This blog post is a response to an invitation to comment on Jeremy Grimshaw's "Mormon Music After the 'Mormon Moment'" article posted today on NewMusicBox. It's in the form of a letter, and still rough, but I thought I would post it here rather than on a facebook wall. Would love further thoughtful comments.
Hi Kevin and Charity Sunshine Tillemann-Dick and the public
world - thanks for bringing me in on this! In the spirit of Jeremy's full
disclosure, I know him somewhat and have worked with nearly all of the
composers he mentioned, either through their music or personally.
Some thoughts which I would be happy to expand upon more
formally. Firstly, I think Jeremy handled extremely well the question of Mormon
as an ethnicity - canonized into academia by Harold Bloom - what exactly, is
Mormon, is a complicated, though much younger question - than what it is to be
Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, etc. etc. There is also of course, some racial element
to that from a historical standpoint. Walking the countryside of New England,
and the strikingly-British-Looking-for-an-arid-desert streets of Much of Utah
and Idaho will confirm the ideals and influence from the UK that this ethnic
map of the US shows:
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/05/bloggers-discuss-race-and-the-census/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0
But what it means to be Mormon, and even Mormon history, is
just as complex as is any other faith, tribe, or nation. Jeremy has dealt with
this by casting a rather wide net of Mormonism - it includes those raised in
Mormon families, practicing and not-practicing, or perhaps never-practiced, to
recently-began-practicing. Given that, Jeremy's idea of what 'influence' is -
from Mr. Young's yes-I-am to no-I'm-not to Ms. Tian's training far from the
influences of what is generally referred to as mainstream or historical Mormon
ideas - obviously changes depending on who he is talking about.
One question I have had for a long time (and have done a
little work in trying to answer, but bow to Jared Oaks for the deeper
research) is what was the style of many of the composers who wrote music for
the institution and about Mormon stories when they weren't doing that? E.g.,
Leroy Robertson, Crawford Gates, Merrill Bradshaw, even Mack Wilberg, maybe
others like Marie Bennett. I don't know the answer on the whole, but the things
I have seen indicate that their ideas waxed a little more experimental in wider
realms, just like those of Prokofiev, Shostakovich, Mozart, and others who
wrote music for institutions at some point in their careers. It so happens that
the church started commissioning a lot of music during the time when
neoromantic styles were the conservative style to write in, and in many cases,
that has stuck as a church 'style' not so much because it is somehow indicative
of a deeper Mormon aesthetic, but because that was the music that got people
hired, and that was popular at the time.
Jeremy's points about normalcy also entice. The idea of
Mormons as a culture striving for peculiarity and normalcy – sometimes at the simultaneously
– is something I have experienced, but also a common trope in academia not just
about Mormon Studies, but about many minority religions and cultures – even, in
broad strokes, the impetus for much of the Counter-reformationists’
raison-de-etre, and the long history of Catholic Bishops spending huge amounts
of time discovering whether miracles reported to their offices were bona-fide
miracles, or simply a function of natural law/natural causes. From Mormon and
American historical standpoint, yes, Mormons stood out from a crowd in some
respects, but not all – they were perhaps the most populous and long-running of
the religions that sprang from the hills of New York (and the 200-mile radius
of Palmyra) in the early 1900s, but certainly not the only ones interested in
finding old sacred texts and objects, seeing deified beings, experimenting with/changing/codifying
non-monogamous marriage, family and sexual practices on religious, political,
or ‘need-based’ grounds, etc. (As a commercial break, it only takes a short
jaunt into American Colonial-Era history to realize that Western Americans were
not, by and large, sexually monogamous, nor were they abstinent before marriage
– there is a noticeable number of 5/6-month intervals between marriage and baby
christenings in Puritan American vital records, not to mention the well-known
practice of keeping mistresses. Ugh.)
Mormon persecution was of course severe and all-encompassing – but so
was that of other faiths, often in proportion to their size/population
concentration/propensity to show up on voting day.
All of that is to say, that it’s interesting that so many of
the singular things about Mormons and Mormonism are surprisingly normal – migrations
toward the west coast in the 1840s, forming religious and political blocs,
temperance movements, family structure debates – was yes, peculiar in many
ways, and arguably in magnitude and longevity – but also deeply culturally
normal. Even the ‘outsized’ Mormon Tabernacle Choir didn’t start with even 100
of the 300+ choir so well-known today. It grew, I would assert, much in the
style of other British and American mega-choirs that became icons of musical
power much like surround-sound or big subwoofers does in today’s pop culture.
Again, the Tabernacle choir has outlasted many other of the large-scale choirs,
but its roots are quite secular and quite ‘normal’. So perhaps even the
Tabernacle choir is an exercise in the church as an institution queuing up in American
pop culture-land. (In the spirit of a review, I don’t think Jeremy would
disagree with me on this, though I could stand to be corrected by the same
Michael Hicks that Jeremy cites – maybe guru to all of us in the realm of Mormon
Music History).
So it is that, in general, I am very pleased that this article has been published, and that some interesting, diverse, and talented composers have gotten some air time for it. Also, within the realm of composers identified by religion, I would be very curious to see how other groupings would compare. I’ve looked as far as Judeo-Christian liturgical music, hymnals, and a little bit of the radio-world. In the ‘Sabbath-day morning’ contexts Mormonism seems a little behind some, and right with others. The large number of Mormons in the Christian-pop radio sound-world, supported heavily by Deseret Book placements, and what they would call their demand curve, skews what many would see as the Mormon musical style largely in what is actually the pop-culture arm of musicians, which I see is the largest arm of music making in most cultures/ethnicities. Saying that Mormon film composers or pop musicians define Mormon music-making is a little like saying Kay Perry defines singers. It’s a little more complicated, of course, when a huge amount of music by Mormon pop artists about Mormon subjects is bought and sold through Deseret Book and subsidiaries – an institution owned by the Church Corporation – but not much more complicated than the existence of gatekeepers across the recording and music making industry.
So it is that, in general, I am very pleased that this article has been published, and that some interesting, diverse, and talented composers have gotten some air time for it. Also, within the realm of composers identified by religion, I would be very curious to see how other groupings would compare. I’ve looked as far as Judeo-Christian liturgical music, hymnals, and a little bit of the radio-world. In the ‘Sabbath-day morning’ contexts Mormonism seems a little behind some, and right with others. The large number of Mormons in the Christian-pop radio sound-world, supported heavily by Deseret Book placements, and what they would call their demand curve, skews what many would see as the Mormon musical style largely in what is actually the pop-culture arm of musicians, which I see is the largest arm of music making in most cultures/ethnicities. Saying that Mormon film composers or pop musicians define Mormon music-making is a little like saying Kay Perry defines singers. It’s a little more complicated, of course, when a huge amount of music by Mormon pop artists about Mormon subjects is bought and sold through Deseret Book and subsidiaries – an institution owned by the Church Corporation – but not much more complicated than the existence of gatekeepers across the recording and music making industry.
Two other conversations I think are interesting points in
this discussion are economics, and a revisitation of Mormon identity and the
need for innovative culture within a cultural/ethnic/political group. I have many,
many artist colleagues, not just Mormons, but many Mormons, who choose certain
pathways for their work-lives out of considerations of supporting a family in a
9 to 5, middle-class way. This is a tangible contributing factor to the outsize
number of film composers, media music artists, commercial-makers, arts
administrators, and frankly, businesspeople in general that I am fascinated to gather
more opinions/stories about for my own collection. But again, in the spirit of
a Mormon claiming the comforting cloak of normalcy, I would wonder how this
compares to society at large. My guess is that there are a lot of aspiring-artists-turned-consultants
out there. It is worth noting that many of the composers Jeremy brought up in
the end of his article (and, again, he admits this) are BYU faculty. I.e., a
their salaries are being paid by a combination of tuition and Church-appropriated
funds, which indicates a tacit approval/appreciation for their work and the
need for it; it also indicates that they are composers for a living and still
can support a family from it – perhaps they are part of a sadly small list of
composers who have interesting voices and managed to ‘make it’.
I would add to the list of interesting ‘Mormon’ voices:
Murray Boren, Ethan Wickman, up-and-coming composers Joseph Sowa, Curtis Smith
(and at this point I proceed to name the composers in my BYU Music classes…) I’d
be interested to know what they would say/what others would say about the
influence question Kevin brought up.
The second thought that I’m interested in considering is
other’s opinions on the idea of culture- or nation-building. For example, I have
been to very inspiring lectures on the need for a ‘Mormon Shakespeare’ – great artists
to help the culture (and perhaps the institution as an art-advocate) reach intellectual
and aesthetic greatness on the proportion of game-changing household names like
Shakespeare. Part of this mission, for some, is also to help bring to their fullness
Mormon ideas (whatever those are) and their exploration through art forms. Another
camp says ‘why bother with a Mormon Shakespeare when we already have
Shakespeare’? (We=humanity and also we=Mormons).
A deeply poignant thought in
many ways, and a terrible place to stop the discussion.
So, I'll write a PS - Also, there is a wide world of Non-American culture based Mormonism, and Mormon Music, also barely touched on by Jeremy or here.
So, I'll write a PS - Also, there is a wide world of Non-American culture based Mormonism, and Mormon Music, also barely touched on by Jeremy or here.
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