Originally posted by Pulcinella
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Moral Maze - British Places : Better Represented By Classical Music Than Other Forms
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostIt isn’t that I want to do this. I am trying to find out how it can be done because, from this thread and the one mentioned up-thread by Richard T on Sibelius BaL, that some people are able to depict or see/hear dark forests in Finland or the sea and Eastbourne in the music. Also, there are apparently some decipherable Japanese elements in the Turnage’s prom work. I am very intrigued.
Cecil Armstrong Gibbs - Dusk - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-xl0bnCUjg
The titles can be completely removed. This is "Summer Valley". There are differences with Delius's "Summer Night on the River" but each is a part of a whole host of mood pieces with the word "Summer" in the title. I am going to produce a piece of music in 2017 in not dissimilar vein and I will call it "Untitled I". People who know the earlier terrain are asked to listen to it and to provide it with a suitable title. The word "Summer" crops up in those titles umpteen times whereas, I don't know, "Factory" is not mentioned at all. Later I shall write a piece called Untitled II. My idea is that it should convey New Zealand. I have decided that it will not have an accordion in it because more often than not that culturally has suggested France.
E J Moeran - Summer Valley - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zN4BAWTwxp4
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostMy idea is that it should convey New Zealand. I have decided that it will not have an accordion in it because more often than not that has suggested France.
This has been an outstanding thread, lat.
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... nope. Lat-lit, after much ponderin', I conclude I don't get what you're on about at all. For me, music doesn't 'represent' anything - it just 'is'.
I don't 'get' Eastbourne, or New Zealand, or the sea, or Finnish forests, or anything else - I 'get' the music.
For me the Velazquez Las Meninas is not in B flat minor, and Wordsworth's 1805 Prelude is not in an orangey-green. A 1990 château ducru-beaucaillou does not remind me of a Haydn quartet, and a foie gras doesn't equate to trumpets.
Why can you not just delight in music 'as it is', without requiring / expecting it to have resonances with unrelated things?
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI'm still trying to understand why you would want to do this.
If music is about anything, surely it's about getting a group of performers together and performing it!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI'm still trying to understand why you would want to do this.
If music is about anything, surely it's about getting a group of performers together and performing it!
* - very off-topic, but does anyone know if the Yerolemous still have their rather wonderful ice cream shop on the Eastbourne seafront?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostWhy can you not just delight in music 'as it is', without requiring / expecting it to have resonances with unrelated things?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThe word "about" is certainly problematic in this kind of context. Generally I try to avoid it (though I failed here! ) in favour of talking about something like "the ideas embodied in the music". Your position seems to be (unsurprisingly I guess!) similar to Stravinsky's "music is, by its very nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all", that is to say anything outside itself. I would say something more like Cardew's "My attitude is that the musical and the real worlds are one. Musicality is a dimension of perfectly ordinary reality. The musician's pursuit is to recognize the musical composition of the world" - that is, it's not so much a question of music possibly being "about" something, as of music possibly taking the shape it does in the process of discovering/inventing a connection with that something. So then it needn't matter to a listener whether he/she is aware of that connection, since, like the notated score, it's been a means to an end. But, again like the notated score, getting to know more about it might well deepen your appreciation and understanding of the music. Often the title is a pointer in that direction.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThe word "about" is certainly problematic in this kind of context. Generally I try to avoid it (though I failed here! ) in favour of talking about something like "the ideas embodied in the music". Your position seems to be (unsurprisingly I guess!) similar to Stravinsky's "music is, by its very nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all", that is to say anything outside itself. I would say something more like Cardew's "My attitude is that the musical and the real worlds are one. Musicality is a dimension of perfectly ordinary reality. The musician's pursuit is to recognize the musical composition of the world" - that is, it's not so much a question of music possibly being "about" something, as of music possibly taking the shape it does in the process of discovering/inventing a connection with that something. So then it needn't matter to a listener whether he/she is aware of that connection, since, like the notated score, it's been a means to an end. But, again like the notated score, getting to know more about it might well deepen your appreciation and understanding of the music. Often the title is a pointer in that direction.
And I'm not totally with Stravinsky: after all, Petrushka is about a puppet in love with a ballerina, and most would agree that the music expresses (for example) the chase in the third tableau and the fun of the fair in the fourth very well.
I don't think we've touched on ballet music in this thread: if we are considering music without words (OK, Pulcinella has vocal bits!), (non-abstract) ballet music tends to be telling a story, so is indeed 'about' something (so I've just demolished my own argument about music not having to be 'about' anything).
This Pulcinella is about to have a cup of tea!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBecause it always does have such resonances, whether its creator put them there or not - for a creative musician everything has a connection to music (Mallarmé: "Le monde est fait pour aboutir à un beau livre"). As I said in my previous post, you can choose to ignore those dimensions, or think you're ignoring them while nevertheless being aware of say the historical/geographical dimension of the music you're hearing; but the idea of music "as it is" surely involves making arbitrary distinctions as to what rightly belongs to the musical experience and what doesn't. We're all synaesthetic to some extent.
And whether a composer had in mind the orange groves of Florida or the delights of poor old Eastbourne - does this really get into the music in an interesting way?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... nope. Lat-lit, after much ponderin', I conclude I don't get what you're on about at all. For me, music doesn't 'represent' anything - it just 'is'.
I don't 'get' Eastbourne, or New Zealand, or the sea, or Finnish forests, or anything else - I 'get' the music.
For me the Velazquez Las Meninas is not in B flat minor, and Wordsworth's 1805 Prelude is not in an orangey-green. A 1990 chateau ducru-beaucaillou does not remind me of a Haydn quartet, and a foie gras doesn't equate to trumpets.
Why can you not just delight in music 'as it is', without requiring / expecting it to have resonances with unrelated things?
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Re Wordsworth, I think I would see something akin to colour actually and certainly it is there in other poetry. There are dark words and there are light words. Clearly there are shades in juxtapositions. However great the precision in verse, its main intention is surely to provide at the very least a haze, otherwise one would just look at what was being described directly on without someone else's interpretation. Focussed, objective approaches - the "I appreciate it purely for what it is" - is a momentary blocking out of everything else whereas running everything else through a partial, different lens is a momentary semi-blocking or more. That does mean there are differences. Perhaps the former is more honest. The latter can have the pretence of wider accommodation. But I am not sure why that should necessarily be inferior. In each case, there is a negotiation of how to deal/cope with external influence via art.
Alfred Noyes - The Barrel-Organ - https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poe...e-barrel-organLast edited by Lat-Literal; 17-08-17, 13:32.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThe word "about" is certainly problematic in this kind of context. Generally I try to avoid it (though I failed here! ) in favour of talking about something like "the ideas embodied in the music". Your position seems to be (unsurprisingly I guess!) similar to Stravinsky's "music is, by its very nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all", that is to say anything outside itself. I would say something more like Cardew's "My attitude is that the musical and the real worlds are one. Musicality is a dimension of perfectly ordinary reality. The musician's pursuit is to recognize the musical composition of the world" - that is, it's not so much a question of music possibly being "about" something, as of music possibly taking the shape it does in the process of discovering/inventing a connection with that something. So then it needn't matter to a listener whether he/she is aware of that connection, since, like the notated score, it's been a means to an end. But, again like the notated score, getting to know more about it might well deepen your appreciation and understanding of the music. Often the title is a pointer in that direction.Last edited by ahinton; 17-08-17, 14:47.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI don't feel my very pertick'ler personal associations as having anything to do with the music.
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