Originally posted by RichardB
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Electronic Music
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostWhat group do creative musicians think of when they do their thing? I don't believe they're all solipsists, making music for themselves, or purified and ascetic, making music for music's sake. They have peers; they presumably want to get their ideas performed etc. This sounds like writing for a market, if not the market.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI would say it sounds like writing for fellow human beings rather than any kind of market. To be a creative musician in today's society (I mean as opposed to a mainstream "contemporary classical" composer like Turnage or Macmillan) requires a certain idealism at every stage in the process, including the conviction that the music has the potential to find its way to an audience that will appreciate it. Which sometimes happens, sometimes not. I have the impression that the way the pandemic has exacerbated social inequalities is mirrored in the way that the return to live performance is marginalising even further those musics that were already marginalised.
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Originally posted by mahlerfan View PostBut isn't the 'market' also made up of fellow human beings? And regarding the pandemic's impact on already marginalised music, I've attended concerts of the creative artists you're thinking of prior to the pandemic, and personally made up nearly 15% of the audience on my own! As superb as I may have found a number of those concerts, generally people aren't really interested.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI would say it sounds like writing for fellow human beings rather than any kind of market. To be a creative musician in today's society (I mean as opposed to a mainstream "contemporary classical" composer like Turnage or Macmillan) requires a certain idealism at every stage in the process, including the conviction that the music has the potential to find its way to an audience that will appreciate it. Which sometimes happens, sometimes not. I have the impression that the way the pandemic has exacerbated social inequalities is mirrored in the way that the return to live performance is marginalising even further those musics that were already marginalised.
But what you say sounds plausible to me. A composer I know, he gets stuff performed though not recorded, certainly not as successful as you but still, pre pandemic he was managing to make a life without compromise, is on the point of throwing the towel in because he’s convinced that very few people care if he ever writes another note.Last edited by Mandryka; 30-03-22, 18:17.
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Originally posted by mahlerfan View PostBut isn't the 'market' also made up of fellow human beings? And regarding the pandemic's impact on already marginalised music, I've attended concerts of the creative artists you're thinking of prior to the pandemic, and personally made up nearly 15% of the audience on my own! As superb as I may have found a number of those concerts, generally people aren't really interested.
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What is the title of this thread again? ... today is the birthday of the Croatian-French composer Ivo Malec (1925-2019) whose Triola ou Symphonie pour moi-même is for me one of the masterpieces of electronic music:
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostWhat is the title of this thread again? ... today is the birthday of the Croatian-French composer Ivo Malec (1925-2019) whose Triola ou Symphonie pour moi-même is for me one of the masterpieces of electronic music:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQvnWj7TORM
I'll have a listen to that tomorrow, thanks. The only electronic music by Malec I have heard were two short pieces on the Philips double LP Electronic Panorama of 1970: Dahovi I and II.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostA "market", as S_A says, is made up of products and consumers. You might choose to see the musical world in such terms but surely that doesn't do justice to musicians or listeners or the relationship between them. Otherwise: I could tell you a few stories about sparsely attended concerts, and also about concerts where people had to be turned away at the door. But so what? You say "generally people aren't really interested"; well, generally people aren't really interested in Mahler either, I'm sorry to say.
When I say 'people' I think you know full well I mean concert-goers and record-buyers, not the general public.
Perhaps Mahler suffers disinterest like the niche composers in question, or perhaps not.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View Postpre pandemic he was managing to make a life without compromise, is on the point of throwing the towel in because he’s convinced that very few people care if he ever writes another note.
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Originally posted by mahlerfan View PostI found S_A's post a bit loosey-goosey, so thanks for your explanation of his plenipotentiary explanation of your thoughts!
When I say 'people' I think you know full well I mean concert-goers and record-buyers, not the general public.
Perhaps Mahler suffers disinterest like the niche composers in question, or perhaps not.
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Originally posted by mahlerfan View PostWhen I say 'people' I think you know full well I mean concert-goers and record-buyers, not the general public.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostNo actually, I didn't realise that you'd defined "people" in that arbitrary way. I think it's as well to keep things in perspective here - that in the wider scheme of things Mahler is also what you call a "niche composer". Also, in the 21st century, "concert-goers and record-buyers" are by no means the only people who listen to music.
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