| About The Concept |
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If you are not familiar with George Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept, this FAQ section from the website home of The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization can give you a start with the preliminary information in brief question and answer format.
1. What is the Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization? The book is available for online purchase directly from Concept Publishing at THIS LINK.
2. What is the aim of the Lydian Chromatic Concept?
3. What is the primary difference between the Lydian Chromatic Concept and all other theories of music?
4. What is Tonal Gravity?
5. Why is the Lydian Scale of paramount importance in this Concept?
6. What is the fundamental difference between the Lydian and Major Scale?
7. What is a Lydian Chromatic Scale?
8. Are there any historical and acoustical foundations underlying the Concept?
9. Who can most benefit by studying the Lydian Chromatic Concept?
10. Does a student of the Concept have to abandon their already existing knowledge of Western music theory? 11. Is the current revised edition dramatically different from the previous editions? 12. What are the extra-musical considerations of the Lydian Chromatic Concept?
13. Are there any connections drawn in The Concept between music and psychology?
14. Has the Lydian Chromatic Concept been taught at any established educational institutions?
This is the foreword - written by Andy Wasserman - to the most current, in print publication of George Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization; Volume One, The Art and Science of Tonal Gravity (Fourth Edition, 2001, Concept Publishing) :
The unified core of ideas at the root of the Concept has the potential to transport music into a realm of deeper meaning. Opening up to those possibilities requires patience, concentrated thought, and dedicated study. Therefore it is important to realize that you cannot assimilate these ideas from too narrow a basis, either intellectually or emotionally. By making the effort to absorb the terminology and structure presented here, your musical foundation can be made stronger and the connections between you and your music more intelligent. Once the unity of the Concept begins to penetrate your practical understanding, everything in it becomes useful. It is then that its message challenges you to inquire musically and psychologically into the things you think and feel. For this reason, it is crucial to embrace the Concept from an emotionally receptive position of seeking something genuine for yourself in a world where most music is far removed from innovation and excellence. To do this requires a willingness to learn that emanates from self-motivation.
The Concept has a unique way of interpreting and translating the things of great value that music can tell us--something about the meaning of organization and gravity. Its purpose is to generate new pathways toward greater freedom in exercising aesthetic judgment and discernment that invoke a more objective fulfillment of musical statement. The focus, attention, and consciousness you put into the study of the Concept will uncover greater meaning and an expansion of your musical understanding, regardless of the stylistic genre of music to which you apply it.
Throughout this course of study you will notice that terms like vertical, horizontal, and the relationship to states of tonal gravity signal an eloquent departure from the major-minor consonant-dissonant system that is commonly taught to students. This specific language, when integrated into your thinking, can bring about personal advancement that will convey insight and innovation to your craft. The ideas are interrelated for a unity like that of a mandala, rather than the compartmentalized, noncontiguous elements that form commonly accepted notions of musical behavior. By its very nature, the Lydian Chromatic Concept will give you a fresh outlook that can aid in bringing life to your musical understanding. This requires you to master a sense of independence and self-awareness. Try to "visualize" the relationships presented in this book by "hearing" its knowledge with an inner ear that is capable of formulating your own singular musical ideas through the experience of an internal focus. This focal point can help you decipher between the superficial, mechanical associations you may be accustomed to making in your compositions or improvisations and the quality of consciousness that allows many levels of subtlety to come into play. Simply to imitate what others have played and composed is not enough. It may be beneficial for you to consider adopting a reciprocal attitude to digesting the Concept whereby the energy you give while implementing its ideas will fuel your passage through unexpected doors of discovery.
Having a specific aim while working with the Concept can he helpful. Whether you are a composer, instrumentalist, improviser, educator, arranger, or theoretician, and even if you come to this book from outside the profession of music, finding an aim as you work will allow you to put this knowledge into action and have it work for you. Use this book as a map to help you aim for that which extends beyond your customary approach. This will require you to examine some basic questions about the meaning behind an organization of musical tones and why you play or write music.
As you absorb this knowledge and become more intimate with its fundamental principles, such as the actuality of a passive "do" which yields to everything in scale that is higher that itself (Chapter II), you can begin to unearth a vision of your innate "response-abilities" within your musical discipline. At its essence, The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization creates a self-organized and infinite range of possibilities for us to master.
Andy Wasserman
THE INSTITUTE OF LYDIAN CHROMATIC STUDIES
Seeds have been planted by George and Alice Russell for the creation of The Institute of Lydian Chromatic Studies (The ILCS) in order to realize Mr. Russell's dream of creating a permanent home for his life's work and a method for preserving that work and furthering it's development in an educational setting.
It's mission is to initially formulate a “school without walls" and act as an educational outreach whose function is to promote awareness about and disseminate accurate content of the world-renowned theoretical work of George Russell: his Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization. The ILCS “community” with be both national and international. Services and resources will be made available both in person through on-location seminars and on-line through a website, video conferencing, media downloads and podcasting. More information about the ILCS will be posted on www.lydianchromaticconcept.com as this project moves forward.
The following article speaks volumes about Mr. Russell and his life's work as innovator, composer, theoritician, educator and band leader. The Music Division of The Library of Congress commissioned this essay for inclusion in the program for George Russell’s May 1999 concert in the Library’s historic Coolidge Auditorium. It is reprinted here to give you a better idea of the man who dedicated 50 years of his life to creating "The Concept.". Here is a link announcing the event on the Library of Congress website.
George Russell: A Lydian Odyssey
George Russell is a singular figure in American music. He is a rarity among major jazz composers, as he is not an influential instrumentalist. Only the likes of Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus possessed a comparable ability to write orchestral music that conveys the spark of improvisation. Yet, what truly sets Russell apart is his half-century application of a single radical compositional principle, which he has evolved through the creation of such American masterworks as “Cubano Be/Cubano Bop,” “All About Rosie,” and “Electronic Sonata for Souls Loved by Nature.”
Both Parker and Davis provoked the direction of Russell’s investigations into tonality. Russell was fascinated by Parker’s practice of ending tunes on what Russell not as a flatted fifth, as the bebop harmonic innovation was widely purveyed, but as a raised fourth. This is a crucial distinction that looms large in Russell’s subsequent critique of Major scales. Contemporaneously, Davis and Russell spent hours together at Davis’ piano devising new chords, prompting Russell to think in terms of an overarching tonal system that would allow improvisers full expressive capabilities in new compositional environments.
Theory and Practice: George Russell Goes for the Modes by Jason Gross published on June 3, 2003 in The Village Voice, New York City, N.Y.
Discussing his career in a Central Park West hotel in the autumn of 2002, he occasionally apologized for his careful deliberations: "I got a lot up here," he explained, pointing to his brain. Many times he referred to a book on the table, a book he's been writing and rewriting for over 50 years. The cover is illustrated with a jagged mountaintop against a cloudy sky. It's the fourth edition of his Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization, an imposing 268-page volume made even more imposing by the subtitle: "Volume One: The Art and Science of Tonal Gravity." Even when delving into his childhood, Russell returns to the book: "I always had an inner voice that I developed in the Concept."
And so the Cincinnati native (born 80 years ago this month) began on his musical path. He started with drums, which took him from a Boy Scout band to nightclub gigs to a college band, before landing in Benny Carter's group and moving to Manhattan. When Max Roach proved more versatile, Carter canned him in 1944. Russell took the dismissal in stride, and decided that he'd focus on composition instead.
Russell found himself at the center of a creative hot spot. With the post-war jazz movement in full bloom, he was soon rubbing elbows with everyone from Charlie Parker and Miles Davis to Bill Evans and John Coltrane. And what did these exalted figures discuss? "Mostly women! It was about music, too. The question was always, 'Where do we go from here?' There was no looking back. The whole atmosphere was wonderful." He had a particularly significant conversation with Davis. When Russell asked him what his aim was, Davis said, "I want to learn all the chords." Russell (who assumed that he already knew the chords) kept that in mind. It would ultimately provide the means for him to realize the Concept.
During this time, Russell wrote the groundbreaking Latin-jazz classic "Cubano Be/Cubano Bop" for Dizzy Gillespie's big band (1947) and the jazz-classical pastiche "A Bird in Igor's Yard" for a Buddy DeFranco ensemble (1949); the latter, Russell's attempt to combine the influences of Parker and Stravinsky, was considered so daring that the label refused to release it for more than two decades.
Just when he was beginning to achieve recognition as a major young composer, tuberculosis sidelined Russell—at one point, he was hemorrhaging so bad he was given last rights. He spent 15 months recuperating in a Bronx hospital, but his determination never waned. "I said to myself, there's a way out of this. I kept dwelling on what Miles said, how he wanted to learn all the chords, wondering how you'd go about that. So I started out with the major chords." As Russell repeatedly ran through scales on the hospital's solarium piano, other patients threw bananas at him. "It'd drive me nuts too!" he confessed. "But in the end, it saved my life."
Out of his obsession came the Lydian Concept. Though spoken of reverently for its influence, many found it an intellectually rigorous, occasionally impenetrable theory—not unlike Ornette Coleman's harmolodics, many years later. Russell scrupulously examined centuries-old music theories, including church modes, which provided the basis for most early composition. A mode is basically a scale distinguished by its tonic and dominant notes; but whereas a scale is identified with one key, a mode denotes the characteristics of a particular scale transposed to any key. By the 15th century, the Ionian mode in the key of C (with its tonic C and dominant G) had been established as the primary scale for music in the Western world.
For Russell, the Lydian mode (with, in the key of C, its tonic F and dominant C) was a more logical candidate to become the primary scale because it suggests a greater degree of unity between chords and scales. Russell argues that a major scale, for example C, consists of two tetrachords that embody two tonalities, not one. But if you adapt the major scale to Lydian mode (in the key of C that would be a C major scale with F-sharp instead of F), it removes the duality of conflicting tonics, and more fully satisfies the tonality of the major chord. With one tonic used for each respective scale, Russell reasoned that a greater variety of chords could be stacked. This offered a new path for adventurous musicians: Standard chord progressions need not dictate the course of an improvisation, as each note is equidistant from a single tonic center. Notes could flow more freely beyond the strictures of a song's chords.
In discussing the Lydian Concept, Russell cites players who exemplified different approaches to improvisation. "Coleman Hawkins played 'vertically,' using a systematic style of working through a chosen chord structure—there was instant unity formed between a chord and its melody. John Coltrane inherited what Hawkins did and ventured way out beyond it. Now, Lester Young was playing 'horizontally,' over the chords, using time, forward movement to determine his playing. Then you have supra-vertical players that embrace both styles, like Bill Evans." It was Russell's intention to offer, as he wrote in an early edition of The Lydian Chromatic Concept, "a view or philosophy of tonality in which the student . . . will find his own identity."
Once his idea evolved, Russell realized, "This is not meant to be kept a secret. It proves that gravity exists in the universe as a force. I have to let this go." In 1953, he published the first edition of the book. Miles and Coltrane in particular took his work to heart and helped bring modality to jazz's center stage; it was soon taken up by '60s rock bands, including the Grateful Dead, and jam bands. Russell was praised for the Concept's far-reaching nature by Ornette Coleman, Eric Dolphy, Gil Evans, and the man who inspired it all: "Miles once introduced me, saying, 'This is the motherfucker who taught me how to write!' "
By then Russell had shifted from composing and arranging for others to leading and recording his own bands. He did so with style and sophistication, hiring such distinguished players as Dolphy and Evans (then unknown) for his Smalltet. His most prodigious output of studio releases began in the mid '50s and lasted through the early '60s. In those years, he crafted a remarkable string of lyrical, emotional albums, including Jazz Workshop (1956), New York, New York (1958, featuring Coltrane), Jazz in the Space Age (1960), Ezz-Thetics (1961), and The Stratus Seekers (1962). Yet despite the admiration of musicians and critics, they were often overlooked in later years. To some, Russell himself was daunting—an intellectual theorist and composer at a time when the romantic figure of the soloist overshadowed every other aspect of jazz. No achievement in jazz is more deserving of rediscovery and reassessment than Russell's.
Russell's distinctive skills as a writer-arranger are evident in all his work; he conceives music as a play with well-defined scenes. Of 1957's "All About Rosie" (based on a children's song), he says, "The first part is fast and stern, while the second is soulful and then the third part is really cooking. I told the band to think about the tempo, the modes, the emotions there." Although surface aspects of Russell's approach changed when he began using electric instruments and musicians who were raised with the modalism he had reintroduced, little changed in terms of Russell's meticulous methods. It's About Time, from 1995, is no less carefully structured. "I wrote out the solo for saxophonist Andy Sheppard and told the drummer not to play on the 2-4 beat as it's usually done. The first movement is all rhythm, the second is the band itself, and the third movement is one of the most beautiful things I've written. It goes from lyrical to thunder and develops into a Miles ending—it always brings the house down."
In the early '60s, Russell found himself in total disagreement with what he calls "the lawlessness" of the emerging free jazz scene: "I didn't feel that I fit in to what was going on."
He left for an extended stay in Europe in 1965, garnering extraordinary acclaim and support for his big-band concerts. Gratifying as that was, he returned home in 1969, when, as he puts it, "America seemed to be searching for its identity," and jazz was out of favor. He took a teaching post at the New England Conservatory at Gunther Schuller's invitation, a job that he still holds 34 years later. "It's security for me, and I like working with such serious and committed students."
Teaching didn't stand in the way of his other activities. He never stopped composing or forming ensembles to play his ingenious music, including such ambitious genre-bending projects as Electronic Sonata for Souls Loved by Nature (1968), The African Game, which was nominated for a Grammy (1983), and An American Trilogy (1992). To help him realize those and other pieces, he formed the 14-piece Living Time Orchestra in 1978, which has performed at the Smithsonian, Newport Jazz Festival, and Carnegie Hall, as well as the Village Vanguard and other clubs. The group toured Europe last year, and triumphed at the Umbria Jazz Festival; it is now headed for London's Barbican Centre. New York is another story. Russell was stung when Jazz at Lincoln Center canceled plans for a 70th birthday concert because he uses electric bass. Understandable maybe in 1952, but in 1992? "They've traveled back to the bad old days—they believe that they are in 1952," laments Alice Russell, his wife of 26 years and assistant manager.
Though he's received fellowships from the NEA, Guggenheim, and the MacArthur Foundation, he remains most proud of his Lydian Concept. The first volume of the greatly expanded new edition appeared in 2001; the second volume now awaits publication, and the third is nearing completion. "It still evolves. It's ongoing, still in progress. If someone asked me what I have to show for my life, I've got this to show," Russell says, pointing to the book. "I hope that the Concept will be remembered as my gift and that I was someone that brought music closer to unity."
The following is an outline of a book currently in development by Andy Wasserman encapsulating his 30 years of work on the Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization and the inspiration he received through his work and personal interaction with George Russell.
The Magnetic Essence of Music
philosophical reflections on what the music itself is telling us about the nature of the Universe in relation to George Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization
by Andy Wasserman
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1- DEDICATION & ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 2- PREFACE : What the LCCTO is telling us about music and the pursuit of psychological unity 3- INTRODUCTION: a word about George Russell—the heart and depth of his Life's Work
PART ONE "The Ray of Creation"
CHAPTERS 1- Scales of Being: Essence and Personality (Lydian and Major) 2- Quantum Physics and the Unified Architecture of Tonal Gravity 3- Ancient Perspectives : The Verticality of Non-Western musical cultures 4- Lydian Chromatic Technology : an open-ended tool for fresh language systems 5- Intervals in Hyperspace 6- The Vertical Providence of the Lydian Tonic 7- Gospel Music and other Music of the Spirit: shape-shifting the New Man 8- The Legacy of Innovation & Self-Evolution for Composers and Improvising Musicians
PART TWO "Psychological Commentaries on the alliance between the Lydian Chromatic Concept and the writings of Dr. Maurice Nicoll"
CHAPTERS 1- Two Kinds of Food 2- Living Time: Vertical and Horizontal Dimensions in Music and Life 4- The Artist's Birthright : Attunement to Higher Centers 5- The Enneagram of the Lydian and Major Scales
APPENDIX 1 - A journal of my personal musical journey through the secret life of music 2 - A word from George Russell 3 - Glossary 4 - Index 5 - Bibliography/Recommended Reading OUTLINED SUMMARY OF BOOK CHAPTERS
1- DEDICATION & ACKNOWLEDGMENTS To George and Alice Russell
2- PREFACE : What the LCCTO is telling us about music and the pursuit of psychological unity overview of the general themes of book, such as the invisibility of things, what the music is telling us, this book is about a few core ideas concerning personal transformation, a book about understanding versus information, etc.
3- INTRODUCTION: a word about George Russell—the heart and depth of his Life's Work a few pages on George's personal vision and accomplishments in his field. emphasis on his commitment to fulfill the destiny of the LCCTO.
PART ONE "The Concept's Ray of Creation" the overall purpose of this section of the book is to elaborate on the basic precepts of the Concept, substantiating the historical background and connections between the Concept and philosophical ideas in general. this includes the exploration of quantum physics, non-western culture's perspective of music, introductory points of the Work Ideas. this section of the book will ultimately illustrate the tremendous importance of the Concept in world thought and history, and set the stage for why it must be taken seriously, especially in light of personal evolution and esoteric psychology.
CHAPTERS 1- Scales of Being: Essence (Lydian) versus Personality (Major) explanation of the relationship between vertical and horizontal, Lydian and Major, and Essence and Personality. general comparison between musical scale and scale of being. music as a 'metaphor' for psychological thought.
2- Quantum Physics and the Unified Architecture of Tonal Gravity the laws of quantum physics that relate to the laws and states of tonal gravity. physics as seen from a philosophical perspective, and music's expression of the laws of physics. introduction to the 3 states of tonal gravity and how they operate in the LCCTO.
3- Ancient Perspectives : The Verticality of Non-Western musical cultures the ethnomusicalogical perspectives of musicians from cultures who have some of the oldest language and measurement systems, such as India, China, African societies like the Dogon, Indonesian (Bali and Java). Their structure of tuning systems, and perspectives of music being synonymous with science, religion, philosophy, the natural world, cosmology, astrology, language and mathematics. all of the above and its connections with the superstructure and fundamental principals on which the LCCTO is founded. also relationship of LCCTO and Pythagorus, as well as Egyptian knowledge of scale, acoustics, and proportion.
4- Lydian Chromatic Technology : an open-ended tool for fresh language systems the LCCTO as a technology which can be used as a tool for self-organized evolution as a musician or philosophy. the Concept as it relates to an all-encompassing, non-exclusive system, applicable to any style of music, and open for adaptation for future language systems in music. the philosophical implications of such an open-ended architecture and its place in world thought. popularity and acceptance of the Concept around the world, regardless of language or stylistic genre.
5- Intervals in Hyperspace exploration of the multidimensional nature of the Concept and music for that matter, with emphasis on the six dimensions of time, parallel universes, and Hyperspace (as defined by Michio Kaku in his book "Hyperspace") and its relation to the depth and breadth of the LCCTO.
6- The Vertical Providence of the Lydian Tonic a summation of chapters 1-5 with a more detailed view of the Concept as a paradigm for a unified cosmology of interdependent dimensions. Why the passive "DO" and inner gravity is so significant. The Chinese "li" idea and going down the ray of creation, and how this manifests in music.
PART TWO "Psychological Commentaries on the alliance between the Lydian Chromatic Concept and the writings of Dr. Maurice Nicoll"
CHAPTERS 1- Two Kinds of Food discussion of higher centers and the right food for each. the LCCTO is food allowing higher dimensional energy to manifest. more on Essence and Personality (i.e. false personality).
2- Living Time: Vertical and Horizontal Dimensions in Music and Life elaborate on many musical oriented and LCCTO-based comments from Nicoll's "Living Time."
3- The Legacy of Innovation & Self-Evolution for Composers and Improvising Musicians this chapter will be geared more specifically for musicians, explaining why most do not have a clue as to what they are doing in music or what music means. will paint a scenario for 'finding oneself' on the path of the musician seeking a truly individual path of expression to compose and/or improvise.
4- The Artist's Birthright : Attunement to Higher Centers why it is so important to try to actualize the ideas presented in this book: a step towards conscious living and its expression in music, or any art form for that matter.
5- The Enneagram of the Lydian and Major Scales my enneagram with an newly edited explanation. with implications for thought.
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