Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Women Composers' Thread/International Women's Day 2015 on R3
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Richard Barrett
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIf you know that the composer is the performer, that's a different matter; I wrote that "it's impossible to tell whether a piece was written by a woman just by listening to it" and that's what I meant - no more, no less. Even listening to a Meredith Monk piece performed by her without knowing who the performer is, you'd not be able to tell, would you?
I'd hope that you could! - otherwise we'd only have Rachmaninov's piano works played by Rachmaninov or Bacewicz's violin works played by Bacewicz. Most composer/performers (of whom there's still nothing like the large proportion that was once the case when almost every composer performed) don't expect to be the sole interpreters of their works, after all - but perhaps you meant something else that I've yet to grasp about this but, in the meantime, put simply, would you know from the music alone that Lili Boulanger's or Sally Beamish's work was written by a woman or would you only know if you'd been told so?
Would you think that Gotterdammerung could have been written by a woman given the cultural and social structures of the time?
I guess what i'm saying is that SOME (not all) work (and this is very true of visual art as well) can be intrinsically about the gender of it's creator.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI think the thing is that the gender of a composer isn't in general any more or less detectable than any other influences on their work. Yes in Monk's case you can tell because she's a singer and obviously has a woman's voice. But even in the case of composer-performers, what about Pauline Oliveros, or Irene Schweizer, or Ellen Fullman? Not all influences are audible.
True, all I was saying was that I think SOMETIMES it is.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSOMETIMES it is.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postbut Facing North ?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI'm not sure, I think I might.
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWell, that's only one model of how music is created, there are many others.
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWould you think that Gotterdammerung could have been written by a woman given the cultural and social structures of the time?
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI guess what i'm saying is that SOME (not all) work (and this is very true of visual art as well) can be intrinsically about the gender of it's creator.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThere certainly IS a lot of nonsense said and written about gender and music.
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThere are several composers I know who's music surprises me in the way that it sounds so at odds with their character as people.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut how and on what grounds and within what predetermined parameters might you be able to tell whether a work was written by a man or a woman just by listening to it?
which isn't the same as saying it's not possible
Sorry, I don't quite get your meaning here. Woman writes piece, it gets performed (whether or not by the composer with or without other performers) and MrGG listens to a recording without being told who the composer is; in what way/s might you perceive the particular model of how it had been created as influencing the extent to which and the means whereby you could conclude whether it had indeed been composed by a woman?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAnd what do you think is the proportion of women in similar positions in the music world? In other words what was the point of your stupid post?
The fact that you and a couple of others frequently descend to personal abuse when you don't like what you read does not in any way demonstrate the invalidity (or 'stupidity') of the point. In fact, quite the opposite.
You seem to be under the impression that such tactics will cow other posters from posting opinions which you find inconvenient.
I beg you to finally grasp that this will not always work, and most certainly not in my case.
Trust this answers your query.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut how and on what grounds and within what predetermined parameters might you be able to tell whether a work was written by a man or a woman just by listening to it?Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI don't know
which isn't the same as saying it's not possible
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThe model of the 'composer' having the idea for the piece, writing a set of instructions on paper and handing it to other people to play is only one way that music is created.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostThe point is obvious ...
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostThe fact that you and a couple of others frequently descend to personal abuse when you don't like what you read does not in any way demonstrate the invalidity (or 'stupidity') of the point. In fact, quite the opposite.
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostYou seem to be under the impression that such tactics will cow other posters from posting opinions which you find inconvenient.
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Mr GG #320
What I would very much like to hear is why one of the most opinionated members of this forum believes that women composers are discriminated, and not the opinions of people whose aims are to promote their causes (this is not to say that I am not interested in such causes but that’s a different matter).
If the graph is meant to show young people’s career aspirations, it merely shows that fewer girls consider music as their future careers. It maybe that girls prefer keeping music as their private interest rather than turning it into a means of earning money. This in itself tells nothing about discrimination.
Do you know what Pete Pan said when he was asked why there were no girls in Never Never Land? He said ‘when a baby falls out the pram in Kensington Gardens, it come here. Girls don’t fall out their prams, they are too clever’. .
That beside, as for a quote, how about this.
...the creative spaces of living composers, 40% of whom are women...Classical music’s past might be dominated by men, but we can ensure its future isn’t. I’m delighted to be part of Radio 3’s International Women’s Day celebrations
(note: the quote may be seen as being taken out of context)
If you respond to this with more quotes and figures, I feel rather rude but I shall ignore it. So my apologies in advance.
Host: Do you think a new thread will be better for this section so that posts about the music can breathe?
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