Eftestøl Goethe and Music PDF
Eftestøl Goethe and Music PDF
Eftestøl Goethe and Music PDF
Torbjørn Eftestøl
Has Goethe’s Theory of Colours and his general scientific work any significance for music? And
isn’t Goethe’s world long past and his spiritual environment so far removed from ours that
only a historical backward-looking attitude finds anything of interest today? I believe this
would be a confusion of the spirit and letter of his work and that precisely in the impulses
of Goethe fruitful ideas ca n be harvested today. Consider for example this statement by the
French composer Olivier Messiaen, one of the most influential composers of the twentieth
century:
I believe in natural resonance, as I believe in all natural phenomena. Natural resonance is in exact
agreement with the phenomena of complementary colours. I’ve made several experiments with
complimentary colours. I have a red carpet that I often look at. Where this red carpet meets the
lighter-coloured parquet next to it, I intermittently see marvellous greens that a painter couldn’t mix,
natural colours created in the eye. Likewise, sound generates harmonics. When you hear a gong...
Make a long sound on a gong and you’ll hear some fantastic things. It’s a modernism that no modern
composer could surpass.1
Messiaen does not refer to Goethe, but his use of the phenomenon of the after-image to
portray his compositional strategy is an interesting bridge between creativity and the subtler
aspects of sensing that Goethe was so keen on observing. The synaesthesia of Messiaen has
often been touched upon, regarded as a more or less private-psychological phenomenon, but
this statement reveals some interesting paths of possible “Goetheanistic” inquiry.
The relevance of Goethe’s thinking for music has not been studied as much as his engage-
ment with colours and sight, living forms of nature and, of course, literature. This is natural
considering Goethe’s production. However, Goethe was in close contact with music in many
ways from early on. In his youth Goethe and his sister received musical education and trained
in piano, cello and singing.2 He later made the scenography for Mozart’s operas; the young
friend and famous composer, Felix Mendelsohn-Bartholdy, frequently played in his house and
he met with Beethoven.
Goethe also worked on the musical equivalent of the Farbenlehre; the Tonlehre. Although it oc-
cupied him for many years it was never finished. But as part of his general thinking about art,
nature and cognition, Goethe’s world of ideas had a lasting influence on the history of music.
One example is with the concept of organic form. In the Romantic area, musical forms developed
where themes grow organically out of an initial cell. Some of the more extreme cases of this
are the first movement of Beethoven’s 5th Symphony or Liszt’s Symphonic Poems. These are musical
instantiations of a paradigm that has been called organicism. Beethoven has been credited with
developing this within musical composition. But when musicologists have tried to conceptualize
and discuss the nature of organic form they have frequently associated it with Goethe and his
ideas about metamorphosis. The famous analyst and musicologist Hermann Schenker – one
of the most outspoken representatives of this way of thinking – traces his idea of an Urlinie, the
basic structure behind a tonal composition, to Goethe’s idea of an Urpflanze. In this paradigm,
music and plant life seem to be almost indistinguishable in their formative growth.
Notes
1 In an interview in the film Olivier Messiaen. La Liturgie de Cristal, directed by Olivier Mille. Juxta Positions, 2002.
2 Claus Canisius, Goethe und die Musik, Piper Verlag, München, 1998.
3 Anton Webern, Der Weg zur Neuen Musik, herausgegeben von Willi Reich, Universal Edition, Wien, 1960,
page 10.
4 I discovered this idea when I read the autobiography of Rudolf Steiner. There he writes: “The true artist
yields himself more or less consciously to the spirit. And it is only necessary – so I then said to myself over
and over again – to metamorphose the powers of the soul, which in the case of the artist work upon matter,
to a pure spiritual perception free of the senses in order to penetrate into a knowledge of the spiritual world.”
Rudolf Steiner, The Story of my Life, chapter 7.
5 Gordon L. Miller, “Introduction” to J. W. von Goethe The Metamorphosis of Plants, MIT press, Massachusetts
2009, page xviii.
6 “Die Tonmonade. Goethes musiktheoretiescher Brief an Christian Schlosser” in Ernst-Jürgen Dreyer, Goethes
Ton-Wissenschaft, Ullstein Materialien, Frankfurt, 1985.
7 For a detailed treatment of this, see for example Eckhard Förster, The Twenty-Five Years of Philosophy, A
Systematic Reconstruction, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 2012.
8 Goethe, Scientific Studies, ed. Miller, page 16.
9 Goethe, Metamorphosis of Plants, §102.
10 Quoted from Benedict Taylor, “On Time and Eternity in Messiaen” in Messiaen: The Centenary Papers, ed.
Judith Crispin (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2010), page 261.
11 The musicologist Ernst Kurth writes about this, saying that a melody is not a combination of tones but
rather an original unity out of which the tones unfold. The wholeness is felt as an inner “movement”, “energy”
or “force”. See Ernst Kurth, Musikpsychologie, Georg Olms Verlag, Hildesheim 1990, pages 76ff.
12 “Just like Goethe speaks of spirit-eyes and spirit-ears, so, one could say, emerges at the first elementary
stage spiritual organs of touch...This is a real life-process, a real process of growth...as real as the growing up
of the child, but one that brings the soul into regions which one had not experienced before.“ Rudolf Steiner,
Lecture 5. November, 1917. Published in Collected Works (GA) 73.
13 See for example Gilles Deleuze & Félix Guattari A Thousand Plateaus, University of Minnesota Press,
Minneapolis, 2007, page 342ff.
Torbjørn Eftestøl is a freelance pianist, writer and teacher. He is currently doing a PhD in music and philosophy at the
Norwegian Academy of Music. A selection of his writings and concert recordings can be found at musicofbecoming.com.