INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD ENGLISH EDITION
The
musical element
When
speaking of the arts, Rudolf Steiner (1861–1925) emphasizes that the
musical element increasingly belongs to the future of humanity. [1] In the following words he points
to the mission of music:
Fundamentally
speaking, music is the human being, and indeed it is from music that we
rightly learn how to free ourselves from matter. For if music were to
become materialistic, it would actually be false: it is not ‘there’!
Every other form of matter is present in the world and is insistent.
But musical sounds are not to be found in the material world in their
original form. We have to devise a means of producing them; they must
first be made. The soul element that lives in the human being lies
between the notes. But today, because the world has become so
unmusical, people are scarcely aware of it. [2]
This
passage also witnesses to Steiner's own particular mission at the
beginning of the twentieth century: to sow seeds in the cultural life
which could enable humanity to find its way from estrangement to
cooperation with the world of spirit. This concept is of immense
practical importance in a century which has allowed the forces of
technology and finance to encroach into the realm rightly belonging to
the free human spirit. About the time of these lectures, Steiner was
responding to requests from many professional quarters for advice which
would provide creative stimuli. Lecture courses were given to experts
seeking renewal in their particular fields: science, medicine,
agriculture, religion, the arts, education and therapeutic education.
‘The development of anthroposophical activity into the realm of art
resulted out of the nature of anthroposophy.’ The art of eurythmy,
however, occupies a unique position as the newly-born daughter of
anthroposophy itself. [3]
For
Steiner, it is not only music; all the arts are to become more musical.
Steiner is concerned with living, creative activity. He communicated
this vision most succinctly in a far-reaching lecture in Torquay.[1]
Like J. M. Hauer (1883–1959), whose theoretical writings were known to
him, Steiner uses the Greek Melos (‘tune’) for
pure pitch (Melodie — ‘melody’, of course, includes rhythm and beat.
See also Steiner's own lecture notes, p. 10). Both Hauer and Steiner
use Melos to indicate the actual creative
principle in music. ‘Melos is the musical
element,’ Steiner claims (Lecture 4). In this translation I have
retained Melos where it is employed.
In
speech, Melos only ‘peeps through’. But it
‘poured into’ oriental architecture, which ‘really did transpose music
into movement’. ‘Oriental architecture has within it a great deal of
eurythmy,’ we read in Lecture 5. The word ‘rhythm’ comes from the Greek
rhuthmos (measured motion, time rhythm),
from rhe-ein (to flow). The word ‘eurhythmy’ is
an architectural term: ‘beautiful proportion, hence beautiful,
harmonious movement’ (Oxford English Dictionary).
Laurens van der Post mentions the ‘eurhythmic grace’ of certain
beautiful animal movements in his African writings. ‘Eurythmy’ and Melos,
accordingly, have existed and do still exist both in nature and in
human culture. Both worlds unite in the art of eurythmy, which
cultivates Melos, and was brought to birth
through Rudolf Steiner. (Otto Fränkl-Lundborg claims the spelling of
‘eurythmy’ without the ‘h’ is philologically correct; rho
as suffix loses its aspirate. See Das Goetheanum, 49. Jg., Nr. 30,
26.7.70, p. 246).
Steiner,
like Hauer, uses the expression das Musikalische (‘the musical’) more
often than die Musik (‘music’), and in this way
emphasizes the inner activity before the technicalities of the craft
come into consideration. This is a supremely important detail. In
English we have to extend this to phrases like ‘the musical element’,
or ‘the realm of music’, which may be clumsy, but they are accurate.
What Steiner has in mind and continuously refers to is the musical
essence. This is not only the concern of musicians but it is the
underlying creative, transforming force of life itself, present in all
vital human expression. Moreover, it bears a direct relationship to the
path of mankind's inner development. This development can be prepared
and assisted by the inner activity of individuals on the path of
initiation, which is described by Steiner as a process of development
through God's grace, involving Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition
(spiritual vision, inner hearing and a higher life). [4]
Long,
long before the human being enters consciously into the stages of
initiation, he is able to express these individual experiences
in images, and this is done through music! In the last analysis genuine
music is essentially a developing drama of life taking its course in
musical sounds, which are an external picture of what the soul
consciously experiences in the life of initiation. [5]
We
may sense that Steiner channelled his own musicality into his work as a
teacher of humanity, and this he confirmed more than once:
It
gave me particular pleasure to be told one day by one of our
artistically-gifted friends that some of the lecture cycles I have
given could be transcribed into symphonies purely on the basis of their
inner structure. Some of the courses are indeed based in their
structure on something very like this. Take for instance the lecture
course given in Vienna on life between death and a new birth: you will
see that you could make a symphony of it. [6]
The
art of eurythmy has been given to us as a gift from the future. Its
evolution depends upon each individual eurythmist, musician and speaker
developing an inner listening with his or her artistic feeling. This
must be developed, not in an ecstatic way, but as a spiritual path the
individual undertakes while within the body. This inner activity,
Steiner insists (in answer to Hauer), can be revealed in art by raising
sensory experience. [7] The
present lecture course may prove to be the
best companion on such a path, which is akin to the practising of a
musician. This is a demanding exercise, but however small the progress,
it forms the substance of true art, and can be offered as nourishment
to a world in need. [8]
One
of the questions today concerns recorded sound (see Appendix 6). After
following the arguments concerning recordings, it can be refreshing to
return to the present course of lectures. Though modestly described as
‘only a beginning’, Steiner begins where many of the great musicians of
his time, and the ensuing decades, leave off. [9]
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Music's
turning point
Steiner
characterizes music as the art which ‘contains the laws of our ego’.
[10] If we could
consciously dive down into our astral body, the
musician in us, we could perceive the cosmic music that has formed us:
‘... with the help of the astral body, the cosmos is playing our own
being ... The ancients felt that earthly music could only be a mirroring
of the heavenly music which began with the creation of mankind.’ Modern
humanity has been led into the muddy, materialistic swamp of darkness
and desire, which obscures this music. But there is a path of
purification leading to perception of the music of the spheres once
again. When we hear a symphony we dive with soul and spirit into the
will, which is usually asleep in daytime consciousness. Art — ‘even the
nature of major and minor melodies’ [10]
- can bring life to the
connection between man and cosmos (in other words, anthroposophy); to
what might appear as dead form. Steiner warns ‘that these things are
not a skeleton of ideas!’ hinting that his Theosophy
was written musically, not schematically.
The
present lectures on eurythmy represent Steiner's greatest contribution
to musical studies. When he gave them in 1924, he advised the
eurythmists to study Hauer's theoretical writings. Hauer was a musician
who discovered atonal melody, or twelve-note music, at the same time
(or even just before) as Schönberg did by a different route. Both
composers endeavoured to get beyond the materialistic swamp through
spiritual striving. [11] By 1924 Hauer had published his own attempt at
a Goethean theory of music, [12] and his Deutung des Melos
(Interpretation of Melos, questions to the
artists and thinkers of our time) includes an appreciation of Goethe's
Theory of Colour. [13] In these eurythmy
lectures, Steiner appears to agree with Hauer's diagnosis of the modern
situation as ‘noise’; Wagner's music, for example, is ‘unmusical
music’, though it has its justification. Steiner seems to agree with
Hauer's spiritual principle of Melos, ‘the actual
musical element’ (to Hauer ‘movement itself’, or the ‘TAO’, the
interpretation of which is ‘the only true spiritual science’). He
reproduces Hauer's correspondence of vowels and intervals, writing in
his notebook Hauer's list of examples (Notebook, p. 10), and he retells
the story of the Arab listening to a contrapuntal piece, who asks for
it to be played ‘one tune at a time’. But Steiner certainly does not
agree with Hauer's answer to the challenge of materialism. ‘Those who
deride materialism are bad artists, bad scientists,’ Steiner declares.
[14] Instead of criticism, he offers help.
In
his profound study on Bach, Erich Schwebsch suggests that eurythmy
arrived just at the right time in the evolution of mankind. [15] His
justification of music eurythmy is unlikely to be supplanted. With the
founding of music eurythmy, a new beginning opens up for the art of
music too. This thought was also expressed by the musician and
eurythmist Ralph Kux. [16] It remains for me to draw attention to the
counter-phenomenon accompanying this new beginning.
The
counter-tendency, so strongly marked in Hauer's thought and life,
artificially separates itself from the human roots of music. Steiner's
answer to Hauer's dissatisfaction with western culture was to give a
further impetus to music eurythmy (already born but still in its
infancy) by tracing the origin of music back to the human being.
Through a conscious ‘turning inside out’ within the organism, at the
point of departure in the collar-bone, the cosmic music that formed us
(flowing in between the shoulder-blades) is released and made available
for artistic ends. [17] Music today, he implies, is not a purely
spiritual, meditative affair, leading (as later in Hauer's career) a
reclusive life. The music of the spheres sought along the old paths
‘out there’ in the cosmos leads to an abstract caricature today. The
living connection is to be found on earth, in the human being. [18]
Steiner was in all things concerned with living, creative activity. The
arts are the means whereby inner activity and experience become outer
expression: ‘to present the soul and spirit in fullest concentration ...
is basically the highest ideal of all art.’ [19] The arts remind us of
the meaning in our earthly destiny. Steiner's meditative verse, written
for Marie Steiner at Christmas 1922, begins: ‘The stars once spake to
man’ — but what leads to the future is ‘what man speaks to the stars’.
[20]
Albert
Steffen expresses it clearly: there is a splitting of the way
‘concerning the life or death of music as such ... The whole of humanity
stands before this alternative. There is no way back. Every individual
has to go through it or come to grief.’ [21] In one of his most
inspired articles, H. Pfrogner (a musicologist and authority on
twentieth-century developments) characterizes the one path of
experience as the way of ‘universal concord’, and the other as ‘ego
concord’. [22] The former path leads to universal spirituality, to a
dissolving of the self. The latter path leads to a maturing of the
self. Pfrogner accociates the former spirituality with the impulse
emanating from the conspiracy of Jundi-shapur (seventh century AD -
further details can be found in Ruland). [29] which echoes on in
Islamic culture; the maturing spirituality he associates with the
Christian west. All inclination to ‘dissolve the ego’, whose new
richness of content was brought by Christ, spiritually subscribes to
Arabism, whereas all steps toward strengthened responsibility follow
the latter path. But this latter path leads to an extension of the
diatonic system, ‘that resounding image of the human being pure and
simple’ (Pfrogner).
The
path to overcome materialism, further elucidated by Pfrogner, [24] will not be reached by avoiding the swamp of man's egotism and
hastily ‘reaching for the stars’ (the arrangement of twelve) to the
exclusion of the diatonic system (based on the number seven). Lurking
in such a counter-reaction to romanticism (which, like Viennese
classicism, arose in the age of materialism as a protest) is an implied
denial of the Christ-event. ‘Christ Jesus inaugurated an evolution in
human nature, based on the retention of the ego's full consciousness.
He inaugurated the initiation of the ego,’ Steiner explains. [25] ‘With
Christ,’ F. Rittelmeyer reminds us in his last book, ‘the whole
orientation of humanity is changed. And from now on we no longer look
back with longing to the past, to a "golden age" of the primal
beginning, but look forward toward fulfilment, creating the future ...’
[26] There is a path through the swamp which has been trodden by
composers such as Bartok, Hindemith, Messiaen, Martinu, Sibelius,
Vaughan Williams, Shostakovich, Britten, Tippett, Hartmann, Henze,
Schnittke, Gubaidulina, Pärt and many others (following in their own
ways the example of the modern ‘Prometheus’, Beethoven). [27]
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Musical
art of the future
On
more than one occasion, Steiner, speaking of the future of music,
pointed to ‘finding a melody in the single note’. [28] In the eurythmy
lectures he points out that this does not mean listening to the
acoustic ‘chord of overtones’ in a single note — on which Hauer and
Hindemith base their theoretical work. It is a supersensible
experience. One of the climaxes of the investigations of Pfrogner and
H. Ruland (one of the former's successors), is the working out of
Steiner's hints of a development of our tonal system. [29]
Here
mention should be made of two other pioneers in musical studies whose
work is acknowledged by Ruland in his Expanding Tonal Awareness.
Ernst Bindel developed the relationship between mathematics and music.
[30] (Without some mathematics there can be no responsible step towards
a musical future.) The other pioneer is H. E. Lauer, [31] whose account
of the evolution of tonal systems has subsequently been considerably
developed by Ruland.
We
conclude with a suggestion regarding ‘artistic longing’, made by
Steiner some months before the lectures translated here:
‘If
someone feels that here on earth he does not fulfil what lies in his
archetype, with its abode in the heavens, there arises in him an
artistic longing for some outer image of that archetype. Whereupon he
can gain the power to become an instrument for expressing the true
relation of man to the world by becoming a eurythmist. The eurythmist
says: All the movements which I ordinarily carry out here on earth do
less than justice to the mobile archetype of man. To present the ideal
human archetype I must begin by finding a way to unite with its
movements.’ These movements, through which the human being endeavours
to imitate in space the movements of his heavenly archetype, constitute
eurythmy. [32]
Steiner
wrote in his Notebook (see p. 131 below) for the present eurythmy
course:
In
the musical element the spatial human being is
transformed into the non-spatial human being — the spiritual human
being is the inner origin of the musical element.
Artistic
people often think more naturally in evocative images, rather than with
philosophical or technical concepts about ‘the spiritual human being’
or ‘the heavenly archetype’. And ultimately the inner life cannot
express itself other than in images. Artistic readers looking for
direction to surmount materialism may be able to grasp the necessity
for decisive action more directly in the form of a picture. It may be
appropriate to recall a passage from one of Selma Lagerlöf's novels to
show the precision of Steiner's statement. An image of the Christ-child
is kept in a basilica run by Franciscan monks. An Englishwoman plans to
steal this image and replace it with a cheap imitation.
When
the copy was ready she took a needle and scratched into the crown: ‘My
kingdom is only of this world.’ It was as if she was afraid that she
herself would not be able to distinguish one image from the other. And
it was as if she wished to appease her own conscience. ‘I have not
wished to make a false Christ-image. I have written in his crown: “My
kingdom is only of this world”.’ [33]
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Alan Stott
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Notes:
[1]
R. Steiner, True and False Paths in Spiritual Investigation,
GA243, (RSP 1975). An accurate translation of the section on music
(last part of the final lecture of 24.8.22) appears in Lea van der
Pals, op. cit., p. 71ff. Compare: ‘The basic mood of the new
world-conception [since the Mystery of Golgotha] is musical, whereas
the basic mood of the old world was sculptural. The basic mood of the
new age is really musical, and the world will become ever more musical.
In order to continue rightly on the path of human evolution, we must
know the importance of striving towards a musical element and not
repeating the old sculptural one’ (R. Steiner, Der Baum des
Lebens and der Baum der Erkenntnis des Guten and Bosen [‘The
tree of life and the tree of knowledge of good and evil’], lecture
Dornach 31.7.15, GA162 [translation A. S.]; see also Appendix 4, ‘R.
Steiner, Torquay, 22.8.24’, in Vol. 2).
[2]
R. Steiner, Eurythmy as Visible Singing, GA278,
Lecture 3.
[3]
The name ‘anthroposophy’ (‘wisdom of the human being’) is not used in
any of Steiner's basic books. It appeared before the world for the
first time one year after the founding of the Anthroposophical Society
(1913), in the final chapter of R. Steiner, Riddles of
Philosophy [original edition 1914, English translation AP
1973], ‘A brief outline of an approach to anthroposophy’. In this
chapter, reference is made to the author's Truth and Science
(1882), The Philosphy of Freedom (1894), and the
lecture ‘The psychological foundations and epistemological position of
spiritual science’, delivered before the Philosophical Congress,
Bologna, 18.4.11.
‘Eurythmy
has grown out of the soil of the anthroposophical movement,
[originating] like a gift of destiny’ (R. Steiner, ‘Eurythmy, what it
is and how it originated’, lecture Penmaenmawr 26.8.23 in Eurythmy
as Visible Song [London and New York 1932], p. 1). ‘The
artistic element will be an elixir of life of the anthroposophical
movement’ (R. Steiner, introduction to a eurythmy performance on the
occasion of the founding of the General Anthroposophical Society,
Dornach 5.1.24, in GA277, p. 423). See also R. Steiner, Das
Goetheanum in seinen zehn Jahren’ (‘The Goetheanum, ten years
in retrospect’), essay of 14.1.24 in GA36, and Tb635 p. 131. For a
detailed account, see R. Steiner, Die Entstehung and
Entwicklung der Eurythmie (‘The origin and development of
eurythmy’, translation in progress) GA277a (Dornach 1965), and R.
Steiner, Eurythmie — die Offenbarung der Sprechende Seele
(‘Eurythmy — revelation of the speaking soul’) GA277 (Dornach 1972), a
collection of introductions to performances, and so on; a paperback
mainly consisting of selections is published: Eurythmie,
Tb642 (Dornach 1986). Some introductions are translated in R. Steiner, Eurythmy,
an Introduction (AP 1984); the lecture 14.2.20 is translated
in The Inner Nature of Music, op. cit.
[4]
Rational thinking is not jettisoned in favour of ‘mysticism’ or
something else. The spiritual activity within thinking itself can be
strengthened for investigating and creating within the realm of the
spirit. The spiritual activity of pure thinking, the higher union of
science and religion demonstrated by Steiner, was prophesied, for
example, by Emerson: ‘No man ever prayed heartily without learning
something. But when a faithful thinker, resolute to detach every object
from personal relations and see it in the light of thought, shall, at
the same time, kindle science with the fire of the holiest affections,
then will God go forth anew into the creation’ (R. W. Emerson, tract on
‘Nature’, Chapter VIII, [1836]. See also a recent study on Emerson,
Richard G. Geldard, The Esoteric Emerson [The
Lindisfarne Press, West Stockbridge, Mass., 1993]).
[5] R. Steiner, Art as seen
in the Light of Mystery Wisdom, GA275, Lecture 30.12.14 (RSP
1984).
[6]
R. Steiner, Practical Advice to Teachers (RSP
1976), GA294. The lecture course referred to is R. Steiner, The
Inner Nature of Man and the Life Between Death and a New Birth,
Vienna 9-14.4.14, GA153 (RSP 1959). Steiner aimed at a marriage of form
and content in his work, which is the lofty artistic ideal. After the
Christmas Foundation of 1923/4, he reached a new level in this respect.
In connection with the subject matter of GA153, compare: ‘Contrary to
the works of architects, sculptors and painters, musical works must be
repeatedly generated anew; they flow onwards in the surge and swell of
their melodies, a picture of the soul, which in its incarnations always
has to experience itself afresh in the progressive stream of time. The
soul flows down from its spiritual homeland and returns thither —
likewise its shadow-images: notes and harmonies. Hence the intimate
effect of music on the soul’ (R. Steiner, lecture Berlin 12.11.06, The
Inner Nature of Music [AP 1983]).
Steiner
confirmed that: ‘For anyone who would read my Occult Science
as today one would read a novel or any other book, passively giving
oneself to it, it is really only a thicket of words — and so are my
other books. It is only someone who knows in every moment of reading
that he must create out of his own soul's depths, and through his most
intimate will — which the books should stimulate — only this person is
able to regard these books as musical scores from which he can
experience the true music. This active experience of the individual
soul, moreover, is what we need’ (R. Steiner, Heilfaktoren
fir den sozialen Organismus, lecture Dornach 2.7.20, GA198).
See also R. Steiner, The Gospel of St John,
Lecture XI, Hamburg 30.5.08, GA103 (RSP 1978); GA278, Lecture 6,
Endnote 39 in Vol. 2.
The
implications for the musician are discussed by Erich Schwebsch in his
pioneer study on anthroposophy and music. He concludes: ‘The cosmology
of Occult Science contains in its thoughts the
best exercises for a meditative musician who is searching for new forms
today’ (E. Schwebsch, J. S. Bach and Die Kunst der Fuge
[Stuttgart 1988], Chapter 4 ‘Musik als Offenbarung des Geistes.
Aphoristische Betrachtungen’, p. 193 [J. S. Bach and ‘The Art of Fugue’;
translation of Chapter 4 in manuscript, ‘Music as revelation of the
spirit. Aphoristic observations’]).
[7]
In his first lecture, before the Goethe Society, Vienna 1888, Steiner
said: ‘Beauty is not the divine in a cloak of physical reality; no, it
is physical reality in a cloak that is divine. The artist does not
bring the divine on to the earth by letting it flow into the world; he
raises the world into the sphere of the divine’ (R. Steiner, Goethe
as Founder ofa new Science of Aesthetics [Rudolf Steiner
Pub., Co., London c.1927]). Steiner claims that this lecture, already
in 1888, contains ‘a sound foundation for anthroposophy and the
anthroposophical way of thinking’ (Preface to the second edition,
1919). The lecture suggests an acid test for what is truly new.
Movements exist today which bear the adjective ‘spiritual’ but do not
attempt any transformation. Indeed, it is often stated that ‘no musical
knowledge is necessary’! Is not the call for courage against
despondency and inadequacy met right here with every individual?
[8]
See Schwebsch, Endnote 6. Pfrogner, in the chapter ‘und was
nun? (‘and what now?’) in his extensive study on The living
world of music’, presents a clear vision of tasks for the future: ‘No
longer l'art pour l'art, but simply and solely: l’art
pour l’homme will be the saying of the hour. This “art for
human beings”, however, will have to be an art totally “from human
beings”, an art in the above-mentioned sense “raised” from the human
being, if it should be true “nourishment for life” ’ (H. Pfrogner, Lebendige
Tonwelt [Langen Müller, München/Wien 1981], p. 474, trans.
A.S.).
[9]
For example: Bruno Walter, Theme and Variations
(Hamish Hamilton, London 1947), and On Music and Music-Making
(Faber, London 1957); W. Furtwängler, Concerning Music
(Boosey and Hawkes, London 1953); Artur Schnabel, My Life
and Music (C. Smythe, New York and Gerrards Cross 1988), and
Music and the Line of Most Resistance
(Princeton 1942); Edwin Fischer, Reflections on Music
(Williams & Norgate, London 1951); R. Vaughan Williams, National
Music and other Essays (OUP 1987); J. Ma. Corredor, Conversations
with Casals (Duddon, New York 1956).
[
10] R. Steiner, Art as seen in the Light of Mystery Wisdom, lecture
29.12.24, GA275 (RSP 1984).
[11]
For the best introduction to this perspective, see H. Pfrogner
Zwölfordnung der Töne (Zürich/Leipzig/Wien 1953), reprinted in H.
Pfrogner, Zeitwende der Musik (Langen Müller, München/Wien 1986),
translation in manuscript, ‘Music's turning point of time’.
[12] J. M. Hauer, Vom Wesen
des Musikalischen (1920, later editions Robert Lienau,
Berlin-Lichterfelde), translation in progress, ‘The essence of music’.
[13] J. M. Hauer, Deutung des
Melos (Tal & Co. Verlag, Leipzig/Wien/Zürich 1923), translation
in manuscript ‘The interpretation of Melds’.
[14] R. Steiner, The Arts and
Their Mission, lecture Oslo, 18.5.23, GA276 (AP 1964), p. 111.
[15] Schwebsch presented his
eloquent conclusion already in 1930: ‘But all inner experience of the
soul when it is ripe to that end, wishes to become visible,
perceptible. The soul world desires to become objective. The first
beginning for this becoming visible of vitally filled musical movement,
from the All rising up behind the Nothing [an echo from Goethe's Faust,
Part 2, 6256. Translator's note.] of the vanishing past, at the exact
nadir of time, is the art of music eurythmy: visible singing, newly
created by Rudolf Steiner’ (E. Schwebsch, op. cit., p. 211). Chapter 4
is more than the title suggests. It is an anthroposophical musician's
‘credo’, which applies to Steffen's essay (see Endnote 21 below), too.
[16] R. Kux and W. Kux,
Erinnerungen an Rudolf Steiner and R. Kux, Eurythmie and Musik
(Mellinger Verlag, Stuttgart 1976), translation in manuscript
‘Recollections of R. Steiner, and eurythmy and music’.
[17] See R. Steiner, The
Essentials of Education, lecture 10.4.24 a.m. (RSP 1982), p. 58. The
physiology is explained in A. Husemann, The Harmony of the Human Body
(Floris Books, Edinburgh 1994; German edition, Der musikalische Bau des
Menschen [Verlag Freies Geistesleben, Stuttgart 1989]). Note, for
example, with what careful scholarship Dr Husemann explores what ‘beim
Aufireten’ (‘by stepping’, or ‘with the first step’) from Lecture 7
must mean (Section 31, p. 189ff.). See also Endnote 43 on Ansatz, in
Vol. 2.
[18] Compare Steiner: ‘Since
the Mystery of Golgotha we cannot speak of the music of the spheres as
did Pythagoras, but we can speak of it in another way. An initiate
might even today speak as Pythagoras did, but the ordinary inhabitant
of the earth in his physical body can speak of the music of the spheres
and of the cosmic life only when he experiences in his soul, "Not I,
but Christ in me", for the Christ within him has lived in the music of
the spheres and in the cosmic life. But we must go through this
experience in ourselves; we really must receive Christ into our souls’
(R. Steiner, lecture Norrköping, 16.7.14, in Christ and the Human Soul GA155 [RSP 1984], pp. 69-70). The harmony
of the spheres is heard ‘in deep sleep’ by the initiate ‘as if they
were the notes of trumpets and the rolling of thunder’ (R. Steiner, An
Esoteric Cosmology GA93a [St George Publications, Spring Valley, New
York 1978], lecture Paris 30.5.1906, reported by E. Schure, p. 45.
Steiner's proclamation of Christ rests on knowledge. By the turn of the
century, he could say: ‘The unfolding of my soul rested upon the fact
that I had stood in spirit before the Mystery of Golgotha in most
inward, most earnest solemnity of knowledge’ (R. Steiner, The Course of
my Life [New York, 1951], closing sentence of Chapter XXVI, p. 276). ‘Spiritual science is concerned not merely to talk about the
Christ, but to declare what the Christ wishes to say to people in our
time, through the medium of human thoughts.’ R. Steiner, lecture Zürich
4.2.19., in The Inner Aspect of the Social Question GA193, (RSP 1950),
p. 16. Steiner indicates what amounts to 84 (= 7 x 12) meditations for
musicians: ‘You have in the fixed stars a wonderful cosmic instrument,
and the players of this instrument of the zodiac and fixed stars are
the gods of the planets beyond’ (lecture Dornach, 2.12.22, in The Inner
Nature of Music GA283 [AP 1983], pp. 42-3); see also R. Steiner, The
Gospel of St Matthew (especially lectures Berne, 3,4, 10 and 12.10.10),
GAl23 (RSP 1965); R. Steiner, Universe, Earth and Man, lecture
Stuttgart 12.8.08 [RSP 1987], p. 118ff. See also Appendices 3 and 5 in
Vol. 2.
[19] R. Steiner, GA277, op.
cit., p. 320.
[20] R. Steiner, Verses and
Meditations (RSP 1961), pp. 96-97 In this connection, compare Beckh's
definition of ‘cosmic’: ‘the revelation of the spirit within the
earthly realm’ (H. Beckh, Die Sprache der Tonart [Urachhaus, Stuttgart
1977], p. 20, English translation ‘The language of tonality’, in
manuscript).
[21] Albert Steffen, ‘Musik’
in Der Künstler and die Erfiillung der Mysterien (Dornach 1964),
translation in the British Newsletter, forthcoming. An artist could
base his life on this astonishing essay.
[22] H. Pfrogner, Chapter 17
in Zeitwende..., op. cit.
[23] Compare: ‘Absolute
objectivity ultimately demands the sacrifice of the personality’
(Hauer, Vom Wesen des Musikalischen [Leipzig/Wien 1922], p. 40), with:
‘When the human being became a personality, God also had to become a
personality in order to save him, to give him the possibility of rising
again’ (R. Steiner, Egyptian Myths and Mysteries [AP 1971], p. 139).
Another twentieth- century scientist, comparing his life to that of
Goethe's, declared that his goal was ‘to penetrate into the secret of
the personality’; the ‘central concept’ of his psychology is ‘the
principle of individuation’ (C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams and
Reflections [Fontana, London 1967], pp. 232 and 235, italics original).
Sir Julian Huxley summarizes Teilhard de Chardin, the scientist-seer:
‘persons are individuals who transcend their merely organic
individuality in conscious participation’ (Introduction to Teilhard,
The Phenomenon of Man [Collins 1959/Fontana 1965], p. 20/21). A vague
pantheism is avoided: ‘Union differentiates’, and ‘the more "other"
[grains of consciousness] become in conjunction, the more they find
themselves as "self" as they make for the ‘Omega point’ of evolution
(op. cit., p. 261/288). See Endnote 20 in Vol. 2.
[24] See H. Pfrogner,
Zeitwende..., op. cit., and Lebendige Tonwelt, op. cit., for informed
views on musical development right up to the twentieth century.
[25] R. Steiner, The Gospel
of St Matthew, lecture Berne 9.10.10 (RSP 1965). Steiner explains the
meaning of the atonement: ‘The One sufferred for all, so that through
the world-historic initiation a substitute has been created for the old
form of initiation ... Through inner vision, through true mysticism,
community with Christ is possible’ (R. Steiner, Foundations of
Esotericism, lecture Berlin, 27.9.05 [RSP 1983], p. 14)
[26] F. Rittelmeyer, Christus
(Urachhaus, Stuttgart 1936), p. 38 (translation in MS). Rittelmeyer's
mature relationship to John's Gospel, with its hidden music, informs
his major works. For Rittelmeyer on music, see A. Stott: ‘Friedrich
Rittelmeyer and the "Song of the earth's perfecting"’ in The Threshing
Floor, May/June 1988 (Floris Books, Edinburgh). Another study on the
Christ- Impulse is C. E. Raven, Jesus and the Gospel of Love (Hodder
& Stoughton, London 1931/49), see especially Chapter XV,
‘Christ in the Twentieth Century’.
[27] The following reference
to Beethoven's entelechy is the only one that has come to my notice: ‘I
was deeply impressed when a while ago I heard from a famous musician
that in a personal conversation Rudolf Steiner said "Beethoven is
Prometheus"’ (E. Kolisko, ‘Beethoven’, from a series of articles under
the title ‘Reincarnation’ in The Modern Mystic, September 1938).
[28] See Endnote 17 in Vol. 2.
[29] See H. Ruland, Expanding
Tonal Awareness (RSP 1992).
[30] Ernst Bindel, Die
Zahlgrundlagen der Musik im Wandel der Zeiten (Stuttgart 1985);
translation in progress ‘The numerical basis of music in its
development’.
[31] H. E. Lauer, ‘The
Evolution of Music through Changes in Tone-Systems’ in Cosmic Music,
edited by J. Godwin (Inner Traditions, Rochester, Vermont 1989). Lauer
also wrote Musik and Musiker (Selbstverlag, undated).
[32] R. Steiner, The Arts and
Their Mission, lecture Dornach 27.5.23, GA276 (AP 1964).
[33] Selma Lagerlöf, The
Miracles of Antichrist (Gay & Bird, London 1899), p. 14.
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