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Desertmusic, 3 x 3 m., 900 sheets of printed music
Singer
Gwendolene Embley’s library of sheet music was bought as a carload from a
market and has sat in a cellar for over 25 years, unwanted and outmoded, so it
may seem strange at first to create a wall-hanging paper sculpture for Desertmusic
out of some 900 pages of this music . The music comes from not so long ago, but
the culture of chamber music performance in the home has nearly disappeared.
Instead, it has been replaced, on the one hand by the ubiquitous television, and
on the other with numerous technological revolutions in music which have
replaced it with a more electronic medium. The new technology has made music
universally available, and people all over the globe can share each other’s
music. But like so many other technical breakthroughs, it is a double-edged
sword which cuts both ways; we have lost a kind of intimate (and skillful)
music-making in exchange for a much more distant one. Like the new technologies
we are finding to alleviate the world’s water problems, we have to give up
some cherished concepts, in the same way that Gwendolene’s sheet music has
been cut up in order to become a sculpture, and look forward thoughtfully and
compassionately to what will replace them.
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