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ETHNIC MUSIC
The Legacy of Our Ancestors

 

Confirmation of New
Insights in Music

 

 

Our Ancestors as
Masters over the
Power-Promising
Creativity


Master over the High
Art of Warfare on the
Battlefield of Life

 

 

 

 

 


The Timeless Method of Description of Ou
Forefathers


The Desire for Music
of Our Generation



Lack of Sensitivity in
the Language of Today



Weak Inner
Imagination in
the Uncultivated
Waking State
of Consciousness


Loss of the Perfect
Use of Speech

By the inner logic of our ancestors' language – by its technology – we find confirmation of what has been said in this book about music and also about speech, and we begin to understand why our ancestors, in their records, have so seriously urged us never to lose sight of our free, inner formative will amidst the outer turbulence of time, and to forever place the highest value on an integrated personality.

To pass on their knowledge, our forefathers thus chose, for example, the symbol of the forge. In this respect, the art of the smith was the symbol for that inner ability of shaping speech, for that true skill of poetry, which was considered a prerequisite for mastering the inner and the outer world.

Everyone had to master this inner art and – equipped with the keenness of his understanding – forge for himself the sword of his action, namely the intellect: under the guidance of a master in the high art of smithery who also knew how to teach it: a master over the field of power-promising creativity: over the true art of war on the battlefield of life.

Such a personality is described by our forefathers as being equipped with a golden helmet, a golden breast plate, and a golden sword – the helmet symbolizing sovereignty over the understanding, the breast plate sovereignty over the feeling, and the sword representing the creative power of self-cognition.
The golden shield was the sign of the sun, the symbol for the self of the acting individual, which from the level of self- awareness radiates its light of pure knowledge into the field of the mind, and from there into the surrounding world.

We have used this one example only to present, in principle, our forefathers' lively, symbolic yet universally understandable, timeless way of description and to show how deep an inspiration we can draw today from their ancient records.

Every day we all make use of language but we use it only on the level of simple categorical meanings. And yet we desire to comprehend our language as a live expression of our ancestor's true art of poetry.

When, in the normal waking state of consciousness, someone says the word "tree," the listener knows what is meant, but he has not the lively impression, the vivid image of that very specific tree – as though he would actually experience it.

This lack of inner imagination in the waking state of consciousness results from our inner bondage to the outer sensory perception which, for example, is considerably reduced in the dreaming state of consciousness and therefore substantially diminished in its binding influence, an influence which, in the waking state, diverts us towards the outside, away from the powerful inner imagination.

This gives us an idea of the great loss that is incurred when handling the elements of language in a routine, mechanistic, and undifferentiated manner which is drummed into the heads even in school, and which drives the feeling towards linguistic stagnation. And the very same word that gives rise to a vivid experience in the dreaming state of consciousness, appears merely as a shadow on the level of the common waking state, and is unable to sufficiently stimulate the inner fantasy.

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©  Micro Music Laboratories  2001

 

MUSIC & SPEECH


Speech

The Superiority of Music over the Language of Today

Fundamental Research

The Organ of Speech

The Smithy of Thought

Sovereignty over
Bound and Free

Creativity

The Dimension of
Creative Unfoldment

Control over the World
of Thinking

Content and Form,
Meaning and Structure

The Share of the
Senses of Perception
in the Process of
Gaining Knowledge

The Language of Music

How Our Ancestors
Used Language

Conclusions from the
Ancient Records

The Legacy of Our
Ancestors

The Task Set by
Our Ancestors

Ethnic Music                                                            continued 54