Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Speaking personally, I don't know what the "purpose" of the works of George Lloyd might be (and that's not a comment on what they mean to me - as it happens, I'm quite ambivalent about such as I've heard of them, one symphony in particular standing head and shoulders above the other eleven to such an extent that it's almost embarrassing), but I do recall in an interview the composer saying that it's to take listeners to places that they wouldn't otherwise go which, for what it may or may not be worth, seems at least to be an honest attempt to answer that question.
The fact that I happen to dislike everything of Feldman that I've ever heard does not influence my questioning of its purpose; I don't know what its purpose is supposed to be in any case, although one might at least argue (for what it's worth) that it differs from Lloyd's insofar as Feldman's concern seems to be less obviously focused upon the notion of taking the listener on any kind of journey, as far as I can tell.
As to "can you hear the sea when you listen to La Mer?", pehaps Sorabji on Ravel might have some input here, when referring to "no stream ever sounded like that" but that the sound of one may well have sparked off certain sounds in his imagination (and, in the same context, he went on to pour scorn on Richard Stauss's probably tongue in cheek comment about the possibility of "representing" a spoon of a fork in music). How many people might hear - or think that they hear - the sea when listening to La Mer - or Bridge's The Sea, Vaughan Williams' A Sea Symphony or David Matthews' A Vision of the Sea without knowing the titles of those pieces?
As you've probably gathered, I don't quite see the pont of this thread either; sorry!
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