Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Where is everyone?
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post[/B]
Why? does it matter?
Our man in the brass section, encouraged me a while ago to post my views on music, (so its YOUR fault Horny !) regardless of how competent I felt, and on a board where there is so much expertise.
And I find I learn a lot,and listen better when I am trying to formulate my thoughts for an audience, even if that audience is imaginary and more knowledgeable than me, and even if the real audience could even me on ignore !!
Listening well, to the Roehre level of discipline, isn't always easy to do, so I tend to see it as an aspiration, rather than a rule.
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Being able to memorise quite long pieces of music from an early age probably helped me understand some of the intricacies of musical form. Johann Strauss waltzes were commonplace on the late 1940s wireless I heard prior to attending my first school aged 4 in 1949. Through them, in particular, I discovered cyclical musical forms that returned to Theme 1 probably before finding out about ABA song forms, because the themes were so easily memorable as almost to become earworms. From knowing the Schumann piano concerto by heart in my head from age 7, by age 13 it was no problem learning about sonata form; I already knew about canon through singing exercises on "Three Blind Mice" at school, and from there it was but a short distance to fugue and counterpoint in general. From there onwards, the business of finding melody in, say, Messiaen's "Chronochromie", or suggesting that there might even be a tenuous connection between the section where instruments enter staccato one by one to build up the massed fractured texture that culminates in chorale chords being flung between the three orchestras of "Gruppen" and any Bach chorale which culminates in the theme proclaimed in fully harmonised triumph, is something that even I, with my near-zero sight reading skills, feel undaunted to bring into the hopefully intelligent kind of discussion it is as nice to find on this forum occasionally as in chatting to strangers in a Proms interval.
The point I'm trying to make to french frank and others who feel they are unable to communicate purely musical experience verbally beyond saying what they like or dislike, is that what is to be said is all there after the listening, and a bit of background stuff on compositional techniques. There ain't that much to our elite, really!Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 11-08-14, 17:18.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
Incidentally, your mentioning Hans Keller's non-verbal analysis (of which I've forgotten the name - "Functional Analysis"? Seems un-Kellerian: how can analysis be dysfunctional?) is exactly the sort of thing I believe Roehre is talking. It's what Wagner's leitmotifs thrive on - and he* would have claimed that it has its origins in those late Beethoven Quartets.
* = Wagner, not Roehre.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post... of the work's eventual return to its initial E flat, and how at the very end this reversion to the major
But yes - Music can be spoken about as eloquently as any of the Arts and Ideas; Keller did so frequently, as have Robert Simpson, Tovey, Anthony Payne, Michael Hall, Paul Griffiths ... and not a few contributors to this Forum.
Great #78, by the way[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIs there a green-with-envy emoticon anywhere?
John Ireland once said that the problem with the Classics for him was more-or-less being able to predict accurately what was coming next, whether nor not one had heard the specific work beforehand. One of the things I like about "modern music" is this feeling of not quite knowing always, which starts, probably, with Debussy. There are points in his music when I think, "My goodness, he's really worked his way into a corner now - how on earth is he going to get out of it?" then marvelling at some melodic turn or operation of an harmonic sleight-of-hand that allows the music to carry on. You could say this is why I like jazz so much, too.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostListen to any piece with which you already have some familiarity. My guess is that as it proceeds you can probably anticipate what is coming next. You are well on the way to storing it in your memory. Try it!
John Ireland once said that the problem with the Classics for him was more-or-less being able to predict accurately what was coming next, whether nor not one had heard the specific work beforehand. One of the things I like about "modern music" is this feeling of not quite knowing always, which starts, probably, with Debussy. There are points in his music when I think, "My goodness, he's really worked his way into a corner now - how on earth is he going to get out of it?" then marvelling at some melodic turn or operation of an harmonic sleight-of-hand that allows the music to carry on. You could say this is why I like jazz so much, too.
I was listening to Schubert D960 last night and thinking much the same...(about unexpected things happening....)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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Roehre
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBeing able to memorise quite long pieces of music from an early age probably helped me understand some of the intricacies of musical form. Johann Strauss waltzes were commonplace on the late 1940s wireless I heard prior to attending my first school aged 4 in 1949. Through them, in particular, I discovered cyclical musical forms that returned to Theme 1 probably before finding out about ABA song forms, because the themes were so easily memorable as almost to become earworms. From knowing the Schumann piano concerto by heart in my head from age 7, by age 13 it was no problem learning about sonata form; I already knew about canon through singing exercises on "Three Blind Mice" at school, and from there it was but a short distance to fugue and counterpoint in general. From there onwards, the business of finding melody in, say, Messiaen's "Chronochromie", or suggesting that there might even be a tenuous connection between the section where instruments enter staccato one by one to build up the massed fractured texture that culminates in chorale chords being flung between the three orchestras of "Gruppen" and any Bach chorale which culminates in the theme proclaimed in fully harmonised triumph, is something that even I, with my near-zero sight reading skills, feel undaunted to bring into the hopefully intelligent kind of discussion it is as nice to find on this forum occasionally as in chatting to strangers in a Proms interval.
The point I'm trying to make to french frank and others who feel they are unable to communicate purely musical experience verbally beyond saying what they like or dislike, is that what is to be said is all there after the listening, and a bit of background stuff on compositional techniques. There ain't that much to our elite, really!
I had to discover "classical" music all by myself - as my parents were completely not interested and my peers even less.
Only one hour of music a week in my grammar school for one year, and reading and listening as much as I could, developed my own and therefore completely independent musical thinking.
I still recall one of my earliest LPs, Holliger playing Fiala, Hummel and JCBach oboe+orchestra works. I was flabbergasted by the diffference in sound between those works, though it was the same orchestra and the same oboe-player (and they even made a mistake in the sleeve text: it was JSBach, not JCBach, wasn't it?).
That was the beginning of a voyage of discovery [which started with Beethoven 2 and Leonore 3] which hasn't ended yet, now 43 years later.Last edited by Guest; 11-08-14, 18:19.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostListen to any piece with which you already have some familiarity. My guess is that as it proceeds you can probably anticipate what is coming next. You are well on the way to storing it in your memory. Try it!
John Ireland once said that the problem with the Classics for him was more-or-less being able to predict accurately what was coming next, whether nor not one had heard the specific work beforehand. One of the things I like about "modern music" is this feeling of not quite knowing always, which starts, probably, with Debussy. There are points in his music when I think, "My goodness, he's really worked his way into a corner now - how on earth is he going to get out of it?" then marvelling at some melodic turn or operation of an harmonic sleight-of-hand that allows the music to carry on. You could say this is why I like jazz so much, too.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMy problem is trying to play or sing from memory.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut you recognised the piano piece, even if you couldn't identify it. Similarly, if the bits you recognised had reappeared in another work, wouldn't you have recognised (if not identified) that the same phrase/melody was being re-used?
Now, off to listen to Op 131.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 ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut you recognised the piano piece, even if you couldn't identify it. Similarly, if the bits you recognised had reappeared in another work, wouldn't you have recognised (if not identified) that the same phrase/melody was being re-used?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOne of my listening problems is overfamiliarity, and I am beginning to wonder whether those such as Flossie, french frank and Eine Alpensinfonie, who have difficulties with memorising and contextualising recognisable bits have a slight advantage!
I have a vague memory that someone called Burpless got shot to it in that novel by Aldous Huxley (I have an awful memory for novels too ).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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