A few weeks ago, I had a friend ask me about the influence
of music in my life, in life in general, and why and how we as humans are drawn
to music. As I may have hinted, and as those who know me know, music has and
still does have a major influence in my life. This topic cannot be adequately
explored in one post, so this post will be more of an exploration of what music
means to me. I’ll attempt to make broader connections with music in later
posts.
As I wrote in my Father’s Day post, I “inherited” my base
love of music from my dad. My dad had a huge record collection, which is direct
predecessor to my CD collection. My dad was of course into the Motown sound of
the 60’s, but he was also into the socially-conscious performances of Marvin
Gaye, Earth Wind & Fire, Sly & The Family Stone, James Brown, and Donny
Hathaway. My dad also liked some of the classic rock sounds of The Doobie
Brothers and Steppenwolf. Finally, my dad was into a lot of the fusion jazz of
the 70’s, such as Grover Washington Jr and Wes Montgomery. On top of that, my
maternal grandfather and his brother (my grand-uncle) performed for decade in a
band, the Verda Tones. The band featured Cape Verdean traditional and jazz
music. My grandfather played the upright bass; my grand-uncle played the
maracas. Growing up, on Saturday afternoon
when my mom worked, my dad always had his records on, or we would watch the
music trifecta of Soul Train, Dance Fever, and Solid Gold. Music was always on in our house, or in the
car. To this day, I am still very much
the same way. The MP3 player is the
greatest invention since sliced bread! I have my MP3 player with me at home, at
work, and on the road – it’s is probably on and playing an average of seven
hours a day, every day of the week.
Then, my parents had two friends in particular who were also
big into music, and at times they performed music. One was my “Uncle Bob” who
was also big into jazz. Whenever the two families would get together, he would inevitably
sit down at the piano and just start riffing, just improving off the top of his
head, which I found fascinating. Then there was my “Uncle Jim,” who was a
member of a doo-wop group in the 1950’s, and wrote a book chronicling his
experiences: Hear Today! Here to Stay!: A Personal History of Rhythm and Blues, by James A. McGowan. He
and my dad had the same music tastes, and (again) inevitably the conversations
they had during visits would be centered at times around music.
Next, as I was encouraged to play an instrument in grade
school, I chose the trumpet, and stuck with it through graduation. There was
something about playing and performing that really resonated within me; the peak
of which was being able to create and perform a pair of improv jazz solos in
the HS jazz band. To be able to follow
instinct and play notes and rhythms that just came to me, and to hear that what
I created fit in with the rest of the song, was powerful for me.
Finally, growing up in a rural-turned-suburban town, the
“music of my youth” in addition to the above was very wide and varied. There
was another family friend that came down from Queens, NY, to visit once a year,
with a kid just a couple of years older than me. He always brought with him the latest New
York City rap music. There was group of guys I hung out with who got into the
early Gangsta Rap stages of NWA and Dr. Dre. Then, my main group of guys,
lifelong friends, all brought different music tastes together and they all
merged into our combined tastes of 80’s metal (Motley Crue, Van Halen), Classic
Country (Charlie Daniels, Merle Haggard), Classic Rock (ZZ Top, Lynyrd
Skynyrd), Blues, Old School Rap, and true “road-trip R&B” (Chuck Berry). This
was all in high school.
And when I went away to college, my college roommate and
best friend at school was into Techno music, and we went clubbin’ quite a bit –
cue footage of “A Night At The Roxbury.” My close friends in college were into
some of the alternative music of the 80’s and 90’s, and I picked that up as
well.
But all the while, deep down inside, the influence of jazz
was still there and growing. It was in college that I first started having the
opportunity to see some of the big names in jazz: Dave Brubeck, George Benson, Wynton
Marsalis. I had a chance one summer to
see Spyro Gyra perform in an outdoor concert and was totally awestruck.
So, in short, I have a wide, wide, unique range of music
tastes. My music tastes are a
combination of my inheritance growing up, plus the memories of whatever
“soundtracks” were playing during the positive experiences of my life. I
believe this is true for a lot of people. I also believe that there is just something
built within us as humans that are just drawn to music. How often have we seen
babies at a very young age that react to
music, whether it’s playing a little music box to soothe a tired little one to
sleep, or watching a baby “dance” whenever happy music is played? There are all
kinds of studies about the influence of music in the positive development of
babies as music taps into that “gene” built into all of us at some level.
But for me, there’s something deeper…I love the art of
expression in general. I love when people are able to express themselves in
creative ways. My tastes in music, which does include some mainstream music but
also includes a lot of lesser-known stuff, has one thing in common – each
performance seems to hold some level of creative performance within it. Even in
some of the vulgarities of Gangsta Rap, there is still a level of creativity,
of performance, of putting pieces of culture together in a creative way to
connect to an audience – whether you agree with the type of connection or not.
When it comes to music, I am attracted to how the different elements
of each song interact to each other. I pay attention to more than just harmony
and melody; I pay attention to the deeper details of a song – the
instrumentation, the backgrounds, little unique fills and phrasing and
counter-play, etc. If there are lyrics, I tend to ignore the actual meaning of
the words, but instead look at the poetic rhythm of the words chosen, the vocal
inflections, and how the voice or voices are another musical instrument.
And this is truly the essence of me: I am
drawn to taking an object, whether concrete or abstract, and figuring out how
that object as a whole is related to the parts that make it up, and then look at
the parts that make it up, and connect that back to the object as a whole. It’s
what I do as a career in Accounting – taking a journal entry and tracing that
all the way up to the total company financial statements’ view of the health of
that company; and then taking that financial statement and breaking it down to its
parts. As humans, we are single whole individuals, made up of a collection of
experiences and influences, and in my opinion, life is understood by taking the
whole of us, breaking it down to that detailed list of events, and then placing
those back together to explain each of us. Even the human race, our society,
our community, can be viewed as a whole that exists as a collection of many
different and unique individuals, whom for some reason have connected in a
specific way to form that community. This concept of the whole being the sum of
its parts, and the combination of parts becoming a whole, is the running theme
in this blog – the connectedness of us. I’ve been exploring this in writing,
which in and of itself can be expressed the same way – a connection of words
and phrases, placed together in a specific way, to create a post, or a poem, or
a single item. Even my photography is the same thing…looking at a subject, and
finding the right combination of foreground and background elements, which are
in focus and which aren’t, what is included in a shot and what is excluded,
from what angle, lighting, color; all of which are combined to create a single
picture.
When it all fits together, whether a song, a blog post, a
photo, a person, or a community – when it fits, when all is in harmony – is
there anything better?



You had to bring up Solid Gold and Dance Fever!!! Definitely appreciated your view on this one... It is amazing how we all can universally appreciate music yet hear it in so many different ways.
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