https://iservalan.gumroad.com/l/concervatoire
This essay accompanies an audio episode from iServalan and forms part of a wider approach to learning music through listening, movement, and attention.Today, I'm Wondering, What Does Punk Have to Do with Baroque? Let's think....Noise, Ornament, Rebellion, Control At first glance, punk and Baroque music appear to be sworn enemies. Baroque is ornate, structured, saturated with detail. Punk is stripped back, loud, suspicious of polish. One belongs to powdered wigs and cathedrals; the other to safety pins and squats. But listen more closely — not to the surface, but to the function — and something curious emerges. Both Baroque and punk were reactions to control.The Sex Pistols would probably never have admitted it, but their power came not from chaos, but from compression. Short forms. Limited materials. A tight palette. Much like Baroque composers working within strict harmonic and rhetorical frameworks, punk performances relied on intensity rather than sprawl. Songs were brief, gestures sharp, messages concentrated. Nothing wandered. In both cases, the danger was contained. That containment is what made it volatile.Baroque music did not emerge as polite background sound. It arrived during periods of religious, political, and social tension. It was accused of being excessive, indulgent, even morally corrupting. Critics worried it overwhelmed the senses. That it did too much. That it moved people too strongly. Punk was accused of exactly the same thing. Both styles used excess as defiance. Not because they lacked discipline, but because discipline had become a tool of power. Baroque composers understood the rules of counterpoint intimately — they stretched them until emotion leaked through the cracks. Punk musicians often knew the rules too; they simply refused to ask permission to use them. This is where the myth collapses. Punk was never anti-skill. It was anti-gatekeeping.
Baroque was never indulgent for indulgence’s sake. It was rhetorical, gestural, urgent. Both privileged message over prettiness. Gesture over refinement. Impact over approval. Even the economics rhyme. Punk’s DIY ethos — self-released records, zines, borrowed spaces — mirrors the hustle of Baroque composers navigating patrons, churches, and courts. Different centuries. Same survival instinct. What scared people wasn’t the noise.
It was the loss of control. Punk didn’t reject classical music.
It rejected permission. And in that sense, it is far closer to Baroque than anyone likes to admit.
iServalan™
Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.
🎧 Podcast & essays:
https://iservalan.gumroad.com📚 Books & long-form work by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0CWGX2DJ6🎨 Professional profile:
https://www.a-n.co.uk/person/sarnia-de-la-mare-frsa-2/
#iServalan #ContinuumApproach #MusicPodcast #RadicalListening #MusicAcrossGenres
#PerformanceCulture #SarniaDeLaMaré
Published on 12 hours ago
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