I have observed a very different kind of modern music culture in this country and, in different ways, in other parts of the Anglosphere — the US, Canada and Australia. A plurality of aesthetics and styles is valued in these places. There is no comparable narrowness or megalomania at work. It makes me think that different places experience the challenge of modernity in the arts in different ways. If one looks at the development of modernity in music from the perspective of the US, for example, one sees radically alternative trajectories and a completely different range of personalities at the core of modernism's history — in effect, an entirely other kind of narrative. And who is to say that their narrative is less authentic than the official European one?
Common to both Europe and the New World are Stravinsky and Schoenberg, but their embrace of North American culture in the flight from European hostility is crucial here. Shortly after Schoenberg's death, his widow found a note in the form of a brief poem written in 1944 when the composer was living in Los Angeles and teaching at UCLA:
"There is a great man living in this country — a composer. He has solved the problem how to preserve one's self and to learn. He responds to negligence by contempt. He is not forced to accept praise or blame. His name is Ives."
Charles Ives was the first great non-European modernist and it is argued that he owed nothing of his originality to Europe. Although he is much celebrated now in modernist circles, it is as a great eccentric and one-off that the "central orthodoxy" prefers to see him, a bit like Messiaen. But his great experiments in polytonality, polyrhythm, tone clusters, aleatoricism (the creation of music randomly) and quarter tones, come from a different place philosophically and sociologically from those generated later in France, Germany and Italy. Fundamental to everything in Ives's imagination were hymn tunes and traditional songs, patriotic songs, the sentimental pop songs of the day, the melodies of Stephen Foster, the music of the dance halls and American popular culture — in fact, everything that the European liberal elites would later despise.
And although the European-rooted, Marxist-tinged orthodoxy has its apologists in the UK too — their agendas working overtime in the prominent reviews they write about modern music — things here are, and have always been, different.
Britain is a prime example of this plurality of aesthetics and style in action. There is no restricting binding ingredient — no false, utopian, extraneous ideology that binds us together in the other way that schools emerged according to a certain political instigation, prompting and inspiration in mainland Europe. This plurality leads to a "promiscuous" disregard for the fundamental precepts of ideological modernism. Some characteristics of the classic avant-garde have been absorbed over the years but many have been easily and lightly discarded.
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