Originally posted by Daniel
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"Classical Music" and other names for it
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostRecall MrGG's anecdote earlier about people appreciating classical music when they weren't told it was classical.
I don't think there's a problem until one gets towards the end of the 19th century. Or is there? Deciding that 'classical music' should be thrown out altogether as a term on the grounds that 20th century music becomes a melting pot seems a bit strange. Or pandering to people's prejudices rather than dispelling them.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 PostAn invaluable tool in developing language and communication skills.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 PostSo the reason for finding another name is that some (most, or whatever) people have an engrained prejudice against anything called 'classical music', rather than that the term is inadequate?
I don't think there's a problem until one gets towards the end of the 19th century. Or is there? Deciding that 'classical music' should be thrown out altogether as a term on the grounds that 20th century music becomes a melting pot seems a bit strange. Or pandering to people's prejudices rather than dispelling them.
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Originally posted by Daniel View PostI don't get this. If a child says 'I think that piece of music sounds happy', it's suggested to them it's not sufficient/ doesn't sufficiently describe their feelings and they'll need to find something different (or words to that effect)? Obviously if they say it sounds happy and then are encouraged to go further and explore other ways of seeing it, that's great. But does one need to ban happy/sad for that to happen. Surely new 'cliches' will just arise in their place?
... and, even worse, presumably these new cliches would have to be approved by those in 'authoritarian power'?
What a quite dreadful and even scary prospect. Poor old Dimitri & Co will be doing double somersaults in their graves at the very idea.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostSo the reason for finding another name is that some (most, or whatever) people have an engrained prejudice against anything called 'classical music', rather than that the term is inadequate?
Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think there's a problem until one gets towards the end of the 19th century.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWell there was "light music" in the 19th century, orchestral music in which the tune is more important than what is done with it, if you'd so describe Delibes' "Coppelia", the G&S operettas, waltz sequences and the like by the Strausses - not to mention Music Hall catering for "the masses".
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Originally posted by french frank View PostCould be demanded from Radio 3 which currently encourages people to share 'how it makes you feel'.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIndeed - and, whre the last of these is concerned, the plot (if ever there really was one) might be thought to have thickened in view of the respect and admiration that the waltzes, polkas, &c. of Johann Strauss II in particular attracted from composers as diverse as Wagner, Bruckner, Brahms, Mahler, Busoni and the luminaries of the Second Viennese School...
Unlike Richard's, my own collection of recordings is subdivided between classical and jazz, each category being stored in a different place, and again subdivided into vinyl and CDs. The classical recordings I have stored in composer surname alphabetical order, and the jazz chronologically, from 1919 to date. One day a friend observed that I only possess two albums of Reggae music, to which I replied that given the range of music available and one's limited lifespan I had decided early on to concentrate on these two fields; the few rock, improv and other non-jazz albums I have compromised on by sandwiching them in among the jazz ones.
From this it can be seen that until this question of whether or not certain musics fall within a classical definition had resolved itself simplistically in my mind. The way I see it is that jazz takes from whatever other classes of music it sees as compatible with itself and adapts them on its own terms. Presumably this is what composers in the classical field have done: Ravel's remark that the Blues movement in his Violin Sonata is not a real blues, and anyone hearing it can tell as such provides such an example; and yet for all its departure from, or watering down of, the blues form Ravel has adapted, for me it is more infused with the feel and spirit of blues than Milhaud's "La creation du monde" or a good many poor pastiches in pop music, for instance, though the last movement of Stravinsky's "Ebony Concerto" is pretty faithful to its harmonic ambiance - and that of Gospel music.
Possibly the first time the issue becomes more ambiguous is with the coming of Third Stream in the late 1950s, where one finds collaborations between orchestras and jazz ensembles or at least soloists in which it is impossible to say definitely which vernacular takes precedence: Ornette Coleman's "Skies of America" of 1972 comes immediately to mind.
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Quote Originally Posted by french frank View Post
I don't think there's a problem until one gets towards the end of the 19th century.Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut we're in the 21st!
a) some people are prejudiced against what they think of as 'classical music' and
b) the last century and a half have been a musical melting pot
seemed a bit extreme and would throw out a term which, while embracing a whole lot of differing styles (most of which saw 'transitional' phases linking one to the next), represents a positive and reasonably clear idea to many. Especially as no one seems able to come with anything better.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 Postno one seems able to come with anything better.
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Originally posted by Daniel View PostI don't get this. If a child says 'I think that piece of music sounds happy', it's suggested to them it's not sufficient/ doesn't sufficiently describe their feelings and they'll need to find something different (or words to that effect)?
Did you never do English exercises at school where you were given words to use in context?
It's not the 1950's you don't get beaten senseless for saying that something is "happy" (though i'm sure some of our leaders would be all in favour)Last edited by MrGongGong; 31-01-16, 20:11.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostYes, sometimes because (and you might find this hard to understand?) we pay people to be TEACHERS in order that they future and develop the people they teach. One idea of school is to learn about stuff you don't find outside, so if you live in a world where music is either "happy" or "sad" then a good teacher will encourage you to question and explore other possibilities, you know, use NEW WORDS, listen to NEW MUSIC (whether it's "Classical" or Tuvan Overtone singing)...
Did you never do English exercises at school where you were given words to use in context?
It's not the 1950's you don't get beaten senseless for saying that something is "happy" (though i'm sure some of our leaders would be all in favour)
The whole post was as follows:
Originally posted by Daniel View PostI don't get this. If a child says 'I think that piece of music sounds happy', it's suggested to them it's not sufficient/ doesn't sufficiently describe their feelings and they'll need to find something different (or words to that effect)? Obviously if they say it sounds happy and then are encouraged to go further and explore other ways of seeing it, that's great. But does one need to ban happy/sad for that to happen. Surely new 'cliches' will just arise in their place?
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Originally posted by Daniel View PostI don't get this. If a child says 'I think that piece of music sounds happy', it's suggested to them it's not sufficient/ doesn't sufficiently describe their feelings and they'll need to find something different (or words to that effect)? Obviously if they say it sounds happy and then are encouraged to go further and explore other ways of seeing it, that's great. But does one need to ban happy/sad for that to happen. Surely new 'cliches' will just arise in their place?
Perhaps the word "banning" takes on an unpleasant aura that does not reflect what happens in the classrooms: no letters are sent home to parents; names are not read out in Assembly; scarlet letters are not sewn onto jumpers. It's a game - not unlike not being allowed to use the word "said" in a passage of dialogue: a "tool", as I said in the post you quoted. Kids are not given detention for not singing "Euphoric Birthday to you"! It's more a case of their being given a set of (temporary) rules to channel their imaginations into exploring a wider vocabulary.
Happy now?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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