Tuesday 29 March 2016

Unfinished Works?

Introduction

What is it about creative geniuses – artists, architects, music composers – that they manage to leave important projects unfinished?  
And as an afterthought, could such a fate ever befall written communicators?

Start with music.  Many of the world’s most celebrated composers failed to complete some of their works.  Include Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Mahler, Schubert, and Tchaikovsky.

Examples include Mozart’s Requiem, which was completed after his death by his contemporary and student Sussmayr; Mozart’s incomplete works include six operas and his Mass in C minor; Mahler’s 10th Symphony was completed by the musicologist Deryck Cooke in the 1970's; Elgar’s Third Symphony was completed from the composer’s sketches by Anthony Payne in more recent years; and Bruckner completed three movements for his 9th Symphony, leaving others to use his sketches of the final movement to finish the work.

All of which beg philosophical questions, such as:- in what circumstances do composers fail to finish musical works; is it right for others to make completed versions; and what issues arise in such proxy undertakings?

Music’s function

Responding to all three questions in the round, a reminder of the purpose of music might help.  Music makes life memorable and melodious.  Like a page-turning book, its story-telling embraces all facets of human activity - love and death, war and peace, joy and sadness.  Music soothes, inspires and provokes thought.

When musical composition is unfinished, its full creative impact and beauty is diminished or lost. There is no climax.  The listener is deprived of the final outcome.  There is no greater disappointment than a wonderful story left dangling without a conclusion.   
Therein lies a prima facie rationale for another composer’s desire to complete in the event of the original’s indisposition.

Music’s key tools include the use of melody, harmony and dissonance, with an occasional (sometimes indefinite) pause.  On which subject, the operative phrase - unfinished works question-mark – implies a command.

Define unfinished

In a sense, no musical work is ever completed insofar as there may always be room for improvement.  This can be either in the nuanced details of composition or in the subtleties of interpretation in performance.

As an integral part of everyday life, music does not exist in isolation.  Hence, the process of composing music faces the same challenges as everyday activity – time, ingenuity, resources, and drive.  The reasons for a musical work lacking a finale or important sections are understandable in this context.

The best-known example of all of music is Schubert’s Symphony number 8 in B minor (Unfinished).  Not only did he fail to finish six symphonies, but Schubert is the only composer to have one actually entitled Unfinished[i].  

Frustratingly, the programme notes[ii] from a recent performance in Belfast offer little to define the circumstances for the composer’s incompletion of “this obvious masterpiece.”  A vague comment speculated that 
“he dropped it, never to resume work....maybe he simply didn’t know where to go next.”

The death in March of the classically-trained Sir George Martin reminds us that many unfinished Lennon-McCartney songs depended on his orchestration and scoring to bring them to completion[iii].  The 1967 Sunday Times review of Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album spared no praise in declaring loudly that

“She’s Leaving Home” is just as sweet as any Schubert song.”

Reasons for not finishing

More convincing explanations for incomplete works stem from the self-evident.  These include death or infirmity of the composer, interruption by another commission, dissatisfaction with the work, and loss of inspiration.  
I would venture to add other prospective causes.

To understand why accomplished composers have left works unfinished necessitates an insight into the genius’s personality.  Compositional mindset seems bound to be influenced by physical and mental health, as well as by personal and domestic circumstances.

No single personality profile fits all composers.  One characteristic they share is exceptional creative instinct.  The outcome is prolific output.  Haydn exemplifies this trait prodigiously.  He was meticulous enough to catalogue his work with openings included.  These have helped musicologists to identify lost works.  Despite his organisational assets, however, Haydn's wife is reported to have shown disdain for his music by using his manuscripts for pastry-pan linings[iv].

That source adds that only one of Haydn’s 108 symphonies has been lost.  This prolificacy gives a lie to Schoenberg’s hauntingly-superstitious comment about the deathly failure of Mahler and Bruckner to finish key works

“he who wants to go beyond a Ninth must pass away[v].”

Creativity is likely to exhibit itself in quality as well as quantity.   
For example, in the consequent desire to capture the constant flow of inspiration, to cope with the urges to express the next idea (which is already gestating in the creative consciousness), started works may be postponed.   
The composer frantically strives to record new ideas lest they are lost in a gushing torrent of inspiration.  Multi-tasking will probably exacerbate matters.  

Could this restlessness explain the numbers of unfinished works by composers such as Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven?
As an example of the relentless zeal demanded by composition, this line from Mussorgsky[vi] when he was writing the beautiful Pictures at an Exhibition nails it: 

“The piano suite is swirling along: the air is thick with its sounds and its idea.  I’m devouring it all, gorging on it, and I can barely get it down on paper.”

Mussorgsky had simultaneously been working on his opera Khovanshchina.  Although excessive consumption of alcohol may have been another influence, he did not finish the opera[vii].  His friend Rimsky-Korsakov completed it after his death.

In other cases, the trait of perfectionism is likely to result in procrastination for eventual reworking and enhancement.  Perhaps this explains why Tchaikovsky, who was sensitive to criticism, left three operas and some other works unfinished.  It seems reasonable to surmise that the obsessive quest for peak perfection may result in unfinished work if it is deemed to fall even a smidin below magnificent.  

Similar reasoning is used in an expert analysis of Schubert’s Unfinished 8th symphony.  The critic Tom Service suggests a combination of[viii] the composer’s syphilitic pain, his musical capacity to reproduce the quality, and/or getting on with new projects.   
He reflects my opinion concluding that although 

“unfinished strictly, it is a complete essential and mysterious symphonic experience.”

Another factor is the seemingly mundane matter of administration.  In particular, consider the composer's capacity (and that of his family and friends) for organisation of paperwork. 
At Bach's beath, for example, he had left a manuscript copy of contrapuntal pieces.  The work's fourteenth and final fugue was unfinished, lacking a title, tempo, markings and instrumentation. 
Discussion about the role and completion of the Art of the Fugue has continued unabated[ix] from the composer's son, through Mozart and up to the modern era.  

Andrew Mellor explains [x]

“at bar 239 the music breaks off suddenly, the score appended with the words – at this point the composer died – a sobering reminder that not even genius can escape mortality.”

Other explanations

The composer’s financial and other personal circumstances will affect his drive, job satisfaction and pride in the work.  Further influences on the impetus to start and to complete the composition include the brief (which may or may not have been restrictive) and the project objectives of the commissioner (such as working to a tight deadline or for a particular event).

Reasons can also include external matters such as climate and weather, politics, censorship, and changing fashions.  Some Beethoven composition perished in floods. 
The current best-seller “The Noise of Time[xi] graphically imagines the visceral story of Shostakovich’s struggle to cope with Communist tyranny.  The banning of his opera Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk and the infamous Pravda editorial denouncing the composer[xii] resulted in four other Shostakovich operas being left unfinished or abandoned[xiii].

Morality of proxy completion

There is no single correct or incorrect answer to the ethics surrounding third-party completion of unfinished works.  It depends on the circumstances.  
To illustrate the dilemma, look outside the musical box for context.  Music faces the same challenges as art and architecture.  Their celebrated exponents have likewise had uncompleted projects concluded by others.

Two of Da Vinci’s[xiv] most famous works, the Mona Lisa and Adoration of the Magi were unfinished.[xv]   
The latter original unfinished masterpiece is displayed in the Uffizi in Florence; a finished version was done in 1995.  Critics, scholars and the public have the consequent luxury of being able to view both, engage in heated debates about their respective merits while comparing one with the other.

Adoration of the Magi, DaVinci. Unfinished

Adoration of the Magi. Finished version 1995 by David Jean

Rembrandt, whose final self-portrait was hanging in the Ulster Museum[xvi] until mid-March this year, left many other self portraits unfinished. 

Rembrandt's final self portrait

This was because he is said to have regarded them as “unsuccessful.”[xvii]  If that reflects the artist’s opinion, what justification is there in attempting to trump him?

In architecture, consider Gaudi’s Basilica of the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.  Decades after the architect was fatally knocked down and after prolonged controversy about his intentions, this epic work was finally consecrated as a place of worship by Pope Benedict XIV in 2010.  Who would have the bravado to assert that it is wrong for others to complete such works?

Something similar applies to the many uncompleted buildings arising from the global financial crisis of 2007/08.  Would anybody suggest that such work should remain uncompleted, especially when economic circumstances improve?

The same rhetorical questions apply to music.   
On the one hand, proxy completions aimed at second-guessing the composer’s mind have arguable worth because they both intrigue the listener as well as providing audiences with alternative outcomes completed by experts with special skills and knowledge of the composer.  
On the other, who can really judge whether the outsider’s completion provides a deus ex machina that satisfactorily untangles the uncompleted narrative and in the appropriate style?

Communicating to eager audiences through music architecture and art is one thing. 
It leaves me wondering about written communication. What if I were to fail to conclude an article for 


©Michael McSorley 2016


References:
[i] Sinfini Music article by Andrew Mellor 18 June for Courthaulds Summer 2015 Showcase Exhibition of unfinished art.
[ii] Ulster Orchestra JTI lunchtime concert 2 March 2016, programme notes Richard Bratby.  He adds “every attempt to complete the symphony including a cash prize in 1928 has failed abysmally.”
[iii] Arena BBC TV 25 April 2011 http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b010t9hz/arena-produced-by-george-martin
[iv] http://www.britannica.com/biography/Joseph-Haydn
[v] Sinfini Music article Andrew Mellor18 June for Courthaulds Summer 2015 Showcase Exhibition
[vi] Mussorsky Pictures at an Exhibition etc. Mariinsky Orchestra. CD Notes by Leonid Gakkel
[vii] http://www.britannica.com/biography/Modest-Mussorgsky
[ix] http://www.fdavidpeat.com/bibliography/essays/dentler.htm
[x] Sinfini Music article Andrew Mellor18 June for Courthaulds Summer 2015 Showcase Exhibition
[xi] Julian Barnes (Man Booker Prize-winner 2010) “The Noise of Time” published 28 January 2016
[xiii] The Big Lightning (1932), Orango (1932), The Twelve Chairs (1938) and The Gamblers (undated)
[xiv] http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704596504575272681406945388 (Wall Street Journal July 2010 Unfinished Perfection, about The Virgin and Child with St Anne).  The formal elegance of the unfinished work & character portrayal is perfection enough.
[xvi] http://www.culturenorthernireland.org/features/visual-arts/rembrandt-drawing-club-and-me?utm_source=Culture+Northern+Ireland&utm_campaign=7b7ba49bc9-CNI+Newsletter+-+July+23&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e5d62de437-7b7ba49bc9-58427593

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