Originally posted by RichardB
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Saddos ....
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI'm not sure. For one thing, "genres" aren't eternal things that come and go - opera, for example, didn't exist before the 17th century, and nothing really new has been done in "compositions conceived for the opera house" for half a century or so. A "thin period" might just mean that the genre is no longer relevant to the present state of cultural evolution, except in so far as it perpetuates some supposedly important institution that emerged in a previous period, like the aforementioned opera house. If we see a lack of vitality in popular music we might just be looking for it in the wrong place! Not that I'm claiming to be an expert, you understand.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostProbably not but I’m unsure of what it might sound like - mind you if I knew I’d probably have a good try at writing it - it would probably reflect my infuencers which may mean it wasn’t really original.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe same could be said of the novel - both had their heyday in the 19th century. However I think they are still hanging in there - just.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostIf there were, is there any reason to suppose it's been reached?
Composers including Eliot Carter, Anthony Braxton, Jonathan Harvey and Richard Barrett all exhibit that spirit of enquiry and inquisitiveness that takes music further than anyone might have imagined before they came onto the scene, even though each of these figures may in some instances have serious differences with the others. They may or may not be working with technical means that lie beyond the understanding of many a music lover nevertheless open to, and appreciative of their music, because one perceives in it a sense of authority transcendent of underlying complexities because one feels the composer to inhabit his or her musical world: they are so to speak at one with it, rather than having it control them. If their intuition leads them down pathways of great complexity it could be argued that this reflects how intuitively attuned they are, as compared to others who prefer escape routes! Intuition one feels can operate at high levels of sophistication - it is the cumbersomeness of language and the ways we explain the workings of nature that are complex, not the workings in or of themselves. I would venture to suggest that one reason why some of us are attracted to such music is that we feel that by analogy it expresses the ever-growing complexity of the modern world: trying to come to terms, armed with outdated terms of reference in need of re-assessment if mentally and spiritually we are going to keep our heads above the water line and not succumb to retrogression.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 18-12-21, 19:03.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostNot in your recordings of the year then?
You like that Jayne? - it’s dreadful!
First time I saw Nicki do it was live on a BBC Glasto Relay .... I couldn't keep still & thought about it for days after.
I just got my first flatscreen, and the sound was terrible so I'd wired two Tivoli Model Ones in as stereo speakers. I had to leap across to them and whack up two manual volume controls!
Starships was used very wittily last year in the Sky Resident Alien series..... its become a classic dance anthem now, for all genders and all ages....
Once that beat kicks in, I can't stop laughing, moving and often crying too for sheer joy.......
I'm on the floor, floor
I love to dance
So give me more, more, 'til I can't stand
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostIt came out in 2012.
First time I saw Nicki do it was live on a BBC Glasto Relay .... I couldn't keep still & thought about it for days after.
I just got my first flatscreen, and the sound was terrible so I'd wired two Tivoli Model Ones in as stereo speakers. I had to leap across to them and whack up two manual volume controls!
Starships was used very wittily last year in the Sky Resident Alien series..... its become a classic dance anthem now, for all genders and all ages....
Once that beat kicks in, I can't stop laughing, moving and often crying too for sheer joy.......
I'm on the floor, floor
I love to dance
So give me more, more, 'til I can't stand
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWell if it’s original by definition it’s new so how will anyone know what it sounds like - let alone like it?
So what you were asking was "is there a limit to the originality a single thing can have?" My answer to that one is that I don't think the idea of "originality" lends itself to such a pseudo-quantitative approach. Newness is always relative to a certain context, in which it creates new insights. For example: you could say that if in 1820 someone had invented Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique it would have been even more "original" than it was when he devised it a hundred years later. But there's no way anyone could have had such an idea in 1820 because there was no context for it. So I don't think a creative musician can decide to produce something "original", they can only decide to develop their individual way of hearing and thinking to the point where their insight into their particular context produces something new. "Original" is often interpreted as "not like anything else", but it's actually more complex than that. "Not like anything else" is the easy part.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI find it astonishing that so unrobotic a person as yourself could dance to that kind of music!
Nothing robotic but very ecstatic, about the slow climax on Meant to fly/reach the sky....but all this is just instinctive, really, very physical...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI well remember this question being asked by jazz musicians of roughly my generation (b.1945) at the beginning of the eighties, who were asking, "Where is there to go after 'free?'". They still felt their most creative work to be in that area of jazz, feeling that the jazz-rock fusion they had participated in during the previous decade had run its course.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI was hitting the dancefloor to Chic in the 70s, New Order in the 80s, Primal Scream in the 90s......... Starships is just pure primal rhythmical exhilaration, like them....
Nothing robotic but very ecstatic, about the slow climax on Meant to fly/reach the sky....but all this is just instinctive, really, very physical...
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostMy feeling is that the novel is so to speak in a very healthy state at this point in time, as opposed to opera!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostYou must be reading different ones to the eighty odd contemporary novels I’ve read this year. There’s a lot of ok stuff but precious few classics. Thing is writing a novel and getting it published is way easier than getting an opera written and produced - too easy perhaps ?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostYou must be reading different ones to the eighty odd contemporary novels I’ve read this year . There’s a lot of ok stuff but precious few classics. Thing is writing a novel and getting it published is way easier than getting an opera written and produced - too easy perhaps ?
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