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Title: Written Music Remodeled
Author: Josiah Warren
Date: 1860
Language: en
Topics: music
Source: Retrieved on October 7, 2011 from https://web.archive.org/web/20111007012657/http://www.crispinsartwell.com/warrenmusic.htm

Josiah Warren

Written Music Remodeled

These are the “preliminary remarks” to Warren’s Written Music Remodeled

and Invested with the Simplicity of an Exact Science. The elements of

expression recognized and rendered definite, thereby securing the great

object of musical performance everywhere, and abolishing multitudes of

ambiguous words adopted in vain to secure that end. The unnecessary

transposition of keys in vocal music dispensed with, and the principal

use, and the bewildering study of flats and sharps thereby abolished.

The confusion of cleffs abolished. A system of short hand accompaniment

introduced. No unnecessary innovations made; but the easy transitions

from, and to, the common notation made an object of special care. The

booklet was published in Boston by Jewett in 1860, apparently using

Warren’s stereotyping technique. This is an interesting little piece,

relating music to politics and economics, and pointedly expressing the

frustration Warren felt about the difficulty he had getting an audience

for his ideas and inventions. Most of the book consists of songs in the

new notation. I cannot pronounce on the system itself, not reading

music, but I’m told that it is at least constructed with expertise, and

could have been useful if adopted.

Whoever understands the philosophy of music, that is, the essential

powers of musical sounds, will probably admit that the present mode of

representing them on paper is neither scientific nor reasonable, and

never was adapted to the wants of the public in general. It neither

gives the author power to express his ideas so as to be accurately read

and conceived by the performer, nor can the student obtain by the

present written rudiments any thing that he can call definite or

satisfactory knowledge.

The growing taste and demand for such knowledge calls loudly for a deep

and patient consideration of the subject and justify a thorough and

merciless criticism of the causes which lead to the general remark, “I

made the attempt two or three times, but my head was too thick, I

couldn’t understand it and gave it up, though I would give almost

anything to be able top sing or play an instrument.”

The position taken by the author of this work is that the fault is not

with the people, but in the mode of representing music on paper.

But we have great obstacles to overcome. Traditional bias, reverence for

authority, vested interests, professional ambition and egotism, all

stand in deadly array against any attack on the present system (or want

of a system) and the innovator must be prepared to meet all the

opposition which these adverse influences can wield; and nothing short

of the glaring and positive advantages he offers the public can justify

for a moment the remotest hope for success.

Nothing for the mere sake of innovation. The author yields every thing

for the present system that can be yielded without running into

confusion (which is the evil to be remedied) and proposes only so much

innovation as is indispensable to the success of this great agent which

is so rapidly becoming one of the necessaries of life.

Some idea of the obstacles to this enterprise may be formed from a few

illustrative facts. For twenty years the author had been desirous of

finding some music publisher who would take an interest in it but

without success. Do you ask why? I will give their own answers.

A very liberal and kind friend of the author, who was a music composer

and publisher was asked by another friend, what he thought of the new

system proposed. His very frank answer was, “As we have got so much

invested in the common music, the less we say about it the better.” I do

not complain of the man; he was a good, kind, obliging, but the best of

men are mere slaves to the unlimited profit making system of business,

and can allow no successful rivalries if they can help it. There can be

no generosity or public spirit any more than friendship in the present

system of trade.

In a controversy with one of the principal musical authorities and

publishers in the west in 1844, after the exchange of a few ideas, he

said, “well I must admit you are right, but we have a living to get, and

the present system suits us.” He turned away, and sitting down to the

piano commenced playing.

An application was made to one of the principal publishers in Boston,

who replied at once, “Yes, we will publish it if you get the sanction of

Mr. ______ and Mr. _____. But these gentlemen were precisely the ones

from whom the greatest opposition might be expected, as rivals most

deeply interested in keeping up the present system.

It is plain then, that music, with all its grand, elevating, and

beautifying powers, is made entirely subservient to the one great, all

absorbing object of money making.

The necessities of the public, the necessities of music itself, the

immense influence for good or evil which it exerts every where, all

weigh nothing in the scale with the profits in trade and the public are

as much puppets (in this respect) of musical wire workers [?] as they

are of French milliners and importers of foreign furs or domestic skunk

skins.

To understand this item of slavery, let it be considered that music has

always been employed as a powerful agency where the object was to

subjugate the masses of mankind; it may therefore be employed with equal

power for their emancipation.

An English statesman of much note once said “give me the making of the

songs of a nation and I care not who make it laws.” Perhaps he did not

think that however well calculated his songs might be to substitute for

laws, to elevate, refine, and harmonise and humanize a people, he could

not get them before the public through any of the ordinary channels, in

competition with the “established authors” who have other objects in

view. To have the market open to every author and their compositions to

sell on their own merits would spoil the profits derived from monopoly.

It is evident that any great innovation or improvement cannot expect any

sympathy or aid from the trade and therefore must take its stand on the

unpleasant ground of open contest, and be prepared to let the strongest

prevail.

This work must stand or fall on its own intrinsic merits — not at all on

its author’s name ; for, although a professor of music from the age of

eighteen, some twenty years, yet he is now entirely unknown to the

public and intends to remain so.

Perhaps an apology should be made in advance for the imperfections that

may appear in the mechanical execution of the work. It is the production

of entirely new mode of engraving, this work being the first ever

executed by it. It is but reasonable to expect many imperfections which

the older arts have overcome by long experience, which is the only means

to conquer them.

The substance of the apology is, that an art was needed by which music,

drawings, maps, phonography, and miscellaneous illustrations could be

printed by a method less tedious and expensive than by those now in use;

and if this work should prove to be the germ of the revolution required

for music, the public will excuse the unavoidable imperfections incident

to the first attempts to use the instrumentalities by which it was

effected.

The copy right has been secured as the only existing means of securing

remuneration. But abhoring the principle of monopoly and all the

workings and tendencies of copy rights and patents and of an endless and

unprincipled scramble after indefinite and unlimited gains, the work and

the art by which it is printed (which is equally adapted to printing

maps, diagrams, and writing, and which is now a secret) shall be thrown

open to the free use of every one, whenever any people or government

shall merely remunerate the labor that has been bestowed upon them.