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AVANT GARDE MUSIC

The Beginnings of Musical History

The “New Sound” Composers of the
20th Century

Music & Health
Music as Stress

Music & Health –
Society’s Responsibility

Music & Health –
Medical Judgements

A Natural Appreciation for Music

Harmonious & Disharmonious Music

Harmony & Disharmony

The Microcosm of Music

The Future of Music

The Future of the Orchestra

The modern Interpreters

Why
Micro Music Laboratories?

The Revolutionary
Musical Path

The Question of the Meaning & Purpose of Life

Musical Development in the Past Hundred Years

Old Errors New Insights

New Insights Old Errors

Living and Dead Music

A Natural Appreciation for Music

 

Peter Hübner
Founder of the
Micro Music Laboratories

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  Avant Garde Music
A Natural Appreciation for Music
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JOURNALIST: Is there also an intellectual concept for harmonically structured music, e.g. as with 12-tone music or serial music?

PETER HUEBNER: Well, the microcosm of music is an existing reality of nature of enormous complexity. If I only have a small insight, then I will only make a small discovery. And if this insight deepens, then my discovery will expand. Research into the microcosm of music reveals a great number of conformities to natural laws, and from those, we are able to derive laws.

We know today that the conformities to natural laws of complex rhythmical function in the human organism which was found in chronomedicine, can also be derived from the microcosm of music, for both were recognised as identical. Johannes Kepler derived the laws, according to which the heavenly bodies move, from his knowledge of the microcosm of music. And modern nuclear physics, as well as modern astronomy, have discovered facts and realities in the sub-nuclear as well as the galactic sphere that are the same as we can also find in the microcosm of music.

Compared to such investigations and derivations of laws in the microcosm of music, the most comprehensive music theories of the avant-garde become restricted.

But the reason for this, is that in the microcosm of music we draw from that which the Creator has made. The microcosm of music is an area of His creation, and not at all created by human mind or hand. And the laws which move His countless elements, are also the Creator’s laws.

In this respect, the intellectual concept of the microcosm of music can always only be something of a musicological theory shaped by science which may then become the basis for musical creations.

In today’s times, many people are confused by the aspect of perfection. At an automobile fair, many are astonished about the enormous technology of a car manufacturer. But nobody is astonished about the incomparably enormous technology which finds its expression in the fly’s eye whose owner is just at that moment sitting on the exterior mirror, and is seemingly rubbing her hands and/or her tiny forelegs.

In contrast to the unnatural, the natural distinguishes itself by simplicity, by inconspicuousness, by discreetness. The complexity of an elephant’s harmonious movements are hardly noticed by the modern observer. It is the other way round with the comparatively primitive behaviour as a driver during the Formula 1 Race – probably because the drivers there generate higher turnovers and/or earn more than an elephant.

Modern industrial societies have a price to pay for this sort of blindness towards the natural, which shows in form of diseases, disasters, catastrophes, depressions and many other things, and this blindness does not make an exception for the whole area of music.

Atonal music, also my own from earlier times, at first glance, seems to be intelligent, interesting, complicated and exciting to the restricted spirit of our scientific technological age. And perfectly naturally structured music seems to the same people to be boring, simple, uninteresting, music to fall asleep by. But this problem is not a problem of music, but a problem of development of the listener and the music creator.

JOURNALIST: Herr Huebner, what is harmony and what is disharmony?

PETER HUEBNER: Musically, disharmony is the deviation from the natural order of the laws of harmony of the microcosm of music.

In contrast, harmony is the order used in the composition of the laws of harmony of the microcosm of music.

Harmony is that which a plain human being feels to be harmonious. It is a mistake to believe that being able to feel harmony is a matter of practice. The composers of disharmonious music always point to Beethoven or Wagner to say they, too, needed a long time to find recognition. But this comparison is not correct.

Regarding tonal harmony in their music, they never had difficulties – they couldn’t have – well, that is, disregarding Wagner’s Tristan.

Concerning Beethoven, the experts were locked in dispute with him, because he brought the emotional into music – today usually described as “dynamics”. Bach was still of the opinion that manipulation of volume was only aimed at superficially manipulating feelings, and from a purely musical point of view didn’t mean anything at all – instead even distracted from the purely musical.

Wagner’s disputes with the experts at the time, were about his annoyance that they didn’t know the first thing about music – the same also applied to the interpreters.

But it was never about the aspect of harmony. Harmonical music is a matter which is scientifically objectively verifiable, and what is felt to be harmonious or not is, across the cultures, not a question of taste or of education, but is solely based on the fact that the biological system of human beings is harmonically structured, and that here especially the ear is physiologically aimed at the knowledge and preference of natural, harmonical structures. Here, with regard to the medical effect, the biological systems are equipped with automatic amplifying and muffling mechanisms, that is more or less, with sympathy and antipathy mechanisms.

An analysis of the compositional structure can, of course, also provide information on whether it is harmonious or disharmonious music. Such musicologically harmonical knowledge is very important if you want to judge the quality of music. The microcosm of music reveals to us a world of music which does not know disharmony. The nature of a tone is made in such a way that, when it is made as an integrated whole – i.e. when it is a natural unity – it develops according to the laws of harmony of the microcosm of music.

There are mock tones which are in reality artificially created mixtures of tones which are mixed together from the outside – be it with mechanical or electronic musical instruments. Such “tones” have no natural development according to the laws of harmony of the microcosm of music.
 
     
     
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  With kind permission of AAR EDITION INTERNATIONAL
© 1998 –  MICRO MUSIC LABORATORIES