HOW HUMAN HOPE HAS ALWAYS BEEN SUPPORTED BY PARTICIPATORY MUSIC
(slightly shorter version published originally in Yoga Living Magazine, January-February, 2008)
WHO Earns Twice the Pay?!
Imagine you are part of an expedition 200 years ago, venturing into the Canadian Northwest. As a voyageur, you strain from dawn to dusk to help paddle a 40 foot canoe. Where there’s no water, you hump a 90 pound pack, and later the canoe itself. Up and down wind the portages, across treacherous, rock-strewn ridges. Hernias, or bone-breaking falls are common. Either, in this wilderness, can end a life. Still you only get paid half as much as the little guy sitting next to you with the prodigious memory and loud voice.
Who’s he? the boss? the guide? No, actually he’s the chanteur, the expedition’s singer. He leads the different songs sung many times a day by your entire company. It’s his contribution that is worth twice yours. Shared music brings rhythm to your strokes, and keeps a smile on your face. In some fundamental way, the songs keep hope alive in your struggling heart.
High-Value Sing-Alongs?
OK. So our low-tech our ancestors placed a high value on sing-alongs. That’s nice, but surely not relevant to us, struggling with a globalized, 21st century recession. After all, most people, we know, can’t even carry a tune. And who needs to, with CD’s and smart phones that play our favorite music perfectly on demand. Who cares if ragged bunches of backwoods grunts sang there way across the continent? Had Ipods been available, wouldn’t those voyageurs have all plugged in to enjoy their separate favorites?
Recent Comments