[This review was published in The Tasmanian Times]
Music is such a powerful force in our lives, it’s surprising we know so little about why it affects us in the ways that it does. It makes us hum, whistle, move, sing, groove, rhythmically thump anything that might have a pleasing hollow sound, pluck strings, blow into tuned tubes, and endlessly innovate new and surprising forms of music and song. Above all, it makes us feel emotions – deep and satisfying emotions.
Imagine a world without music, and you’re imagining sterile, joyless Hell.
How will you dance without music and song? What will thrill your soul as music does? What will make you reel with feel-good chemicals and writhe with the rhythm? What will join you, in abandoned, joyous communion, with others?
Andrew Ford is a brilliant guide to the inner sanctums of composition and the outer reaches of what we can even call music. The Shortest History of Music isn’t a dry history of famous composers, or confined to the Anglosphere, nor is it a tedious timeline of ‘first this, then that’.
Ford, as a musician in his own right, with a long career in music journalism, compares, contrasts and contextualises the many forms of structure and sounds that music and song are made from. In short, The Shortest History of Music is for every music lover who enjoys a broad range of music, and loves to explore the stunning diversity of music from around the world and across the ages.
For me, as an eclectic listener and lover of every genre except opera and the earnest AI faux-pop shite they play in dentists’ offices, I loved this introduction to the vast world of music. I would like nothing more than for Andrew Ford to be given the resources to turn The Shortest History of Music into a ten part, globe-spanning ABC documentary, and include all the math, science and biological understandings we’ve accumulated about music so far.
We exist as life-forms in the flow of time, and time implies and embodies rhythm. Even protozoans beat time with their flagella, and every part of our human bodies, from the cells up, also form rhythms that drive our bodies and minds, one part of which is drawn to, and seek, those elements that make up music and song.
Music might be audible math, and song might be a biological need, but wherever there are humans, there is rhythm and melody.
If you want to know a little more about the wonders of music, and get a better sense of what it is, I highly recommend Andrew Ford’s The Shortest History of Music.