Originally posted by french frank
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Understanding Music
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostA-level General Studies (does it still exist?) always seemed easier for scientists (we could still write an essay and have a stab at a foreign translation, remembering something from our O-level studies) than it did for artists. We were encouraged to read 'The Listener' while they got given "New Scientist', I seem to remember.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostProbably a good basis for a lot of things. I didn't take that (don't know that it was on offer), but having done French, German and Latin, I knew nothing of TS Eliot or Ezra Pound - as scientists I knew did. They also played musical instruments, often very well.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostCan the St Matthew Passion "ever completely reveal itself" to someone who isn't an early 18th century Lutheran from Saxony? Does any music ever "completely reveal itself" to anyone?
Assuming that Lewanski is right about the medley in the Shos 4 finale saying 'Russia was better in the old days', then clearly the composer could not possibly have set a text expressing that sentiment, or he would have been shipped straight to the Gulag. So he had to encode his message in instrumental music. Perhaps that says a lot about the damage done to art by political repression.
I have been looking again at the Cambridge Music Guide to Brahms's first symphony (David Brodbeck) in which he links the piece with elements of Brahms's earlier life via the music of Schumann. It's all very interesting, but doesn't affect the fact the Brahms 1 stands very well on its own, written in accepted forms and therefore able to be understood as pure music, whatever might have been going on in the composer's subconscious as he put the notes on paper. Shos 4 (much as I like it) is a different kettle of fish, and harder to understand (at least for me).
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostMusic can be appreciated at many levels. I agree, a modicum of knowledge about the background to a piece can be helpful to its appreciation (understanding if you like), but is not, in itself, necessary IMV. It depends on who is listening, I guess.
That was what he as a potential performer needed to understand. It may or may not bother a listener. Depending.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAttributed to Feynman is the quote, "If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics." Another slant on the meaning of 'understand', not quite the same as when applied to music? Stephen Pinker noted, if I remember, as being on Private Passions and not including a single piece of classical music among his choices?
Quantum Mechanics is a theory devised to reconcile apparently contradictory experimental results (is light a particle or wave, etc, etc). To understand the theory, physical intuition has first to be suspended, and the mathematical structure has to be understood. When a working knowledge of the structure is obtained, then one can think about what it all means. Immediately one realises that chance plays a key role, and that nothing can be predicted with certainty (in the sub-atomic world). This is a main reason why Einstein fell off the wagon (God does not play dice), and there must be a better theory somewhere. However Quantum Mechanics has been tested and tested over the years, and it has proved effective at predicting experimental results to an extreme degree of accuracy. We have to live with the fact that the universe is ruled by chance.
The other issue with Quantum mechanics, is that going deeper into the subject, the mathematics becomes intractable, and huge efforts have been made over the past 100 years to devise better ways of analysing the subject. So Feynman's comments are understandable. Interestingly, although Feynman approaches Einstein in his ability to think deeply about scientific issues, his IQ rating was apparently not sky high, as one might have expected.
Going back to Artificial Intelligence, this is a latest offering from the Robotic Community: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5JU0R4Zd2To
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