One of my favourite music-related books is Nicolas Slonimsky's Lexicon of Musical Invectiive. However, it deals mainly, though not exclusively, with nasty things said by critics of musicians. Reading through Paul Zukofsky's notes re. Feldman's For John Cage I found this:
"This piece is a 70th birthday present for John, so we should end with a story -- an homage to John's stories. What shal it be? I know -- do you remember the time I came to Buffalo to do a concert of John's Six Melodies (just intonation), his solo violin version of Cheap Imitation (pythagorean intonation), and your Spring of Chosroes (mean tone), and the music critic (an ex-student of yours, no less!) wrote that he didn't understand why I had such a good reputation since I had such a great deal of trouble with my intonation (this after having come back stage to look at the music, and failing to understand the pitch notation)? . . . "
So I thought, with the Season of Good Will coming up, how about some further examples of cloth-eared critics?
"This piece is a 70th birthday present for John, so we should end with a story -- an homage to John's stories. What shal it be? I know -- do you remember the time I came to Buffalo to do a concert of John's Six Melodies (just intonation), his solo violin version of Cheap Imitation (pythagorean intonation), and your Spring of Chosroes (mean tone), and the music critic (an ex-student of yours, no less!) wrote that he didn't understand why I had such a good reputation since I had such a great deal of trouble with my intonation (this after having come back stage to look at the music, and failing to understand the pitch notation)? . . . "
So I thought, with the Season of Good Will coming up, how about some further examples of cloth-eared critics?
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