Originally posted by Ian
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My new piece - Symphonic Suite [WIP]
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Richard Barrett
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere seems to be a constant undercurrent, in discussions such as this, of assumption that if an artist is committed to a particular way of looking at things he/she automatically thinks other ways are invalid or that people aren't "entitled" to do things according to other principles. That really isn't the point.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAs I've said, what's most important as far as I'm concerned is expressing the freedom of the imagination.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAnother red herring is the idea of posterity. There is no point in caring about posterity. I don't think there are many creative musicians who would appeal to posterity as a justification for carrying on doing something that conservative audiences find hard to take. And there's no point in second-guessing what audiences are going to think - if one is interested in intelligent listeners with minds of their own, and not in treating them as so many automata that can be trusted to react predictably to this semi-familiar musical stimulus or that, the best one can do is to to say something like: I find this so deeply engaging/exciting/fascinating/deeply expressive that there must exist other people in the world who would also be affected by it, given that so much of our humanity is shared... even if arranging for the music to find its way to those people is something of a challenge!
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Originally posted by Ian View PostI can only give you my personal perspective - as a composer of the type I’m sure you would think ‘does this’.
If I try to compose a (tonal) lyrical melody (as an example of an aspect of music from a previous generation) I don’t feel as if I’m ‘falling back’ on to an easy solution - I find it very challenging to come up with such melodic ideas that are both uniquely distinctive and original - at least in the sense that it doesn’t infringe an existing copyright. I’m not saying I ever succeed - but it is something I sometimes try and do. It would be easier to reject the concept of tonal lyrical melody all together, but that, for me, would be a cop out.
Originally posted by Ian View PostNeither would I accept I reject the present - most of my music is influenced hugely by various popular musics. However, don’t see that I have a particular responsibility to conform to any kind of received view that seeks to pre-determine what is worthwhile.
Originally posted by Ian View PostI don’t think music can be nostalgic. It’s people who, sometimes, can be nostalgic. The music I write has nothing to do with what, from time to time I might feel nostalgic about.Last edited by ahinton; 08-10-14, 12:44.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI either disagree with you here or dont properly understand what you mean (or maybe even both). To the extent that music is composed (or improvised) by people, if some of those people are being nostalgic then the music that they produce might reasonably be expected to be the same for that very reason.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostWhat is feeling nostalgic? Having fond memories of some time in your life?
"I don’t think music can be nostalgic. It’s people who, sometimes, can be nostalgic."
Originally posted by Ian View PostI might, for example come over all nostalgic about loading the old Fender Rhodes in the back of the van and going out to do some Northern Soul gigs. But I don’t see how that would result in music that might (at a pinch, you understand) somehow relate to Debussy, Fats Waller, or Tippett (for example) nor do I think I would be tempted to knock out some Northern Soul!
"I don’t think music can be nostalgic. It’s people who, sometimes, can be nostalgic."Last edited by ahinton; 08-10-14, 13:45.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostSure, but then it seems to me as though you've deliberately cited a particularly unhelpful illustrationf whatever it was that you might have meant when writing
"I don’t think music can be nostalgic. It’s people who, sometimes, can be nostalgic."
But ok, is there a body of music that you would say is intrinsically more nostalgic than another?
Sure, there are pieces of music in all styles from all ages that I might describe as ‘tender and wistful’ but how could I accept that as an intrinsic truth about the music when I’m pretty certain someone else might find the same material ‘cloyingly sentimental’
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Originally posted by Ian View PostA real life situation all the same.
But ok, is there a body of music that you would say is intrinsically more nostalgic than another?
Sure, there are pieces of music in all styles from all ages that I might describe as ‘tender and wistful’ but how could I accept that as an intrinsic truth about the music when I’m pretty certain someone else might find the same material ‘cloyingly sentimental’
To return to the origins of this thread, it might be argued that one perceived "problem" (for which no one could reasonably blame you!) with your piece is that it risks comparison with Debussy's Sonate merely because of its instrumentation; it's surely a good thing that composers since Beethoven haven't seen fit to concern themselves with such a risk by eschewing the string quartet medium just because Beethoven wrote his C# minor quartet! - and Richard Barrett has helpfully mentioned that there are far more works for flute, viola and harp than I realised there were until he had the grace to point this out (although I still cannot help but wonder how few of the 200+ that he mentions predate Debussy's Sonate!)...Last edited by ahinton; 08-10-14, 13:47.
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Originally posted by AlexMc View PostThanks a lot for your input!
Alex, congrats on prompting such an earnest and robust debate!! I'd love to know your reaction now, just over 36 short hours since your last post (#19!). Amazing that an apparently uncontroversial original post can spark such a wide-ranging discussion (did I spot Jimmy Savile making an appearance at one point?! )
Hope it won't scare you off! Do pitch back in and keep writing - both here, and the music !!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostFor example, Sorabji's fulsome admiration of Delius was not such as to discourage him from making the occasional disparaging remark about what he saw as the composer seeming to try to encapsulate in certain of his writing a desire to recapture things of the past that appear to have been lost and to bemoan that loss
Originally posted by ahinton View PostTo return to the origins of this thread, it might be argued that one perceived "problem" (for which no one could reasonably blame you!) with your piece is that it risks comparison with Debussy's Sonate merely because of its instrumentation; it's surely a good thing that composers since Beethoven haven't seen fit to concern themselves with such a risk by eschewing the string quartet medium just because Beethoven wrote his C# minor quartet! - and Richard Barrett has helpfully mentioned that there are far more works for flute, viola and harp than I realised there were until he had the grace to point this out (although I still cannot help but wonder how few of the 200+ that he mentions predate Debussy's Sonate!)...
One of the dangers of writing any kind of tonal music with tunes is that you are very vulnerable to comparisons - that comes with the territory. Perhaps it depends how high your originality threshold is. Some people might think that once a crime novel has been written any further examples of the genre are inherently pointless - even though their plots might be completely different. (In other words they go differently) While other people look forward to enjoying new twists and turns that they might expect/hope to find in an otherwise familiar genre.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere seems to be a constant undercurrent, in discussions such as this, of assumption that if an artist is committed to a particular way of looking at things he/she automatically thinks other ways are invalid or that people aren't "entitled" to do things according to other principles. That really isn't the point. As I've said, what's most important as far as I'm concerned is expressing the freedom of the imagination...... the best one can do is to to say something like: I find this so deeply engaging/exciting/fascinating/deeply expressive that there must exist other people in the world who would also be affected by it, given that so much of our humanity is shared... even if arranging for the music to find its way to those people is something of a challenge!
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Originally posted by Ian View PostBut I'm not trying to 'recapture' anything that I consider has been lost
Originally posted by Ian View Postand it follows from this that I don't think tonal lyrical melodies are a lost cause either.
Originally posted by Ian View PostI'm not aware of any predating the Debussy, but I'm sure there must be well over 200
Originally posted by Ian View PostOne of the dangers of writing any kind of tonal music with tunes is that you are very vulnerable to comparisons - that comes with the territory.
Originally posted by Ian View PostPerhaps it depends how high your originality threshold is.
Originally posted by Ian View PostSome people might think that once a crime novel has been written any further examples of the genre are inherently pointless - even though their plots might be completely different. (In other words they go differently) While other people look forward to enjoying new twists and turns that they might expect/hope to find in an otherwise familiar genre.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by aeolium View Postwhat puzzled me was your suggestion that somehow music written in a "conservative" style was necessarily restrictive to the imagination. How?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI think that your illustration here goes too far, actually, for it would seem tantamout to saying that it would be "inherently pointless" to compose a string quartet or a work scored for that particular ensemble because hundreds of thousands of string quartet pieces have already been composed - and that would surely be rather ridiculous!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm talking about music which appears to behave according to preexistent boundaries around what does and doesn't make "a good piece of music", which is the product of restrictions and/or denials placed (consciously or unconsciously) on the imagination of the composer, and I'm saying that as far as I'm concerned, given that artistic creation is one of the few areas of life in which freedom of the imagination can (still) be realised, it seems a shame when it behaves nevertheless as though there's a pressure towards conformity, as of course there is in so many other areas of life. I hope that's a bit clearer. As for "instinct", surely anything that looks like instinct in the domain of artistic creation is likely to consist partly or mostly of received assumptions, and realising that this is the case is an important step towards overcoming them. (Not realising it, on the other hand, is an important step towards being in thrall to them.)
I'm uncertain that "instinct", at least in that sense, is something necesarily to be "overcome", as you seem to imply or, for that matter, that to seek to "overcome" it might reasonably be perveived as necessary because, "in the domain of artistic creation", it "is likely to consist partly or mostly of received assumptions"; to suggest the latter appears, to me, at least, to represent a view that "instinct" is somehow an inherently flawed concept to be treated with care and, in some cases, even with a modicum of suspicion as it is not implicity to be trusted.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostI half agree with you but I think your counter-illustration goes to far. I'm sure you understand what I'm getting at though.
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