Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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David Matthews SYMPHONY NO. 8 First Performance 17/04/15
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat's an interesting idea, I'd never really seen it like that before. But complexity (in music, say) isn't just a reflection of social phenomena and historical processes; I think there's something deeper than that going on, in the sense that the certainty, the divine order if you like, which ultimately lies behind the necessity for closure (or the implication that there's a closure-shaped hole which isn't being filled), has been progressively dismantled, for example by Marx, Darwin, Freud, Einstein, Heisenberg, Schoenberg, Kandinsky, Joyce etc. etc. - of course their discoveries required a certain stage in social evolution to be conceivable in the first place - and the result is on the one hand something profoundly exciting for artists (and their audiences) of a progressive frame of mind, and seemingly something rather scary for their more nostalgic colleagues.Last edited by ahinton; 27-04-15, 16:55.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat's an interesting idea, I'd never really seen it like that before. But complexity (in music, say) isn't just a reflection of social phenomena and historical processes; I think there's something deeper than that going on, in the sense that the certainty, the divine order if you like, which ultimately lies behind the necessity for closure (or the implication that there's a closure-shaped hole which isn't being filled), has been progressively dismantled, for example by Marx, Darwin, Freud, Einstein, Heisenberg, Schoenberg, Kandinsky, Joyce etc. etc. - of course their discoveries required a certain stage in social evolution to be conceivable in the first place - and the result is on the one hand something profoundly exciting for artists (and their audiences) of a progressive frame of mind, and seemingly something rather scary for their more nostalgic colleagues.
Edit: One thing howerver that always strikes me is the coincidence that the acceleration in the complexification process really took place after the establishment of capitalism, though for detail one would also have to take account of the concomitant (and resulting) weakening of interrelationships between church, state, business and art.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 27-04-15, 17:01.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWell, that's undoubtedly the most comprehensive view of the notion of what reflecting, or responding to, one's time might represent for the composer that's been expressd in this thread so far, although given that, as you say, "the modern composer can give expression to all this [i.e. the ever increasing range of available musics, techniques et al] with access to the technical means of linguistic expansion and sound generation [that] makes the world of musical complexification more readily available to the composer", it might be taken to suggest that reflecting or responding to one's time means reflecting or responding to ever more and more means of musical expression in part because of its availability for exploration and absorption rather than reflecting or responding to extra-musical events, societal developments, discoveries and all the rest of what makes up contemporary life in the various contrasting environments in which it is lived by "composers and other lunatics" (as Sorabji once put it, albeit with sharp tongue firmly in both cheeks).
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Critical theory offers us a rich, wide and exciting variety of ways to approach a text, texts of courses having potentially a very wide range of meaning.
All of these theories, if used wisely, can help us to new insights on a text, some perhaps more helpful than others, and, importantly, some more appealing to an individual than others.
The value of these varying approaches are surely the potential to approach texts in many different and illuminating ways, not that one is necessarily required to prevail, in order to prove its worth.Last edited by teamsaint; 27-04-15, 19:55.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThis puts it much more comprehensively, thanks!
Edit: One thing howerver that always strikes me is the coincidence that the acceleration in the complexification process really took place after the establishment of capitalism, though for detail one would also have to take account of the concomitant (and resulting) weakening of interrelationships between church, state, business and art.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPerhaps the politically and historically conscious artist or composer might see the two facets of what you refer to as interdependent? It wouldn't seem too much to ask - or would it?
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm thinking now of pieces such as "African Sanctus" and the accusations that erupted around it and similar such pieces of "neo-colonial expropriation".
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostCritical theory offers us a rich, wide and exciting variety of ways to approach a text, texts of courses having potentially a very wide range of meaning.
All of these theories, if used wisely, can help us to new insights on a text, some perhaps more helpful than others, and, importantly, some more appealing to an individual than others.
The value of these varying approaches are surely the potential to approach texts in many different and illuminating ways, not that one is necessarily required to prevail, in order to prove its worth.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostNot necessarily, no.
I've not thought about that in years; what did/do you think about that particular brouhaha?
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOn the one hand I can't believe the wealth and range of resources once available to the modern composer have become exhausted
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Going back to the David Matthews 8th after a week, the 1st movement allegro energico sounds far stronger, varied and more purposeful than it did before - the lack of focus was in me, not the music (hence the need for careful remarks after the premiere! - though the rather colourless sound balance & slightly cautious performance didn't help). What gives the piece an unusual shape is the lengthy return of the brief introduction as an extended 3rd section, almost as long as the allegro itself, which sounds as if the allegro has been interrupted by another slow movement. That threw me a bit. I'd also missed how the four dances in the finale all reappear briefly through the coda, with the first appearing last of all. I've probably overlooked other intricacies.
(I've only recently twigged to the Lutoslawski-Chain-like construction of the 2nd Violin Concerto's 2nd movement, too transfixed by its chameleonic, catch-your-breath beauty (or the Australian Birdsong interlude later on) to focus on that feature...)
Again, the stark contrasts between each of the 8th's movements now sound much more vivid and strange. With the last two, Mahler's 4th kept coming to mind. But all of this won't matter much if a listener is out of sympathy with the music's ethos...
I hope we get a big, bright & shiny hi-res Chandos recording soon!
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Teamsaint's mention of French Structuralist ideas put me in mind of intertext or intertextuality, one sense of which is that "texts" or artworks have their richest meanings in relation to other works, perhaps only mean anything in relation to them. It seems to me a logical contradiction to deny or minimise the importance of Matthews' other orchestral works in relation to the meaning or understanding of this 8th Symphony, whilst insisting on evaluating it through reference to the works and musical styles of others!Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 27-04-15, 23:53.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThree farts and a raspberry - was a saying of Barbirolli to describe contemporary music that he disliked .
Regarding intertextuality, Jayne, I did write a couple of pages back: "There is a level of understanding of an artist's work which can only be gained by a broad and sustained engagement with it." In other words I was by no means "denying ... the importance of the context of Matthews' other orchestral works", at least in principle. But I also said that if that's the only way to appreciate a given piece there must surely be something lacking in it. Anyway, as I keep saying, discussions of taste are a side-issue here as far as I'm concerned. It's easy to say that one likes or dislikes some piece of music, and nobody has any right to claim that one should or shouldn't like it. I'm interested, as I've said, in wider issues of music and culture, although of course these always exist in some kind of symbiotic relationship with one's tastes.Last edited by Guest; 27-04-15, 23:56.
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