Originally posted by Beef Oven!
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David Matthews SYMPHONY NO. 8 First Performance 17/04/15
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Richard Barrett
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere is a level of understanding of an artist's work which can only be gained by a broad and sustained engagement with it. But if DM's 8th symphony can't be appreciated by any other means that surely makes it weak even on its own terms.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere needs to be something about a first listening which is sufficiently attractive to create the desire for a second.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut as far as I'm concerned this discussion is not primarily about musical taste. It's about what this piece of music (not "the symphony" or some other generalisation, and not David Matthews and his intentions, whatever they are) means in its cultural context.Last edited by ahinton; 27-04-15, 13:26.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere needs to be something about a first listening which is sufficiently attractive to create the desire for a second.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI meant (of course!!!) for an individual listener.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostOf course you did!!! But on the basis of that specific criterion, the symphony was a success, wasn't it?
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View PostOf course you did!!! But on the basis of that specific criterion, the symphony was a success, wasn't it?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI suppose so, but that's not a particularly interesting matter, is it? All kinds of rubbish can be "successful" as we see around us every day. The discussion here has rather been about the meaning of this "aesthetic of denial".It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI suppose so, but that's not a particularly interesting matter, is it? All kinds of rubbish can be "successful" as we see around us every day. The discussion here has rather been about the meaning of this "aesthetic of denial".
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAs I see it, everyone should be allowed to create music in the way they wish, paint as they wish, write as they wish. There is no freedom in art if that isn't so. To feel constrained to do it in a way that pleases the masses - or the minorities - simply in order to satisfy THEIR expectations seems to me (a non creator) to make the whole enterprise hardly worthwhile to the creator.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View PostAs I see it, everyone should be allowed to create music in the way they wish, paint as they wish, write as they wish. There is no freedom in art if that isn't so.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI suppose so, but that's not a particularly interesting matter, is it? All kinds of rubbish can be "successful" as we see around us every day. The discussion here has rather been about the meaning of this "aesthetic of denial".
This is what "reflecting our times" in music means to me, at any rate; and I guess it is what will set much of the pace for the future, while the forces driving the imponderables and complexities of our age remain in place. maybe some future age of simplicity in which all are included for our inborn value, rather than ability to command and dominate one way or another, will find echoes in simpler means of expression and delivery.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIt certainly seems to me to risk making it an unnecessarily onerous one of dubious value; "entartete musik" and "formalism" were once considered to be out of order in certain places because they were perceived not to conform to certain expectations of the contemporary composer, perhaps in part because they might have been thought by the powers that were to represent some kind of "æsthetic denial" of the realities of modern life...
There are always going to be "expectations" of art and artists - what's important it seems to me is where such expectations come from. If the tenor of the times is to pronounce relatively simplified means of expression as being what gets certain composers or concert organisers accepted over those communicating a more complex picture, that says something about how the kind of product the arts establishment, in its dependency on or collusion with increasingly commercialised funding, wants the public to be in receipt of. It shouldn't take too much difficulty adding two and two together to figure out why that should be the case today: "difficult" art helps facilitate a questioning of received wisdoms, and this, apart from the deeper issues of authenticity under discussion, is problematic for those who hold sway over politics and society today.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 27-04-15, 16:39.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThere seems to be an inexhorable law gravitating in the direction of complexity, operating ever since composers in the wake of Bach's compexity tried to start off by simplifying their means and ended up making them more complex
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostTo me that would mean being able or unable or unwilling to express in art or music the complexities of today's surrounding world - be they economic, political (being another word for religious to me), ecological or cultural. There seems to be an inexhorable law gravitating in the direction of complexity, operating ever since composers in the wake of Bach's compexity tried to start off by simplifying their means and ended up making them more complex: think CPE Bach's transition away from contrapuntal complexity towards relatively simply outlayed tonally-gravitated contrasting narratives leading eventually to Beethoven's Ninth and the late quartets; Debusy's early inner battles regarding whether to go for popularity or more elaborate sophistication; Neo-Classicism in the 1930s and '40s giving way to 12-tonery, and 12-tonery to integral serialism and stochasm; post-serialism to a minimalism that has yet to find a sequel adequate to its times; Miles Davis's and John Coltrane's bid to simplify harmonic procedure by reverting to scales, and amid the urban context those scale choices and cross-combinations becoming evermore divorced from their precursorship in a part-recalled African past in Coltrane's great late recordings, along with those touched by association. That the modern composer can give expression to all this with access to the technical means of linguistic expansion and sound generation makes the world of musical complexification more readily available to the composer or real-time performer using computers etc than it was for Schoenberg when in some kind of mental whirl creating those still extraordinary sounds in Erwartung in a month on score paper as far back as 1909, or Stockhausen glueing scrupulously measured lengths of pre-recorded tape together in 1954 - and this is to be seen in the work of some groups operating between the worlds of contemporary classical, jazz, and improvised music, using these techniques, as well as in the composer's studio.
This is what "reflecting our times" in music means to me, at any rate; and I guess it is what will set much of the pace for the future, while the forces driving the imponderables and complexities of our age remain in place.Last edited by ahinton; 27-04-15, 17:06.
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