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Musilogic > Essays > The Music Paradigm
While the natural world has embued all living creatures with the instinct of competition, and therefore a constant conflict over territory and resources, mankind has the potential to transcend this self-survivalist approach, and assert the principle of cooperation. While cooperation is certainly present in nature as |
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well, it is usually at the expense of a rival species, and the ultimate balance is achieved through the harsh law of "survival of the fittest". Through man's superior intelligence, optimal solutions can be devised for creating win-win interactions. Such solutions are based on a full and accurate understanding of the rules governing these interactions.
Provided the rules of interaction are correct, music helps us understand how the different "moving parts" can work together in harmony. Individual melodies can have independent narratives that overlap and interact with numerous other individual melodic narratives. As the number of melodic narratives increases, like a growing society of political parties and beliefs, so too the subtle balance between the different threads in the musical tapestry, which become finer and more delicate, and subject to ever greater care and attention. The realm of Western music, like the realm of Western society, has developed an elaborate set of theories, rules and guidelines which can lead to optimal results, but the implementation of so many rules has become complex and difficult to apply.
The advent of computers and computer programs has removed many of the difficulties involved in rule implementation and data monitoring. Where interactions are difficult to grasp mentally, computer models can help us visualize the problems in simpler terms. Intelligent score editors can offer such a model, providing a practical way of experimenting with and visualizing complex multi-layered interactions. |
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