Apollo Helios Apollo Phoebus |
In Greek myth, Apollo is the
God of Harmony, Music, Prophecy and Healing. When he first came to
Olympus with his lyre, the Gods could think of nothing but music. The
nine Muses burst out singing while the three Graces, the three Horai and
Harmonia, Hebe and Aphrodite (another group of nine) danced in a circle
with Artemis leading them from the center. Even Ares and Hermes dropped
their spear and staff in order to leap and cavort among the dancers.
Apollo was promptly declared to be the God who brings nature into
harmony. He plucks the strings of his lyre with a plectrum made of
sunlight.
Except, the lyre hadn’t been invented yet.
On
the day Hermes was born, he found a tortoise and used its shell to make
the first lyre. He then stole Apollo’s cows for a small barbeque. When
he was caught, Hermes gave the lyre to Apollo and taught him to play it
as payment for the 50 cows he had already eaten. Apollo was delighted
and felt he had gotten the better end of the deal saying the lyre’s
harmonies caused bliss, love and restful sleep. He even used the string
music to make the walls of Troy dance into place (unless that was
Poseidon and his Godlike masonry).
Before
the lyre lessons, Apollo played the aulos, a double-reed instrument
that turned breath into flying notes and made all who heard it forget
their worries. He played laments, music for sacrifices and foreign
dances on the wild instrument. He even played country melodies in King
Admetus's herding fields, were Apollo went to atone for several
different wrongs.
Except, the aulos hadn’t been invented yet.
When
Medusa was killed, her sisters wailed and keened for her so beautifully
that Athena stopped to listen. She picked reeds and made the first
aulos to imitate the Gorgons’ singing. The aulos became the wind
instrument of choice in ancient Greece and aulos players were often kept
on city payrolls just in case they were needed to appease a God or
fight a plague (plagues were one of Apollo's special forms of revenge).
The instrument was so common, today it is mistakenly translated as flute
in English in spite of being played more like an oboe. Hermes even
claimed he had invented it when he created the lyre, just to get in on
the action. Apollo finally asked Athena to teach him the aulos so he
could play harmonies and keep time for the antiphonal Muses in his role
as their choir leader.
Except, he wasn’t the leader of the Muses yet.
Artemis
sang and danced with the Muses in all the earlier stories and she was
considered their dance leader even after Apollo got the higher ranking
title. Some say he was in love with all of Mnemosyne’s Muse daughters
and decided to stay unmarried when he couldn’t figure out how to marry
all nine at once. Others said he was the father of the three Muses at
Delphi; Kephiso “of the river Kephiso”, Borysthenis “strength” and
Apollonis, a female version of Apollo.
Except…
In
all the stories of Apollo’s many conquests, there is not one mention of
a possible mother for the singing poets. The Muses of Delphi may have
accepted Apollo as their honorary father, but the story doesn’t seem to
have been finished. Possibly this was because they weren’t the most
popular Muses anyway. This left hints and gaps showing how Apollo had
moved into a place already filled to the rafters with Gods. There are
four stories among Apollo’s affairs and descendants that could have
included the Muses fairly easily and somewhat logically, based on
connections to the oracle site, music, poetry or a combination of these
traits. But the Muses are not even hinted at as offspring of any of
these women.
Dryope was tricked by Apollo in the shape of a tortoise, the animal whose shell was originally used to make lyres.
Phanothea
and Phemonoe were priestesses of Apollo who are both credited with
inventing hexameter, the poetic form the Delphi oracles traditionally
used. They are sometimes considered to be the same person but only
Phemonoe is listed as Apollo’s daughter.
Celaeno/Melaena
and Apollo’s descendents gave their names to Delphi and the Pythian
oracle. She was the daughter of the Kephiso river, the same river the
Muse Kephiso is named after.
Thyia,
another daughter of the river Kephiso, was the first person to sacrifice
in honor of Dionysus at Delphi. Apollo and Dionysus shared custody of
the Delphi oracle. She is sometimes the mother and grandmother of
Delphus and Pythes instead of Celaeno/Melaeno.
When
Apollo claimed the Pythian oracle, it already spoke in meters and
poems, which the Muses had loved long before Apollo was born. Delphi’s
three resident Muses, even had to be renamed for the low, middle and
high strings on the lyre that Apollo played before Apollo was allowed to
join their trio.
Speaking of lyres,
there were two different kinds that were used strictly for different
styles of music. Apollo only played one with his uplifting, character
building music. Dionysus played the other for his drunken runs through
the mountains and to pump up the emotions of his theater shows. The
Muses of course loved all music, not just Apollo Approved chords. Its
hardly surprising that “Apollo’s Muses” kept running off to see
Dionysus’s latest plays with their toe tapping tunes. Two Muses, Thaleia
and Melpomene, even claimed comedy and tragedy as their special musical
areas.
The Contests: Reeds vs. Strings
One
day, after Apollo gave up the aulos for the lyre, Marsyas, a
goat-footed satyr, found Athena’s first set of aulos reeds which almost
played themselves thanks to the Goddess’s breath having touched them. He
naturally challenged Apollo to a contest, satyrs having very little
sense. They met and played in Phyrgia near a lake full of reeds perfect
for making aulos mouth pieces. Some say Marsyas won and Apollo was so
furious, he skinned Marsyas and used the goatskin as a wineskin. Some
say Apollo won and skinned Marsyas for losing but the little country
Gods turned Marsyas into a stream. Some say Marsyas won the first round
but then Apollo turned his lyre upside down and played again or he sang
while playing, both tricks a wind player can’t do. In other words,
Apollo the God of natural rules and order, cheated. In most versions,
the Muses were the judges, making it seem even less likely to have been a
fair contest. Some people have claimed this story was meant to show
that the civilized lyre was a better instrument than the bawdy aulos
which was used in the worship of various foreign Gods. Although how the
versions with Apollo losing show that, I’m not quite sure. The tag to
the story, that Marsyas’s aulos was dedicated to Apollo after the
contest, raises even more questions. One or two versions even have
Apollo feeling sorry for how he treats his competition and tearing the
strings from his lyre in atonement. Finally, Satyrs may have been the
mythical version of shaman-priests wearing animal skins. To “skin” one
would be nothing more than taking off a heavy robe and returning the
priest to his everyday life.
Pan playing the double aulos |
Cinyras/Kyknos
was a king of Cyprus, a priest of Aphrodite and sometimes a son of
Apollo. He got into a lyre contest with Apollo, too, but this time, both
seem to have played the same instrument. The challenge suddenly became
much more personal. Cinyras lost, we’re told, and threw himself into the
sea or was turned into a swan (sacred to both Apollo and Aphrodite).
His 50 daughters also turned into birds, out of sorrow it was said.
Though on a side note, the Muses, who were known to turn into birds
themselves, had once or twice changed other musical contestants into
birds.
Paean, The Music Therapist
In
early Greece, many healers used paeans as musical charms that both
praised and asked a God for help. They were performed as a prayer, for
good luck, to avert evil, to ask for healing, before battles and after
victories. The early formal paean had a solo leader and a choral
response while later versions were mostly antiphonal chorus, both very
like the description of the Muses singing. They were usually accompanied
by the kithara (Apollo’s lyre), but on the battlefield they were
accompanied by both aulos and kithara, the instruments from Apollo’s
contests. Paean is also the name of the God who healed both Ares and
Hades with herbs and music when no one else could. Eventually, Paean
became one of Apollo’s more famous titles, though other Gods with links
to healing used that title too.
Apollo Musagetes “of the Muses”
Apollo Kitharodos/Chithaeroedus “the lyre singer”
Apollo Nomius “of the meadow/pasture” who plays shepherd pipes/aulos
Apollo Pythius of oracles, meters and poems
Apollo Paean “healer” and song
Apollo
may have gotten top billing, but he always ended up sharing music and
roles with others. He learned music and song from anyone he could,
civilized or not. He organized music, defined harmony and made music
into the finest, most soothing balm. Apollo is the dabbler who learns
new music for fun and the student driven by ambition. He is the patron
of all the divas who are justly proud of their skills and all the
musicians who can’t wait to learn a new instrument. He is the first
music theorist and orchestrator, the conductor and the promoter. He
dragged society round by the ears to honor musical accomplishments and
made music something all people could share. He shows how to use music
to bring peace and healing to the soul.
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