Originally posted by Lateralthinking1
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Howard Goodall on BBC Two
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostHa! Just shows what a nebulous concept 'elitism' is.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Post
If his main argument is that the classics are the roots of most pop music, he will need to address the black roots of much of it and also the white folk music roots to convince.
But if he is saying that there are similar patterns in each, and arguably some elements of influence in the former on the latter because the former came first, that is different.
One of the implications of what you seem to be saying here was raised by Goodall at the point where he implied - to me at least - that (by implication again) white European folk music had acquired what we today would consider its folkish harmonies in the 15th century, at which point harmony became more varied, expanded beyond its earlier foundations built primarily on fourths and fifths, to include major and minor thirds and so on. He also made the point that sacred music - if you will, the forerunner of what we think of as the classical heritage - and secular music, had both shared many of the same melodies in an ongoing process of interaction, intermittently interrupted by attempts by church authorities to prevent contamination of the former by the latter.
That's as regards the roots of white European folk music, if one ignores the proviso offered by Euan McColl's and Peggy Seeger's later tracings of common links with folk musics right across Europe and beyond, filling out Bartok's earlier researches. (Bartok became friendly with a Scottish composer (with whom he stayed and whose name currently escapes me) who was given to treating Scottish folk melodies in a manner similarly radical to how Bartok was treating folk materials from the Balkan region; in diary writings (which were posted by someone most helpfully on the old BBC board) Bartok noted similarities between the two traditions. When it comes to considering influences from black musical traditions on western pop music we're talking about something separate, coming from a different direction, and in terms of recent impact - though of course we can say we all came ultimately from Africa; but it is a much more interrupted continuum in the latter case. Possibly (dare one say) the recent influence of African folk musics in Afro Pop (Osibisa etc) have been more easily assimilated by virtue of the "contamination" of African music by European harmony. But a lot more of such contamination had occurred in the meantime in the development of jazz in America: and there, in particular since the late 40s (Afro-Cuban) we see powerful attempts by African Americans to reclaim continuities predating slavery.
It's all very, very complex!
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm at a similar disadvantage to you on this subject, Lat, while similarly motivated to get to the bottom of all this.
One of the implications of what you seem to be saying here was raised by Goodall at the point where he implied - to me at least - that (by implication again) white European folk music had acquired what we today would consider its folkish harmonies in the 15th century, at which point harmony became more varied, expanded beyond its earlier foundations built primarily on fourths and fifths, to include major and minor thirds and so on. He also made the point that sacred music - if you will, the forerunner of what we think of as the classical heritage - and secular music, had both shared many of the same melodies in an ongoing process of interaction, intermittently interrupted by attempts by church authorities to prevent contamination of the former by the latter.
That's as regards the roots of white European folk music, if one ignores the proviso offered by Euan McColl's and Peggy Seeger's later tracings of common links with folk musics right across Europe and beyond, filling out Bartok's earlier researches. (Bartok became friendly with a Scottish composer (with whom he stayed and whose name currently escapes me) who was given to treating Scottish folk melodies in a manner similarly radical to how Bartok was treating folk materials from the Balkan region; in diary writings (which were posted by someone most helpfully on the old BBC board) Bartok noted similarities between the two traditions. When it comes to considering influences from black musical traditions on western pop music we're talking about something separate, coming from a different direction, and in terms of recent impact - though of course we can say we all came ultimately from Africa; but it is a much more interrupted continuum in the latter case. Possibly (dare one say) the recent influence of African folk musics in Afro Pop (Osibisa etc) have been more easily assimilated by virtue of the "contamination" of African music by European harmony. But a lot more of such contamination had occurred in the meantime in the development of jazz in America: and there, in particular since the late 40s (Afro-Cuban) we see powerful attempts by African Americans to reclaim continuities predating slavery.
It's all very, very complex!
I recognise your description of Osibisa. If ever there was 'Afro-Pop' in a western sense in the 1970s, Osibisa are your example. At the same time,they were British Ghanaians (and Caribbeans). They came here. Some of them may have been born in London which isn't to say that colonialism is irrelevant but they were more about post-colonialism. None of my comments necessarily get to the substance of Goodall's programme but they do provide some colour. I am looking forward to the moment when he manages to combine in a sentence Bartok, the Proclaimers, Gogol Bordello and Peter Maxwell Davies. Is the latter indeed the missing link?Last edited by Guest; 28-01-13, 00:12.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI too thought is was excellent. I switched on the television with some trepidation that it was going to be another case of gross dumbing down, but HG presented the whole thing thoughtfully and intelligently.
And the trivia addict in me loved the titbit that Lurpak butter (a constant in the fridge at Château Caliban) is named after their famous ( I'd never heard of them) discovery... I had no idea!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Thropplenoggin can you not tune your digi box satellite dish thing to freeview? [guarantee every dish in Southern Spain is pointing at Sky UK just need a good pal to provide a uk address fr the decoder card etc & billing]]According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Thropplenoggin
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View PostThropplenoggin can you not tune your digi box satellite dish thing to freeview? [guarantee every dish in Southern Spain is pointing at Sky UK just need a good pal to provide a uk address fr the decoder card etc & billing]]
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I think it is really quite unfair of the experts on this Forum to criticise this programme for missing this, that or the other. This is clearly not a programme aimed at those who know the history and theories of Western Classical music (and beyond) back to front. Its main target is for those who enjoy classical music and have probably read bits and pieces along the way but never had a chance to put things in perspective and to see how things are (may be) connected (I speak for myself). Most viewers are probably happy to leave it as it is but some will go and find out more.
Originally Posted by Caliban
And the trivia addict in me loved the titbit that Lurpak butter (a constant in the fridge at Château Caliban) is named after their famous ( I'd never heard of them) discovery... I had no idea!
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostI think it is really quite unfair of the experts on this Forum to criticise this programme for missing this, that or the other. This is clearly not a programme aimed at those who know the history and theories of Western Classical music (and beyond) back to front. Its main target is for those who enjoy classical music and have probably read bits and pieces along the way but never had a chance to put things in perspective and to see how things are (may be) connected (I speak for myself). Most viewers are probably happy to leave it as it is but some will go and find out more.
Spot on.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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I thought the general tenor of the comments had been favourable though?
[To discuss salted and unsalted, please go the Refreshment Room...]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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It has been useful to see expert opinion on the board ,as to where there may be understandable gaps, so that we can look further for ourselves.
I have been interested for a while in connections between folk and Classical musics, and posts by S-A and others have been very illuminating, whilst not undermining the positive effect of the show.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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just watched it through on iPlayer and must agree with doversoul and the generally very favourable commentary above
without affectation, without a hint of condescension, the history of music as technique perhaps but all the better for that imv ... and i have never before 'got' Monteverdi so ta Howard i am hooked!According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postjust watched it through on iPlayer and must agree with doversoul and the generally very favourable commentary above
without affectation, without a hint of condescension, the history of music as technique perhaps but all the better for that imv ... and i have never before 'got' Monteverdi so ta Howard i am hooked!I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post... without affectation, without a hint of condescension ...
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostYes, I was favourably impressed with that too -- and he can express himself without feeling the need to wave his arms about (unless conducting, of course), which to me is the bane of all too many programmes on the arts these days.
OG
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