Plough My Account Sign Out
My Account
    View Cart

    Subtotal: $

    Checkout
    green, gold, and pink expressionist painting of two kids playing instruments

    Covering the Cover: Why We Make Music

    By Rosalind Stevenson

    February 26, 2022
    1 Comments
    1 Comments
    1 Comments
      Submit
    • Martin Bohley

      Yes, one can hear the cover. Thank you

    As we searched for cover artwork for this issue on music, I began, as I often do, by entering a search term into Google and looking at the images that came up. I typed “making music.” One or two images showed someone actually playing a real instrument or singing. But the vast majority feature digital editing of prerecorded sound. If there were any humans in the picture at all, there typically was only one.

    While sound mixing is one aspect of a process that brings music to our lives, the story we wanted to tell with this issue is so much larger. Spontaneous music-making that is not done for applause or pay, but as a means of expressing what is deep within. Not something that elevates the artist, but something that draws others to join in the experience. Music that speaks heart to heart without the barrage of filters and mixers. Interaction over isolation, participation over professionalism. The way that a child begins to dance when the music comes on. The way that people gather around when someone pulls out the guitar, hoping it’s “Country Roads” so they can sing along. Music that is made together.

    green, gold, and pink expressionist painting of two kids playing instruments

    The paintings of Ghanaian artist Betty Acquah perfectly capture the spirit of this – people coming together to create music that flows from the heart, engages the whole body, and impels the observer to respond. Acquah lives in Accra, Ghana.

     


    Another View

    Marta Zamarska is an artist from Ustroń in southern Poland. She studied painting, batik, and art theory at Warsaw’s Academy of Fine Arts, graduating in 2008.

    painting of a man playing accordion in a train station

    Marta Zamarska, Accordion Player 1, oil on canvas, 2014. Used by permission.

     


    Back Cover

    Music is an endowment and a gift of God, not a human gift. It drives away the devil and makes people cheerful; one forgets all anger, unchasteness, pride, and other vices. I place music next to theology and give it the highest praise. —Martin Luther

    photo of the inside of a cello

    Adrian Borda, Inside a Cello, Sony A7 camera with fisheye lens, 2017. Used by permission.

    Contributed By RosalindStevenson2 Rosalind Stevenson

    Rosalind Stevenson is the magazine designer for Plough. She lives at Fox Hill Bruderhof in Walden, New York.

    Learn More
    1 Comments
    You have ${x} free ${w} remaining. This is your last free article this month. We hope you've enjoyed your free articles. This article is reserved for subscribers.

      Already a subscriber? Sign in

    Try 3 months of unlimited access. Start your FREE TRIAL today. Cancel anytime.

    Start free trial now