Music as Language
Music is powerful to us humans. We
consume - no, devour - music for everything. We play it for
celebrations, we use it for sorrow, we use it to vent, we play it to
romance.
Music at its core is a language.
Compare it to a
spoken/written language. Music has letters (notes), words (musical
phrases), sentences (verses), and together they make stories (songs).
A song tells you something. That something is its meaning.
Vehicles of MeaningI read the phrase "language is a vehicle of meaning" and I immediately thought of music. Music does the same.
For
example, if I write a bouncy, light, skippy tune, you might think of
something happy. If I write, a dark, somber, plodding tune, you may
feel something sad. This effect is extremely powerful! I can make you
feel something with just timed sound.
However, I think there are
some limits. I can't really make you think something specific, like
say the day Dad took you to the ball game, or the feeling you felt when
your best friend moved.
Music superimposes itself on us. It
uses our past. If some soul had never, ever heard any music, they
probably could guess the bouncy tune was happy, but they would not know
that it was written to resemble the way a family dog bounced on
everything.
This idea is important though. There are certain emotions you can
convey well, such as happiness, sorrow, longing, anger, or reverence.
Outside of these emotions, you would need some other experience or
opinion. If you heard a certain tune every time your parents were
angry, then you would associate that tune with those events, even if
the song does not deal with that.
Always search for the purpose of a song. Especially the intent of the writer and performer. The whole meaning of a song includes the human intent and the human interpretation.