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sharp_as_knives ([personal profile] sharp_as_knives) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2016-05-23 12:01 am
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Music Appreciation | Monday, period 1

Hannibal nodded at the students once they were settled in. "Last week, in the course of discussing home, we mentioned war a few times. There are any number of songs about war, its effects, its aftereffects, and the feelings it elicits. Today we'll be discussing those songs."

//It's fascinating, in its way,// Jono added, from his usual spot leaning against the desk at the front of the room. //There's such a broad cross-section of approaches to music about war, it's impossible to cover every point of view. The songs of each war are very much defined by the attitudes of the people living through those wars at the time. The bitter, the frightened, the adventure seekers looking for glory and those who discovered the hard way that 'glory' is absolutely the wrong word for it. The songs of the victors, the lament of the defeated. The cheerful sarcasm of those who are in over their heads and who refuse to let that fact drag them down... It's ugly. War is so bloody ugly. But the music that comes out of it is some of the most raw expression of human emotion you'll ever hear.//

"Music can also serve a purpose in war," Hannibal continued. "I will start today with a selection of drums from Japan. Drums there, as in many cultures, were used to set a pace for marching to war, to carry orders long distances, and to inspire the troops. This particular piece comes to us by way of a Chinese film showing the horrors the Japanese troops of the time perpetrated on the city of Nanjing, but offers some context to the music."

Once that had played, he continued. "Of course, there is also the much more romanticized and removed view of war presented in operas such as Bellini's Norma. In this aria, Norma calls her people to war so she may have revenge on an unfaithful lover. It shows a much less visceral facet of music."

He queued up the next song. "From the other side, we have Benjamin Britten's War Requiem. It was commissioned for the consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral, after the prior cathedral was destroyed in the bombing of World War II. In response, Britten composed a requiem - the traditional Latin mass for the dead - interspersed with poems written during World War I, creating a poignant pacifist piece. We will listen to his "Dies Irae", or "Day of Wrath", from that piece."

Hannibal smiled, "I would be remiss not to include The Year 1812, festival overture in E♭ major, Opus 49. Or as some of you may know it, the 1812 Overture. The Russian composer Tchaikovsky wrote it to commemorate Russia's successful defense against Napoleon. It includes the - somewhat anachronistic - French national anthem, a notable war song in its own right, and was scored for woodwinds, strings, percussion, brass, and an entire battery of cannons. It is not often performed with full orchestration indoors, for obvious reasons," he added, amused.

"Not all war songs are about war, so much as used during it. For propaganda, morale, or simply distraction. During World War I, a popular French song was "Quand Madelon", a story about a young woman 'entertaining' the troops, although it's actually remarkably tasteful for the genre."

After that, he shook his head. "Still, lest you think that all of the more modern songs are critical of war, I offer you "Heureux Piou-piou", in which a soldier from World War I sings of the glories of war and how much he enjoys soldiering."

Jono gave his head a shake when his turn rolled around. This was a topic that hit a little close to home.

//I tried to come up with a selection of songs that gave a pretty decent representation of the past century of wars on Earth myself,// he noted, //but there's going to be a definite slant toward the anti-war protest songs here, as well. A few of them, such as Eric Bogle's The Band Played Waltzing Matilda and Bruce Robison's Travellin' Soldier - popularized by the Dixie Chicks well after the song was written - offer a retrospective look at the aftermath of wars that happened decades before. The first looks at the slaughter of Australian troops at Gallipoli during the first World War, and the second shows the loss of a young life in the Vietnam war through the eyes of the girl back home who loved him. U2 sang about the horror of the Bloody Sunday massacre, where British Troops shot at unarmed civilian protesters in Northern Ireland, exacerbating the Irish anti-British sentiment and raising support for the IRA. They actually cut out verses from the song before releasing it for fear of their own safety.//

Jono's voice had gone curiously flat during that last part. He'd seen the results of that particular conflict first-hand. It wasn't the sort of thing you forgot easily.

//They've all got a very different feeling from the more tongue-in-cheek songs written for the soldiers themselves during the war,// he said, dropping that weird neutrality from his tone. //Songs that were meant to keep the spirits up while acknowledging just how in over their heads they were, such as Arthur Aksey's Kiss me Goodnight, Sergeant Major from the Second World War, or Irving Berlin's Oh, How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning from the First, for example. Songs that took a comedic angle on the life of a soldier were something of a coping mechanism when things were the darkest.//

Jono's own soldiers had come up with no small number of songs meant to keep their spirits up during Glacia's war, for that matter. No, he wasn't sharing any of them in class today. For one, that would involve singing. For another, he was trying to actively avoid any music that might put him back in those moments, today.

//Some songs resonated on a more personal note with anybody who listened to them. Lili Marleen was so popular in Germany that Lale Andersen had them translated and released the song in English as well. It was massive hit on both sides of the same war, singing a story that people could relate to no matter where they called home, and was covered by numerous artists. Allied troops even took the tune and repurposed the lyrics into a bitter number about how their contributions to the war in Italy were being talked down on, and they were being referred to as D-Day Dodgers.//

So help him god, he wasn't done yet.

//Vietnam saw a different attitude toward songs about war, with songs like Eve of Destruction by Barry McGuire, War by Edwin Starr, and Fortunate Son by CCR singing out against it outright. This prompted songs that embraced a patriotic fervor in turn, such as Staff Sergeant Barry Sadler's Ballad of the Green Berets, which sounds, interestingly enough, as though it would be more at home with the songs of the Second World War instead.//

It had been a long and bloody century. Jono had left so many things out. And he was still going. He ran a hand through his hair and then looked tiredly up at the ceiling before pressing on again.

Hannibal shifted a little to bump his elbow against Jono and send him a feeling of strength and support. It earned him a little sideways glance and a nod of thanks before Jono pressed on.

//I'm going to wrap this up on a few songs that have come out of more recent times still, prompted by the state of the world and the Iraq War. Jack Johnson's Crying Shame is another song in protest of war, though it's less angry than many others and more just... tired. Avenged Sevenfold wrote their song, M.I.A., to try to give some perspective of the toll that war takes on the psyche of a soldier, portraying the singer looking back on the horrors that he's seen and perpetrated himself. Metallica's One is about a soldier who was left stuck inside his own head after the injuries he sustained at war left him blind, deaf, and unable to move. They spliced scenes from the film meta for Johnny Got His Gun into their music video to better hit their point home, and ultimately bought the rights to the film in order to continue to show their video. And Muse's most recent album, Drones, is a concept album that follows the main character's journey, having his humanity and identity basically stripped away as he was indoctrinated into the military to become a killing machine in Psycho, leading to his eventual defection and victory over his enemies.//

Jono was making a mental note, next time they had a class about war, he was bringing the kitten.

Hannibal had not brought a cat, but he had brought food and drink? There was coffee and tea, and a number of pastries that he waved the students at. He'd taken a small tart and a cup of coffee for himself to share with Jono. "So, how do you feel these songs reflect or are affected by the wars of their times? What songs about war do you know, and which do you relate to best? What, in your opinion, should a song on the topic involve?"
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-23 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Tip grinned. "I'm cool with big geeks. You guys are usually more interesting, anyway."
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-23 08:45 pm (UTC)(link)
"Oh, I agree. I'm fascinating," he laughed. "But just wait until I talk through the whole recording and then we'll see how forgiving you are."
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-23 08:46 pm (UTC)(link)
"I've listened to J.Lo rant for forty minutes about Boovian technology I only barely understand," Tip said. "The key is to just let yourself be entertained by the flailing."
thewrathofkaan: (default)

RE: Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 12:06 am (UTC)(link)
"Do you get like that about anything?" Roscoe asked. "It's an underrated joy. But like, very uncool, I guess."

The sarcastic slant to his tone made it clear that he wasn't too bothered by the cool/uncool divide. He was cool anyway, so.
intotheout: (Default)

Re: RE: Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 12:22 am (UTC)(link)
Tip shrugged. "I'm more likely to get flaily when I'm angry," she admitted. "It's not that I'm not passionate. I'm just -- cynical."

So jaded at age 14. It was pretty sad, actually.
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: RE: Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 01:37 pm (UTC)(link)
"I mean, understandable," Roscoe said. "An alien invasion and, like, unbelievable destruction would probably make a lot of people into pessimists." He was trying not to imagine it too hard, honestly. It was kind of depressing.
intotheout: (hmmph)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
"Yeah." Tip gave a little rueful laugh. "I was cynical before that happened."

Tip's mom had been great at things like music and dance parties growing up. Not so much at things like budgeting and scheduling doctor's appointments and not generally being a flighty disaster. Tip came into her cynicism early.
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 05:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Roscoe shrugged one shoulder. "It happens. Sometimes things are really shitty." Roscoe was just lucky that when his dad had been really crappy about looking after him, he had still had his grandpa to schedule his doctor's appointments and pack his lunches. "What's the worst is when people think it's their business to fix it and they start telling you to smile more." Ugh.
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 06:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Tip snorted. "Right? Because that's all you need to get through the tough days: a sunny attitude!"
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
"'Just whistle a happy tune,'" Roscoe sang. "'Make-believe you're brave and the trick will take you far,' yadda yadda." Come to think of it, there were a lot of songs with similar, really condescending attitudes about people's feelings. "It's such original advice, it's in a million billion musical theater songs."
intotheout: (huh)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)
"I'm guessing at least some of those were ironic, originally," Tip said. "Meta for Annie has several songs like that, while being set in the middle of the Depression, with a character named Daddy Warbucks. I'm not sure they could have painted the irony any thicker on that one."
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 08:36 pm (UTC)(link)
"I love meta for Annie," Roscoe said wistfully. "Quvenzhané was so good. But, yeah, agreed. Don't forget about 'Easy Street' and how it basically tears apart the whole get-rich-quick American Dream thing."
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 08:48 pm (UTC)(link)
"Did they remake it?" Tip didn't know who Quvenzhané Wallis was, either. She'd grown up on the 80s Annie, which she'd honestly kind of hated until her mom's friend pointed out the whole "Daddy Warbucks" thing. "How much pop culture did my world miss?"
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 09:04 pm (UTC)(link)
"You missed that one too?" Roscoe was so sad for you, Tip. "It's, like, bad. But Jay-Z produced it and Jamie Foxx is Daddy Warbucks. And Cameron Diaz is in it for some reason." He rolled his eyes. "The songs are all updated, so it's worth a watch."
intotheout: (hmmph)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
"My world's infrastructure was wiped out in 2012," Tip pointed out. "Everyone's been concentrating on getting phone towers rebuilt and the internet back online. I missed kind of a lot."

It was a minor miracle that Beyonce had still managed to drop "Lemonade". Not even the Boov could stop Beyonce.
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-24 09:14 pm (UTC)(link)
"Yeah, it makes sense. But it sucks. Music and art and movies and all that are supposed to be these healing tools, you know? Not having access to that, it blocks you guys off from processing everything that happened." He was starting to sound a little pretentious, but it was how he felt.
intotheout: (crossed arms and poufs)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-24 09:20 pm (UTC)(link)
"We're still making things," Tip said a little defensively. "The founding fathers and old Broadway plays aren't as much on the radar is all."

Tip herself had written something rather beautiful in the aftermath of the invasion, though only her teacher and the time capsule committee knew about it. And only Tip, J.Lo, and her mom knew about the complete manuscript she refused to send in.

"Some of us are still figuring out what how we want to process it," she continued softly. "There was some stuff rushed off the presses, but it's all pretty much crap."

And it was going to be considered her world's history. God but that rankled.
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-25 01:28 pm (UTC)(link)
And then Roscoe realized that of course not having access to broadcast systems wouldn't mean that no art was being produced. There had been plenty of beautiful music written before the invention of the radio, after all.

"No, that makes sense," he said. "I guess there's, like, a period where emotions are high and you kind of just have to mourn. It's like how after 9/11, all that stuff came out that was all gung-ho, pro-war, let-freedom-ring stuff right at the beginning, and then it took time for everyone to, like, bring complexity to it and get all of that down on paper. Right?"
intotheout: (hmmph)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-25 03:12 pm (UTC)(link)
"I guess, yeah." Tip had been born a few weeks after 9/11. She wasn't super aware of the timing of the art that came right after it. "And the invasion was global. Everyone was still picking up their lives again. My family was lucky, we had some Boov tech that corporations were willing to spend good money to get a look at. So we were able to pick an undamaged house in a nice area to settle back into. A lot of people came back to find their homes ransacked by the Boov, or gone completely, and didn't have anything to use to start over again. It's hard to think about making art when you're busy thinking about finding a place to live."
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-25 05:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Roscoe was mostly working off of what he had heard from his uncle Malcolm, who had a tendency to give lectures about this kind of thing. Anyway, what Tip was saying made sense.

"It's hard for me to even imagine what that was like," Roscoe admitted. "Back home for me, the biggest disruption to day-to-day life we might have is maybe an earthquake a few times a year. And that's pretty much done with in sixty seconds."

So Tip uprooting her life, finding a new home, contending with new rules and a much more violent existence - kind of hard to relate to.

"I probably sounded pretty pretentious before, huh?"
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-25 05:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Tip smiled faintly. "A little. But, hey, at least you notice it when you do."
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-25 05:45 pm (UTC)(link)
"Sometimes I get very 'self-involved rich kid' and you just need to smack me out of it," he said. "It's a whole thing. I got it from my mom, minus the 'kid' part."
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-25 05:53 pm (UTC)(link)
"Well, I don't mind smacking you when you need it," Tip promised. "And you can tell me if I'm being too woe-is-me. Just because I grew up poor doesn't make me perfect."
thewrathofkaan: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] thewrathofkaan 2016-05-25 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
"You'd be super boring if you were," Roscoe said with a little grin. "No, don't worry about it. I'll let you know. Or I'll just distract you by being really hilarious." Well, he could try.
intotheout: (Default)

Re: Discuss!

[personal profile] intotheout 2016-05-25 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
"Sounds like a deal."