Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Pieces Not Fit for Purpose
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThat message, and in particular, for me personally, the part I've taken the liberty of highlighting, is one of the most enlightening statements I have read on music. Many many thanks, Richard.
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Originally posted by jean View Postwhen Pachelbel's Canon is done without the canon
Two things most people don't know about Pachelbel's Canon: (a) it is for solo violins, not string orchestra, (b) it has no tempo indication so there is no justification for playing it as slowly as in most pseudo-romantic realisations of it. Almost every time you hear it, therefore, it's been adapted for more "popular" use.
Except here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z__dWl0MWbQ
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Originally posted by jean View PostNo, I meant something more like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOA-2hl1Vbc
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But it's not just about speed! I'm talking about a simplified, repetitive bass line.
I know repetition is the point, but in the versions I'm thinking of, the repeated bass sections are much shorter than they should be, and do not interact in an interesting way with the top line.
.Last edited by jean; 15-06-16, 16:41.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostVery much agreed - except that I would add (for what it may or may not be worth) to his question " in what sense is a Schubert song more complex than a Beatles song?" the answer that, in a fair number of cases (though not all), there is somewhat greater harmonic complexity.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by jean View Post
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostVery much agreed - except that I would add (for what it may or may not be worth) to his question " in what sense is a Schubert song more complex than a Beatles song?" the answer that, in a fair number of cases (though not all), there is somewhat greater harmonic complexity.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThat message, and in particular, for me personally, the part I've taken the liberty of highlighting, is one of the most enlightening statements I have read on music. Many many thanks, Richard.
Are we saying that a six-part Bach fugue is not inherently more complex than a simple folk song, say?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
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.
so not only does the creative musician have to avoid the twin traps that you describe, they also need to create with the possible breadth of listening experience of their audience in mind, as well as keeping the promoters on board, and those who give commissions happy?
Blimey .I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postso not only does the creative musician have to avoid the twin traps that you describe, they also need to create with the possible breadth of listening experience of their audience in mind, as well as keeping the promoters on board, and those who give commissions happy?
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