Originally posted by Beef Oven!
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Pieces Not Fit for Purpose
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI would say that "unfocused" means something like a lack of structural discipline on the larger scale and a certain arbitrariness in the material on the smaller scale, so that it's often not at all clear why the music has to have the dimensions that it has, or what the necessity is behind there being the notes or harmonies you hear rather than any others. Of course all music, especially when it works with extended durations like Sorabji, Feldman, LaMonte Young or Wagner, does strange things to the listener's perception of time, but of all the aforementioned my feeling is that this is more hit-and-miss with Sorabji than with the others - the feeling that he simply has no idea when or how to stop is in some cases (Opus Clavicembalisticum) fascinating, in others (Fourth Piano Symphony) simply interminable. To me anyway.Last edited by ahinton; 13-06-16, 22:03.
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Scriabin's Mysterium was supposed to bring about the end of the world. I have listened to the acte préalable several times (whilst burning incense, dancing, smelling many scratch 'n' sniff markers and watching screen savers, as prescribed) and unfortunately there is not yet any sign of this happening.
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Originally posted by kea View PostScriabin's Mysterium was supposed to bring about the end of the world. I have listened to the acte préalable several times (whilst burning incense, dancing, smelling many scratch 'n' sniff markers and watching screen savers, as prescribed) and unfortunately there is not yet any sign of this happening.
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Originally posted by kea View PostScriabin's Mysterium was supposed to bring about the end of the world. I have listened to the acte préalable several times (whilst burning incense, dancing, smelling many scratch 'n' sniff markers and watching screen savers, as prescribed) and unfortunately there is not yet any sign of this happening.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAh, but Scriabin's uncompleted work was composed before the many universes interpretation of quantum mechanics was posited. Who's to say that some unfortunate world in a parallel universe did not meet its end due to your risky auditioning of what has come down to us.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAh, but Scriabin's uncompleted work was composed before the many universes interpretation of quantum mechanics was posited. Who's to say that some unfortunate world in a parallel universe did not meet its end due to your risky auditioning of what has come down to us.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostOf all the Sorabji music that I've heard, it has never occurred to me that it is unfocused (not that I have sufficient technical understanding to know what he should have been focusing on).
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As I suspected, my lack of a technical grasp of music is saving me from such considerations. I wouldn't know structural indiscipline from music that observes the rules (although I can often sense when something's not quite right). Similarly, I am unaware, and therefore untroubled by the randomness of the smaller scale music. Happy in ignorance?
Technical knowledge can add, or perhaps even take away, something from the music, just as knowledge of the ingredients of a food recipy can affect whether you like it or not, but just like food, music should be able to stand on its own. If the listener NEEDS to understand it, or have technical knowledge in order to enjoy it then I reckon there is something wrong somewhere.
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Originally posted by NatBalance View PostIf the listener NEEDS to understand it, or have technical knowledge in order to enjoy it then I reckon there is something wrong somewhere.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 PostPerhaps enjoyment and appreciation are the differences. Certainly popular music doesn't seem to have much to 'understand', musically, and people seem to enjoy it. But you seldom seem to hear anyone discussing the music. Isn't the point about classical music that it does offer something more to 'understand' (or be aware of) than surface emotion - however strongly experienced?
Regarding pop music, it only seems to be simple if one defines "the music" (or for that matter "surface emotion") as denoting the same thing as it does in other musics, that is, if one judges it by inappropriate standards. And thousands of academics and commentators are discussing pop music in sophisticated terms all the time - if you "seldom seem to hear" this it's again probably because you're looking in the wrong places. Many would say that the presence of pop music in higher music education, for example, threatens to push other musics out of consideration, partly because it always has the argument of "popularity" (supposedly equal to "relevance") on its side. Personally I don't see that any music inherently involves "more to understand" than any other. Understanding music in the deepest sense always involves understanding that "the music" is an ill-defined concept which isn't covered by just the written score (if any), or the sounds of any single performance or recording of it, and different musics inhere to different degrees in restrictive definitions like this. Anyway, in what sense is a Schubert song more complex than a Beatles song?
Something tangentially related occurred to me as a result of BO's comment: very many people, myself included, listen to and appreciate many different musics, from "classical" music however one defines it, to pop music, jazz, free improvisation, electronic dance music, whatever. Yet very many creative musicians make their work as if they only appreciated one area out of this diversity, while many others work as if the alternative to this were a box-ticking kind of eclecticism (which certainly seems to go down well with promoters and labels these days - look at any month of Deutsche Grammophon's new releases these days!). Much "contemporary music" is therefore to my mind "not fit for purpose" in that it either ignores the openness to everything which I think is certainly a feature of contemporary listening, or it regurgitates its influences in undigested form, which mediocre music has always done.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostTalking of tea
We can have this (the only Beatles tune I have knowingly bought ....and in this version)
Editie 016 van het Festival voor Nieuwe Muziek 'Dag in de Branding'ALVIN LUCIER PROJECT / in aanwezigheid van Alvin Lucier20 mei 2010 / 19:00 uur / Korzo-5Ho...
Or even the seminal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8RkbsR_lReo
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