There
are geniuses among us. Some of you might be geniuses. But since it is
impossible to define what a genius is, few of us can ever know who is or is not
a genius. I will just share some insights, from the evolutionary point of view.
First,
what genius is not. It is not just intelligence. I am intelligent, as
seen from the outside, but when I am being intelligent, as when I am writing, I
can see myself from the inside: I am paddling like crazy, like a dog trying to
not drown in a flood of stupidity around me.
But
for a real genius, everything comes almost without thinking. Mozart would fit
anybody’s idea of a genius. He could write the most exquisite music without
even having to think about it; in his own words, he wrote music “as the sows
piss.” This certainly does not describe anything I do.
Second,
genius shows up in the details. I can think of some musical examples. Consider
the Nutcracker ballet by Pyotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsy. It is full of delightful
melodies, which millions of people know. The ballet is performed hundreds of
times around the world at Christmas. I heard that The Nutcracker performance is
what keeps a ballet troupe in the black for the season. It may be the most
successful ballet in human history.
But
that is not what makes it a work of genius. I do not have a score to the
Nutcracker, nor can I navigate the online public domain fragments, but I will
tell you where to find the music I have in mind. It is in the Danses de Poupées Mecaniques. The magician Drosselmeyer has brought three mechanical dolls for
Clara. A lot of skill is required for the three ballet performers since they
must all have graceful yet jerky movements that make them seem like robots. The
middle one is a woman dancing a waltz, although, this being Tchaikovsky, it is
hemiola, with three-quarter time sounding like three-two time. It is not One
two three One two three but is One two Three one Two three. It is an exquisite
and seldom remembered melody. Right at the end, when the strings repeat the
melody one more time, there is a gentle wavering of two flutes. This is the
detail that makes it a work of genius. I heard it several times over the years,
but never noticed it until my grandkids made me play a video clip of it over
and over and over and over.
A
similar genius-detail can be found right at the beginning of Hindemith’s
Symphony in B flat for band. Few people would rank Hindemith up with Mozart or
Tchaikovsky, and I, for one, am not sure. When we rehearsed this piece in band
at the University of California in 1977, the director raved on and on about
what a genius Hindemith was. Maybe he was right. In the first movement, the
trumpets carry a soaring melody (Theme 1). A few minutes later, the oboe
introduces Theme 2. But right in the very first measure, just as the trumpets
enter with Theme 1, the rest of the band plays just the first five notes of
Theme 2. The intervals are correct, but just in the tuba line! Nobody could
possibly hear it. Such attention to unseen and unheard detail is something that
ordinary composers overlook in their rush to produce something that publishers
want.
Third,
genius can sometimes work together insights from different realms of thought:
music and literature, or literature and science, etc. Leonardo Da Vinci, a
genius of both science and art, is everyone’s prime example of this. Isaac
Asimov, a biochemist, might have also been an example. He wrote science,
fiction, theology, and humor. More often, genius is narrow. Mozart was a genius
musician, but who knows if he might have had the rudiments of some other kind
of genius. Genius can be narrower yet. John Philip Sousa was a genius in
writing band marches; of the best twenty band marches, Sousa probably wrote
seventeen of them. He wrote 130 marches, but his operettas, fantasies,
overtures, suites, and dances (which add up to 83) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Philip_Sousa]
have been largely forgotten. According to a 1952 movie, whenever he tried to
write something other than a march, it came out sounding like a march. In the
movie, he wrote a love song, “My love is a weeping willow down by the
streamside fair…” His wife played piano as he sang. Then she started laughing
and played the music as a march, the now famous trio of Semper Fidelis.
Fourth,
genius can be agony. One thinks of Beethoven struggling with every detail. In
fact, most of the great composers seemed to have mental problems, except
apparently Bach and Mendelssohn. If this sounds like I have contradicted my
first point, about genius being easy, maybe I have, I dunno. But consider
Tchaikovsky again. I have heard that Tchaikovsky loathed, despised, hated the
Nutcracker. Maybe not his own music, but the plot seemed utterly stupid to him,
even though it was written by an author today revered (Alexandre Dumas). It
must be admitted Tchaikovsky was under time pressure, having to write an opera
Iolanta at the same time. (I’ve never heard it either.) But it is clear that
Tchaikovsky jotted down lines of music perhaps with disdain; “There, they’ll
love that,” as he scribbled in the little flute murmurs. But he wrote perfect
music even for a piece that he hated. I’m sure that I have given more thought
to that little bit of music for the mechanical ballerina than he did. The music
Tchaikovsky despised has brought pleasure to hundreds of millions of people.
Genius
seems like a supernatural gift. But it evolved. The human brain is capable of
astounding complexity, more in some people than others, and usually only after
a childhood of mental stimulation. The exact form it takes may be a matter of
chance. Some people (often autistic) can remember incredibly long strings of
numbers. The extreme complexity of the human brain has a very clear
evolutionary advantage. Smart people can read the physical and social landscape
and use it to their advantage. They can amaze the other people and become
revered, and fecund, leaders of the tribe. They could figure out a lot of
things, and even if they knew how they did it, they would not have told
anybody. They could out-bamboozle everyone else. They were especially good at getting
people to believe them. Their intelligence continually contributed to the
collective intelligence of their tribes, of related tribes, and eventually of
the whole species.
We,
all of us, are the evolutionary descendants of at least some geniuses.