Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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"Classical Music" and other names for it
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Isn't an important 'division' between the various genres individual taste? 'People' like 'classical' and nothing else; 'people' like jazz and nothing else; 'people' like pop, metal, hiphop &c and don't stray too far away from those sounds. It makes sense for 'people' to know that they can hear 'classical music' on Radio 3, hip-hop on 1Xtra, discriminating/off-the-wall/left field/intelligent &c. &c. popular on 6 Music. Broad categories are needed if for no other reason that for 'most people' 'music' is not universally loved: some music is widely hated by 'some people': talentless, boring, infuriating blah blah blah …
The bulk of (surviving/recorded) music which dates back to before 1900 will be 'classical' of some sort, won't it, the various styles being telescoped into a single genre with the label 'classical'? After that it either continues to be classical - RVW, Sibelius, Shostakovich et al - or is either 'not classical', 'pop' &c 'rubbish' ("not even music") &c .
Isn't it only the music from the 20th century onwards that becomes impossible to categorise? Doesn't the difficulty lie in assigning all this music to one category or another?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 MrGongGong View PostBecause to simply use "happy" and "sad" as descriptors of music is superficial and lazy.
Along with the nonsense about minor and major keys being "happy" and "sad".
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostMaybe, according to your personal opinion, and nobody would object to that ... but BANNING such easy terms from the classroom is a different matter altogether, and indeed one might assume would be anathema to all those wishing to make 'classical music' more approachable and accessible to the wider public?
If you want people to engage with listening to and talking about music then you need to engage with developing a language to talk about such things.
Music is much more nuanced than "happy" and "sad" which are just "Empty Words" (have you read it?)
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIf you want people to engage with listening to and talking about music then you need to engage with developing a language to talk about such things.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 french frank View PostWhat if you want them to listen to a particular kind of music, and talk about it - not just music in a generalised way? What if you've developed a language for it but are told: 'No, no: music is just music.' This is why I see it as linguistic fascism to tell people they can't talk about music in one way - they've got to talk and think about it in a different way. For their own benefit …
If you want to get people to talk about a particular kind of music (so at the moment I am listening to Shostakovich (Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra Conducted by Kirill Kondrashin via Youtube, very loud!) encouraging them to use words more than "happy" and "sad" is a good way to go IMV.
So, Prof Tipps which should I choose for the Shostakovich ? I'm a bit confused because it's neither, and both and more.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post'People' like 'classical' and nothing else; 'people' like jazz and nothing else; 'people' like pop, metal, hiphop &c and don't stray too far away from those sounds.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIf you want people to engage with listening to and talking about music then you need to engage with developing a language to talk about such things.
Music is much more nuanced than "happy" and "sad" which are just "Empty Words"[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostExcluding cliches is useful technique that's all.
If you want to get people to talk about a particular kind of music (so at the moment I am listening to Shostakovich (Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra Conducted by Kirill Kondrashin via Youtube, very loud!) encouraging them to use words more than "happy" and "sad" is a good way to go IMV.
So, Prof Tipps which should I choose for the Shostakovich ? I'm a bit confused because it's neither, and both and more.
Yes .... thought that was the reason :)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostSome 'people' do (Ian Thumwood for example ) but do most people?
As for clichés, they become clichés because what they express is a commonly held view/feeling, what people can recognise and readily relate to. In some contexts they're to be avoided but I should think that in others they do have an effective use.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 MrGongGong View PostExcluding cliches is useful technique that's all.
If you want to get people to talk about a particular kind of music (so at the moment I am listening to Shostakovich (Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra Conducted by Kirill Kondrashin via Youtube, very loud!) encouraging them to use words more than "happy" and "sad" is a good way to go IMV.
So, Prof Tipps which should I choose for the Shostakovich ? I'm a bit confused because it's neither, and both and more.
As for Shostakovich, like most composers his music can reflect a variety of moods to the listener, and if the end of his popular Fifth Symphony can be described as either 'triumphant' or 'defiant' (according to personal interpretation), why on earth can we not describe music as being 'happy' or 'sad'?
FF uses the term 'linguistic fascism' to describe an attempt to ban the use of such words ... heavens, I would never dare use such an uncharitable term, myself! ... but alongside that, is it not also 'cultural elitism' of the highest (or lowest) order?
Questions, questions, questions, Mr GG!
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Bill Gates Desert Island Discs this week(?)
(By 'fascism' I was thinking of classical 'fasces' which was at the root of the word: the symbol of authoritarian power)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 french frank View PostAs for clichés, they become clichés because what they express is a commonly held view/feeling, what people can recognise and readily relate to. In some contexts they're to be avoided but I should think that in others they do have an effective use.
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