Originally posted by waldo
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Fewer listeners are attracted to Music that has no such "narrative" associations - just as with the controversies that arose with the emergence of "abstract" instrumental Music in the early 17th Century, the idea of Music creating its own "grammar" and "logic" totally unconnected to words or dance movements is unfamiliar to the larger number of disinterested listeners. It's something that needs repeated experience to be accustomed to; something that the pressures of time, work, and life generally makes extremely difficult for a great many people.
Forumistas generally are more accustomed to more "dedicated" (there should be a better word - I don't mean that other listeners aren't really "dedicated" to their Music) listening; but it isn't surprising that the "filter" continues here, too - with a preference for orchestral Music, even if of a more "rarefied" repertoire, outnumbering those who prefer Monteverdi Madrigals, Machaut isorhythmic motets, Webern's songs, or Haydn's String Quartets. And, of course, there are a great many of us here who delight quite as much in the Tone Poems of such a major composer as Sibelius as we do in the Consort Music of William Lawes. But, in the wider picture, more people will prefer Beethoven's Fifth Symphony to his c# minor Quartet, or The Rite of Spring to Debussy's Sonata for Flute, Harp, & Viola.
No judgement intended.
I wonder, though, if these Posts might be better accommodated on a separate Thread away from discussions of Mahler #2 and the relevant BaL?
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