Originally posted by Pulcinella
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Tired of music?
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI started losing interest in pop music when I was around 20 years old, in the mid seventies, as it all seemed to be a watered down repeat of what had preceded it. That era is now viewed as a Golden Age of pop music. However, to be fair, and with due respect to Living Composers such as RB, Classical Music has become a type of Museum Art. This is no longer the mid twentieth century when the likes of Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Bartok, Hindemith, etc were still active. Yes, there are times when I feel a real ennui with all types of Music
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First I would say to RF that yes, Classical Music has become a museum art, but that doesn't impinge on me overmuch since I don't describe what I'm doing as "classical", it doesn't sound classical, it often isn't played in classical-music venues and it isn't all written with classically trained musicians in mind (& I'm not one myself). As will be clear from many of my posts, I do love a great deal of classical music (and not only this, of course) but what concerns me is renewal rather than preservation. I am working mostly with musicians much younger than myself, and in this way trying to inspire the coming generations to forge a path for themselves with something other than the museum as their starting point.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postthe vagaries of capitalism - its inbuilt uncertainties, undependabilities, increasingly short term driven imperatives - leave these "bigger" existential questions deferred, in turn leaving people floudering on where to turn for answers and solutions which would once have been sought in religious or artistic vision: hence the apparent durability of heritage, in the arts in general and music in particular to older age groups instilled with educational values more appropriate to earlier eras - viz the Proms, the power of nostalgia. At the same time those same groups see a younger generation emerging into a world in which these values have little or no relevance, and so it is understandable that their own tastes and preferences are experienced as more and more questionable. This I think is the question behind this particular thread.
Apart from which, less than two weeks ago the latest instalment of my large-scale work based on poems by our late friend Simon Howard was premiered, unfortunately for me in Brazil, and the performers put up a video of 37 seconds from their soundcheck, which brought tears of joy to my eyes, not just because the poetic complexity of Simon's words comes through in such a beautiful way (the text here consists of the words "I'm not here or there" repeated several times) but also to see these young performers so clearly negotiating the considerable coordinational challenges of the music with an almost jazz-like sense of rhythm. Whoever was at the concert, I hope that one or more of them might have retained or kindled a belief that all isn't lost as far as a future for (this) music is concerned.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostAs someone who has always considered music an important part of my life. Recently I have gone through short periods of time when I’ve not wanted to play music, listen to music, sing or even think about music. These do not last long but I think it may be a reaction to the amount of unavoidable bad pop music that seems to be everywhere.
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