The Tyranny of Pop Music
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostOf course, but (Gabrielli knew this stuff more than me) it's hardly "new" or "unusual".
Gabrieli did not have to worry about the reproduction of his polychoral effects, since as far as he was concerned nobody outside the church where his works were being performed was ever going to hear them. But modern sound engineers do give somne thought tio the matter...don't they?
If you don't want your music to be heard in that acoustic then don't let it happen.
What we have here is a hypothetical situation where WA is the only available venue. And you are desperate to secure this performance of your work, so
And ask them to make Westminster Abbey sound like your front room?
WHY on earth would you want (or think that it is worth doing) to do that?
Even if one was writing a string quartet for the Wigmore Hall I doubt many composers would think about it in that way.
...and anyway why are we (and my hand is up) indulging Natty in his quest in this discussion anyway?
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Originally posted by jean View PostWhere are you quoting from?
Don't be obtuse!
What we have here is a hypothetical situation where WA is the only available venue. And you are desperate to secure this performance of your work, so
Not obtuse
Music is intrinsically connected with the context of it's performance and reception
Well, like the Wigmore Hall, anyway.
Because it's the effect you'd hoped for. You said
I'm suggesting it's probably a default position.
You can suggest all you like and you will probably find some for whom your suggestion is correct.
You're not indulging anyone - you're piling ridicule on ridicule, because it's what you do.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostMusic is intrinsically connected with the context of it's performance and reception
I realise that there is some music for which this distinction is meaningless, but I don't believe that's always the case.
That's not what Max said when I asked him about writing a piece for a string quartet in the Wigmore.
.Last edited by jean; 30-11-15, 14:27.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostMusic is intrinsically connected with the context of it's performance and reception
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI don't think you understand how many (NOT ALL) composers think about what they do. (but i'm sure you will say you do)
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postshare the love.
Oops, sorry; I went back on topic by accident please sir I won't do it again honest sir!...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut all the thinking in the world about what one does is not the same thing as the question the kind of venue and acoustic in which it might get performed at any time; for example, an organ piece of mine was written very much with not only the organist who commissioned it but also the venue in which I had heard him play [in mind], but if it gets played by someone else in an acoustic and on an instrument far less sympathetic to it than will be found in the Church of St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol (say, for example, Gloucester Cathedral, with all its side-chapels and stuff), whatever I might have thought about at the time of writing could come across quite differently in practice.
Your use of the words I highlight seems to indicate that you do have some (default) idea of how your work would sound best. But in the less sympathetic conditions it might even reveal new facets of itself you had never imagined...
But that's another topic - perhaps!
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Originally posted by jean View PostThat's what I might have assumed - though I would never dream of saying that I understood how composers thought about their work.
Your use of the words I highlight seems to indicate that you do have some (default) idea of how your work would sound best. But in the less sympathetic conditions it might even reveal new facets of itself you had never imagined...
But that's another topic - perhaps!
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jean #556
Note the absence of a comma after railway. It is crucial. If it were present, as in It's like looking at a model railway, where every item on it is at a different scale we would have a defining relative clause - that's what model railways are like. But without it, difference of scale is only a characteristic of this less than adequate example of the genre. See here
I’d go for the context than grammatical accuracy. A comma or not, scale is NatBalance’s obsession. Besides, what else is he saying if he is not describing the scale of a model railway (don’t bother to answer. I’ve done with this thread)?
As I said in my repost, NatBalance’s model railway analogy is a very good way of describing the music on the radio. Whether he likes it or not, he clearly understands the principle (Incidentally, by principle here, I mean being made to serve the purpose, be it a toy, a model or radio broadcast). But then, he came up with the second quote.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostNo, because even if that WAS possible (and I have worked in halls where you can do a transformation from similar acoustics) it would be (IMV) uninteresting and not making the most of the opportunity. I don't think you understand how many (NOT ALL) composers think about what they do. (but i'm sure you will say you do)
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Originally posted by jean View PostSee my detailed exegesis above.
By the way
Jean #556
I'm assuming that the 'it's like...' in the second quote from Natbalance implies a conditional
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I said it implies a conditional.
It's as if you were to look at a model railway, and see the sorts of distortions of scale you might see if you looked at a toy railway, whose approach to accuracy is a bit more gung-ho because its purposes are different.
The distinction between the two sorts of model wasn't established until later in the discussion.
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