Originally posted by kernelbogey
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Reputations
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Richard Barrett
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostDo you not think that - with all art - a reliable canon becomes established?
In literature, Shakespeare, Dante, Goethe, Tolstoy, Austen...
In Visual art Michelangelo, Goya, Turner, Picasso...
I choose random examples, but I would have thought a canon exists in music, too. Yes, there will be distortions from current culture but time will even those out.
At the same time, the iconic figures can become just that, revered for their reputations, preserved as national institutions. Shakespeare for instance is already being regularly modernised to make it accessible to audiences and it's not hard to imagine the more obscure allusions in the text being phased out or reworked. It is largely the "tradition", the RSC institution and compulsory study of Shakespeare in schools that keeps his work alive as I doubt many people now read him for pleasure. How many now read Dante?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt seems to me that people in each period have a tendency to think that "their" canon has reached a steady state, with only the inconveniently constant appearance of new work to complicate the picture.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostIsn't the 'canon' to a large extent established by an elite of some kind
Perhaps a point is reached where the work of a few "masters" itself provides a criterion for excellence rather than the other way around. I remember reading a book about Haydn in which certain works were criticised for basically not being Mozart (or the "Mozart" of those works admitted into the canon of greatness). And of course this is a particular problem regarding much contemporary music, which regularly receives criticism and even dismissal on the grounds of not conforming to what are supposed to be timeless criteria but which actually derive from the work of specific personalities, usually from the past.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostYes Haydn was in my mind too, Richard. When I first started listening to classical music I think he was regarded as second-rate; it's now clear that he was hugely venerated in his lifetime, and much of his music IMV is superior to some of Mozart....
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostBut isn't that just the other side of the coin that RB was describing, where Haydn was judged by virtue of his possession, or lack of possession, of Mozartian qualities? The Haydn v Mozart debates which crop up again and again on these boards to me just illustrate the pointlessness of comparing two quite different composers; in the end someone will come down in favour of the qualities of one of them they prize more highly, but so what? It's like the equally pointless Brahms v Wagner debates in the nineteenth century. The problem with evaluating composers by comparison with the works of others is that the listener will end up looking for qualities in one composer that he values in another rather than trying to assess the individual qualities of each composer (or each work).
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by aeolium View PostThe problem with evaluating composers by comparison with the works of others is that the listener will end up looking for qualities in one composer that he values in another rather than trying to assess the individual qualities of each composer (or each work).
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAnd of course this is a particular problem regarding much contemporary music, which regularly receives criticism and even dismissal on the grounds of not conforming to what are supposed to be timeless criteria but which actually derive from the work of specific personalities, usually from the past.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI think the comparatively recent history of electroacoustic music is an interesting mirror (or even time compression in a Mantra style?) of longer term things in music. Some works which are regarded as "Classics" and part of a 'canon' haven't lasted well now that the music has escaped from the confines of institutions.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhat are you thinking of in particular? I have the impression that the "classics" of electroacoustic music (Gesang der Jünglinge, Presque rien, De natura sonorum to name three things I listened to recently) have never been held in such high regard as now.
While it's true that many of these are rightly held in high regard these days I sometimes wonder if it's because of their context rather than their sonic properties ? (which IS as much a part of music as anything else).
Maybe the way that this music is less part of an "academic" world (you can now make it without needing a University or Radio studio) is more significant?
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