Originally posted by Dave2002
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What Are You Practising / Composing Now?
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Allegedly Mozart wrote this
“It is a mistake to think that the practice of my art has become easy to me. I assure you, dear friend, no one has given so much care to the study of composition as I. There is scarcely a famous master in music whose works I have not frequently and diligently studied.”
Not that I'm advocating "competing" with Mozart, but studying works of others, and practising, and building on them, does make some sort of sense.
However, many people have written that Mozart was very fluent at composition - he certainly had very significant talents.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Poststudying works of others, and practising, and building on them, does make some sort of sense.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAllegedly Mozart wrote this
in a letter to his father. In German, of course.
Not that I'm advocating "competing" with Mozart, but studying works of others, and practising, and building on them, does make some sort of sense.
However, many people have written that Mozart was very fluent at composition - he certainly had very significant talents.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt made more sense when there was consensus about what knowledge and skills composers ought to have in order to be able to work with the materials and forms of their time.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAs I said, there's absolutely no consensus about any of those things in the way there was in the late 18th century or earlier.
I didn't realise that until my last visit to Leipzig a few years ago. He actually provided and organised the music for three churches. We all know about St Thomas Church, but there is also Nikolaikirche, and St Pauls - which the town council blew up in the 1968 in an act of architectural vandalism. Bach was at one time responsible for all of htem.
Clearly Bach had to gain sufficient credibility to gain his positions, but it may be that he had many people - students/pupils/instrumentalists effectively working for and with him. In that kind of society there would have been considerable group understanding - which may perhaps not exist today. Even then, in some parts of the world, music was quite an industry.
In the meantime I couldn't resist tinkering with the Lyadov piece - it'll take more work, but it's doable, at least in a simple minded way.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIn a broad sense, yes.Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt made more sense when there was consensus about what knowledge and skills composers ought to have in order to be able to work with the materials and forms of their time.
I suppose to some extent it depends on what one means by a composer. A composer could be a musician who has studied instruments and other aspects of formal music at a music college, or a university, or a jazz musician, or could be a self taught person who plays in a small band, or a rap artist etc. In each case there is likely to be a flow of ideas from one person to another, surely, either directly, or by listening to works produced.
Another factor is simply the financial viability of living as a composer. Wasn't it always thus?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI'm still not convinced that there aren't pathways for modern composers. Different people will have different approaches to what they learn and what they know, and what they want to produce. Some of those will still study the works of others from the past, while others will take advice from modern practitioners.
I suppose to some extent it depends on what one means by a composer. A composer could be a musician who has studied instruments and other aspects of formal music at a music college, or a university, or a jazz musician, or could be a self taught person who plays in a small band, or a rap artist etc. In each case there is likely to be a flow of ideas from one person to another, surely, either directly, or by listening to works produced.Last edited by Richard Barrett; 31-08-20, 09:34.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostObviously. A "flow of ideas from one person to another", though, is not necessarily the same thing as basing one's work on a preexistent model. You have made my point for me actually: in the 18th century there was an emphasis on using such models as the basis for one's work ...
Nowadays, with social media and the internet some people can develop their music and make it available to millions, and also listen to a much wider range of musics than people in previous centuries. Clearly there was awareness of music in previous centuries, though how widespread it was we perhaps can't be sure. In some formal concerts in previous centuries pieces might have been played twice - because those would have been the only two performances that any ordinary person would ever hear.
It might also have been fairly common for local musicians - such as church organists - to have indulged in a modicum of composing/improvising or arrangements of other pieces. Some wouldn't have done, but others would have been much more adventurous.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostClearly there was awareness of music in previous centuries, though how widespread it was we perhaps can't be sure.
Involvement in music before the advent of recordings and broadcasts was a very different matter to what it became subsequently, and indeed it was expected of every trained musician to be able to extemporise, arrange and compose within the parameters of the prevailing style in that time and place.
Not that any of this has much relevance to the thread subject of course.
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