Abstract
This paper presents a model for understanding spirituality in music making from a perennialist philosophical perspective. Drawing from experience teaching free improvisation and computer-based music making, the paper aims to speak to music educators interested in finding ways of articulating something of the intuitively experienced significance and meaning of their role and practice. The paper takes a definitional approach to spirituality that emphasises the techniques and epistemologies associated with efforts to realise truths about the human condition in relation to the transcendent. Although connected with religious faith and practice, it acknowledges its relative independence by virtue of similarities in spiritual experience that cross and depart from such traditions. Another significant emphasis is the integrative potential of spirituality in terms of enhancing an individual’s sense of inner unity, and in achieving greater connectedness to others and broader reality (ultimately the transcendent). This approach exists in relation to perennial philosophy, which is rooted in the understanding that there exists shared and universally true knowledge in all authentic religious traditions and experiences throughout history. (Nelson, 2009, p. 122). On the basis of this approach, the paper presents a framework for and interpretation of the spiritual significance of musical creativity organised around the themes of (i) motivation, (ii) methodologies, and (iii) principles. Using examples from teaching and participating in improvised and computer-based musical practice, parallels are explored between the procedures and experiences of creative musicianship and the defining characteristics of the perennial tradition. As these parallels are identified and discussed, the nature of the relationship between music and spirituality according to this approach is defined. The framework and its interpretative method offer a way for those interested in the experiential connections between music and spirituality to understand the deeper significance of working in and through the medium of music: ultimately, as a metaphor that reflects and directs to the Real. Nelson, J. M. (2009) Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality (Springer)