Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Howard Goodall on BBC Two
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThe idea (yes THAT word again !) that music doesn't have to follow a simple "tension > release" mechanism is tricky for some folk."...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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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by Ian View Posttension - release mechanism.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostApart from its self-aggrandizing and patronizing nature, this sort of comment detracts from a much more likely, but non-confrontational, truth - that folk might simply prefer music that does follow a tension - release mechanism.
This may be where I part company with some of my friends on this thread, sadly.
At the time of the young Pierre Boulez's outburst against Schoenberg for not having followed through on the implications of the atonal revolution he had unleashed, there were outlined many criticisms, including AS's adherence in the serial works to outmoded forms and gestures dependent on tonality such as the cadence, but also by implication any sense of connectivity linking sequences or superimpositions of tones derived from series, and thereby decontextualised by virtue of the organisational net placing them.
One listen to all Schoenberg's, and dare one say Webern's serial output, reveals both composers' indebtedness to principles of melodic and rhythmic tension build and release, I would argue. Indeed, subsequent writers were often led to remark on one important aspect of the greater accessibility accorded the music of Webern being attributable to better performance; earlier presentations of his music having been marred by a misunderstanding of connectivity between what had previously been perceived as isolated tones, deployed where more than one instrument was scored for across the timbral spectrum by Webern's use of Klangfarbenmelodie. One writer, buried somewhere in my memory, went as far as opining that this was a misunderstanding by the "Boulez faction" of the deep embedment of Webern's melodic thinking in earlier composers such as Mahler, one born of poor performances, that had misled the Darmstadters who had extended serial organisation beyond pitch into venerating Webern as their true forbear, when they didn't actually have one to lay claim to.
I argued earlier that Schoenberg's arrival at the 12-tone method sprang spontaneously from practices he retrospectively realised had been taking place in the music of his free atonal period; I don't for one moment believe Schoenberg took the 12 tones of the chromatic "octave" out of a bag, every time he wanted to compose a new work, and threw them on the table to arrive at a random distribution that would then predetermine as correct Boulez's interpretation of serialism's meaning - had he done so he would have been closer to John Cage - but that on the contrary, the rows he chose were impregnated with the same melodic sources that had powered his and his colleagues' predecessors. There one finds the gradations of dissonance AS wrote of in 1911; it's all very traditional and euphony-based!
Afterthought: the above is not intended as an indictment of integral serialism or post-serialst music in general: it is more by way of saying that, with accustomisation, I believe it is as easy (or difficult) to come to terms with the music of Schoenberg and Webern - and other composers who have adhered by and large to their introduction of 12-tone-based musical structure - as with that of, say, Bartok. I would even go as far as including Elliot Carter. All these composers' musics can be listened to narratively. Those of the Darmstadt School (to re-create another unfortunate myth) who extended serialism in ways unintended by Schoenberg, I believe, explain the difficulty many people have in applying habitual, narrative-based approaches to listening to their works. While I - for one - hugely appreciate their work - seeing the languages of "Gruppen" and "Kontakte" as plusses - there is for me, personally, too much "narrative" to be inferred, Rorschach-like, into these two pieces (in particular) for me to be able to divorce my responses to them from old listening habits. There are works from the "pointillist" canon (no pun) to which I can so listen, but I receive the music in much the same way I would a free improvisation - and I'm not so sure the two aesthetics are that far apart, procedurally excepting...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMusic doesn't need to be tonally-based to follow "a tension-release mechanism"
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI would even go as far as including Elliot Carter.
Broadly speaking, I accept and agree all your other points here and appreciate your expressing them in detail.
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Originally posted by Julien Sorel View PostI was saying that the BBC presents a series on - broadly - the history of modern - broadly - classical music and starts from the premise that - broadly - the origins of modern - broadly - classical music are catastrophic. That something went wrong, but fortunately there have been and are composers who put or are putting it right.
But the series you refer to wasn’t about “modern - broadly - classical music”. It was about two particular strands of 20 classical music. And because the proponents of those strands are typically unsympathetic to each other it’s no wonder that there was a certain amount of argy bargy and ‘positioning‘. And that’s what I found interesting about the program - the politics of it all.
Of course the reality is that the vast majority of composers (and probably the ones most people listen to) are neither modernist nor minimalist. So no one actually has to be rescued. But the series was useful in reminding me that not everyone, particularly trend mongers, see it that way.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Caliban View PostWise words, imho, anotherbob If feel the same.
However among many things, this Forum has brought home to me forcibly that people must listen to music for very different reasons. Some listeners seem to relish the puzzle, the structure, the mathematical or physical construction of music, so that the primary reaction is an analytical one, rather than being concerned with purely what it sounds like or how it make one feel. This is the only way I can account for an enthusiasm for the harder-core serial or other 'modern' music, or for that matter for the more difficult 'HIPP' temperaments (cf Hervé Niquet's Handel at the Proms).
And perfectly legitimate that kind of appreciation is too. It's just not mine (nor, by the sounds of it, yours )
From my own experience I'd just report that listening to some of this music that you refer to it is possible to 'get' what you didn't previously 'get', through repetition, perhaps in different performances, or in juxtaposition with other music that you know/understand/appreciate better or let's say more easily, presumably through the process that MrGG describes as the 'something to hang onto factor'
So I guess I'm saying, never say never and don't give up! You could be missing out on some wonderful stuff
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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by Ian View PostBut the series was useful in reminding me that not everyone, particularly trend mongers, see it that way.
Caliban: Some listeners seem to relish the puzzle, the structure, the mathematical or physical construction of music, so that the primary reaction is an analytical one, rather than being concerned with purely what it sounds like or how it make one feel. This is the only way I can account for an enthusiasm for the harder-core serial or other 'modern' music, or for that matter for the more difficult 'HIPP' temperaments (cf Hervé Niquet's Handel at the Proms). The fact that it's the only way you can account for something doesn't mean it's the only explanation: it just means it's the only explanation you feel comfortable with.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostBut the series was useful in reminding me that not everyone, particularly trend mongers, see it that way.
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Re AnotherBob's question about having modern music explained..... surely at times other people's insights, knowledge, thoughts can lead us to better understanding of things?
I am a hopeless case on visual art, but old Simon "No show" Schama certainly eplained a few things to me in "The Power of Art" that I would have taken a lot longer to get, if I ever would have,on my own.
The programme on Rothko, cheesy though it was in part, was one of the revelatory moments of my life.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 teamsaint View Post..... surely at times other people's insights, knowledge, thoughts can lead us to better understanding of things?
This is one of the greatest attractions of this Forum, for me: the insights, knowledge and enthusiasm of others for Music that I didn't know (and even for that which I thought I didn't like) has led me so frequently to new assessments and enjoyment that I wouldn't've dreamt of previously. I've often toyed with a "neglected Serialist" Thread on the lines of BeefO's "neglected Brits", and Ian's comments here motivated me to actually get it started.
I don't wish to talk down to anotherBob or Thropple - nor to "convert" them; I simply want to share my love of this Music with anyone who might be interested, and to provide examples of the Music for anyone who wished to judge for themselves the quality of hostile and inaccurate comment by Mr Goodall in his very personal series.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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amateur51
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostRe AnotherBob's question about having modern music explained..... surely at times other people's insights, knowledge, thoughts can lead us to better understanding of things?
I am a hopeless case on visual art, but old Simon "No show" Schama certainly eplained a few things to me in "The Power of Art" that I would have taken a lot longer to get, if I ever would have,on my own.
The programme on Rothko, cheesy though it was in part, was one of the revelatory moments of my life.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostApart from its self-aggrandizing and patronizing nature, this sort of comment detracts from a much more likely, but non-confrontational, truth - that folk might simply prefer music that does follow a tension - release mechanism.
Hope you enjoy Andre on Sky
some folk do
I've just come from a concert in Leicester which was full and everything was 2 channel acousmatic music played through 48 speakers
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostRe AnotherBob's question about having modern music explained..... surely at times other people's insights, knowledge, thoughts can lead us to better understanding of things?
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