Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Events in the Life of Dane Rudhyar
- Introduction
- Part 1 Autumnal Decay: Seed Ideas
- Part 2 Wholeness: The Scope of the Orient
- Part 3 Rawness and Vigor, Innocence and Experience: An American Synthesis
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Abbreviations
- Bibliography
- Index
- Endmatter
- Eastman Studies in Music
Chapter Six - Toward Artistic Practice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Events in the Life of Dane Rudhyar
- Introduction
- Part 1 Autumnal Decay: Seed Ideas
- Part 2 Wholeness: The Scope of the Orient
- Part 3 Rawness and Vigor, Innocence and Experience: An American Synthesis
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Abbreviations
- Bibliography
- Index
- Endmatter
- Eastman Studies in Music
Summary
Cycles and Change
Rudhyar conceives structure in space as form, and structure in time as rhythm, concluding that the “full and perfect Form is the Sphere; the complete Rhythm manifests as the Cycle.” He distinguishes two different kinds of cycles: cycles of position and cycles of relationship (or relatedness). The first can be exemplified by the rotation of the earth, or a seed becoming a full-grown plant, which returns back to its natal position when it becomes a seed again. The second type involves two bodies or factors moving at different speeds on separate planes “upon a third factor, the earth.” Their conjunction comes to an end when a new conjunction occurs at a different point in space, “because no relationship is static. It must be either progressive, or regressive.” A crucial thread here is his emphasis on the combination of different types of cycles. Rudhyar explains that
The only reality to be experienced is a multiple, protean, many-dimensional relatedness between all there is. Thus, all truly real cycles are cycles between two or more factors, each of which is active, is moving, is forever changing… . The world of reality for human beings is thus a world of creative relatedness.
For Rudhyar, rhythmic irregularity is a positive pattern because it signifies a certain release from a restricted or controlled environment. (An instance of this was uncovered in the previous chapter's remarks on the first thirteen measures of the second movement of Three Melodies.) Time, on the other hand, is “the succession of ever-changing situations which any organized whole has to meet.” Rudhyar gives the movement of the earth as an example; as an organized whole, it is indicative of time as the experience of change:
[Time] is inherent in the experience of change, and it depends on the rate of change to a large extent, or the quality of the change. There are changes which are not only fast or slow but which have the momentum towards fulfillment, or changes which have the momentum towards disintegration.
Whether directed toward success and fulfillment or toward failure and disintegration, change is the one constant for Rudhyar because there can be no time “where there is no process of change”:
The moment an existential cycle begins then the process of change starts, and therefore time starts. Time is born anew at every cycle, at every new universe.
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- Information
- Dane RudhyarHis Music, Thought, and Art, pp. 118 - 134Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009