Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Especially since the time of Modernism, a work of art has always seemed a comment on what precedes it, especially within a given artist's oeuvre. That tension in Lutoslawski between the violence, the physical experience of disintegration in Livre or Mi-Parti, or the loose, orbiting fragments of the 2nd Symphony's 1st section, then the fading of its end; and the attempt to form meaningfully resolved structures like the 3rd Symphony,or narrative "Chains" in the classically laid-out Piano Concerto; isn't this conflict the classic modern dilemma - the undermining DOUBT that meaning can be found at all, whatever your creative choices or impulses?
I think that is why some of us enjoy it - because it seems thrillingly, ( ) uncomfortably, ( ) true ( ).
(Apart, of course, from the sheer, meaningless, sonic thrill...)
(Apart, of course, from the sheer, meaningless, sonic thrill...)
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