Not sure if that title is fit for purpose itself as it tends to imply the pieces are not good. Anyway, I've just listened (on Radio 3) to that brilliant piece by John Adams, The Chairman Dances. Absolutely wonderfull …. BUT …. do I see a Chariman dancing when I hear it?
Well, no, not really. It's a bit of a struggle. What I do see is something mechanical, in particular a steam locomotive, an image which is enhanced by the way the music gradually increases in speed at the beginning and then gradually comes to a 'halt' at the end. Not something you normally do when dancing. Perhaps if I saw the opera and how that music fits the scene I would think differently. There are other pieces that do not fit their purpose, or title, the imagery they are trying to convey, but I can't bring them to mind at the moment. Does anyone else have pieces that they think do not fit their title?
There are of course pieces who's meaning, imagery (whatever the correct way of expressing it is) has been totally altered from the composer's, the classic one being a piece by Khachaturian from his ballet Spartacus which I believe was composed as a love theme but who (of a certain age) now thinks of love when hearing it? Do I need to state which piece I mean and why? We'll have to exclude such pieces from this debate I think.
Music as a way of describing something is of course not a precise medium, but on the other hand it can also 'say' things which cannot be expressed in words.
Rich
Well, no, not really. It's a bit of a struggle. What I do see is something mechanical, in particular a steam locomotive, an image which is enhanced by the way the music gradually increases in speed at the beginning and then gradually comes to a 'halt' at the end. Not something you normally do when dancing. Perhaps if I saw the opera and how that music fits the scene I would think differently. There are other pieces that do not fit their purpose, or title, the imagery they are trying to convey, but I can't bring them to mind at the moment. Does anyone else have pieces that they think do not fit their title?
There are of course pieces who's meaning, imagery (whatever the correct way of expressing it is) has been totally altered from the composer's, the classic one being a piece by Khachaturian from his ballet Spartacus which I believe was composed as a love theme but who (of a certain age) now thinks of love when hearing it? Do I need to state which piece I mean and why? We'll have to exclude such pieces from this debate I think.
Music as a way of describing something is of course not a precise medium, but on the other hand it can also 'say' things which cannot be expressed in words.
Rich
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