Originally posted by kea
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Adams, John
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIf you can't be bothered to spell my name correctly I don't really see why I should be bothered to reply, but I've already made it clear I don't agree with the OP, and hardly anyone else has mentioned this aspect, so I wonder why it seems to annoy you so much.
I wish the situation was such that creative musicians experienced less pressure to ape the marketing techniques of commercial music. Marketing is basically to do with persuading people that a "product" no better than others is in fact more desirable than them, and applying this to music seems to me to devalue (potential) listeners to the status of passive consumers. Personally I wouldn't wish to insult people in that way.
marketing can be about this, but very often, certainly for things like music and books, it is about raising awareness about the availability of product, where products are indeed unique.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 MrGongGong View Post
The report states that
Perhaps unsurprisingly, composers who had an agent or publisher to handle the development of their commissions received significantly better than the general average commission income, at £15,000
and my immediate question is whether that figure represents the gross amount or what the composer receives after the agent or publisher has taken his/her/its cut.
The figures as a whole are profoundly dissipriting but, whilst it would clearly have been beyond the remit of this report, it would have been useful had the brief extended to a survey of the other sources of income for composers that relate directly to their compositional activites, such as performance / broadcast / recording royalties, publication royalties / sales (especially of self-published composers), as well as some idea of the proportion of individual composers' total incomes that derives from composition related income as a whole.
The only reference to the amounts of time required to fulfil commissions is in the context of composers who occasionally turn them down on the grounds of lack of time. There's no consideration of how much of that "lack of time" arises as a consequence of composers' need to spend time on other activities besides work on commissioned pieces. There is likewise no attempt to assess average individual incomes from all composition-related activity to a statistic such as the living wage or national minimum wage - perhaps because it would make for quite astonishingly uncomfortable reading!
All that said, many thanks for linking to this document!
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI wouldn't agree with this specific part of your post.
marketing can be about this, but very often, certainly for things like music and books, it is about raising awareness about the availability of product, where products are indeed unique.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI took Richard to be referring specifically to "marketing" of the kind that applies in this particular case and other cases like it rather then in the rather more general terms and context to which you allude here.
The perils of internet discussion.
My colleagues in marketing are fine people , and do an honourable job.
or so they tell me !!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 ahinton View PostYes, it does. There's plenty to discuss in it but, for now, I'd just pick on a few issues.
The report states that
Perhaps unsurprisingly, composers who had an agent or publisher to handle the development of their commissions received significantly better than the general average commission income, at £15,000
and my immediate question is whether that figure represents the gross amount or what the composer receives after the agent or publisher has taken his/her/its cut.
The figures as a whole are profoundly dissipriting but, whilst it would clearly have been beyond the remit of this report, it would have been useful had the brief extended to a survey of the other sources of income for composers that relate directly to their compositional activites, such as performance / broadcast / recording royalties, publication royalties / sales (especially of self-published composers), as well as some idea of the proportion of individual composers' total incomes that derives from composition related income as a whole.
The only reference to the amounts of time required to fulfil commissions is in the context of composers who occasionally turn them down on the grounds of lack of time. There's no consideration of how much of that "lack of time" arises as a consequence of composers' need to spend time on other activities besides work on commissioned pieces. There is likewise no attempt to assess average individual incomes from all composition-related activity to a statistic such as the living wage or national minimum wage - perhaps because it would make for quite astonishingly uncomfortable reading!
All that said, many thanks for linking to this document!
Thats not to say of course that this is how things should be in a better world, but frankly ,buyers, decision makers etc do take more notice, very often, of the creator than of a head office functionary.
Sad but true, I suppose. Division of labour rears its ugly head......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 ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBeautiful.
I suspect (hope) that rfg meant that he wished other composers had the ability to make their work better known to a wider audience (rather than the purely commercial aspects that his words might suggest) - but RB's comment here demonstrates that there are other, more important things to which composers can (and should) be devoting their time and efforts, and other, more important priorities that the Arts can (and should) be concerned with.
Mind you, what that might say about composers who spend a certain amount of time posting to internet fora is presumably another matter altogether...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostDoes anyone really use Adams' music to convince an audience of the worth of "contemporary music", or to listen to more challenging contemporaries? Who would bother to do this? Don't planners & musicians put Adams on simply because they like the music & know an audience will come to hear him? In which case, you might ask yourself why so many listeners (and sophisticated, widely-listened**, "classical" performers) seem to enjoy it...
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostQuite. Why on earth should Adams' music be required to lead listeners to other music (let alone "real" contemporary classical music, as if Adams' music was somehow unreal)? We don't require this of any other composer or type of music. The music of the composer should stand on its own. Adams here seems to be blamed for not persuading listeners to hear music of contemporaries writing in a quite different style - how absurd is that?
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by aeolium View PostAdams here seems to be blamed for not persuading listeners to hear music of contemporaries writing in a quite different style - how absurd is that?
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostWhy on earth should Adams' music be required to lead listeners to other music
(let alone "real" contemporary classical music, as if Adams' music was somehow unreal)?
We don't require this of any other composer or type of music.
The music of the composer should stand on its own.
Adams here seems to be blamed for not persuading listeners to hear music of contemporaries writing in a quite different style - how absurd is that?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Postprogramming work of composers like Adams is, I think, often a lazy option taken by (especially) orchestras whose programmers know very little and care less about contemporary music but feel they ought to include some, with the effect that programming diversity is reduced further than is already the case.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut ... but ... but ... Where on earth do you find such a ridiculous suggestion in any of the Posts on this (or any other) Thread, aeolie? rfg made the suggestion that, in his experience it has done this on at least one occasion (#s36 & 49) and might do for other listeners. A misunderstanding of what type of "other Classical Music" led to posts about other "contemporary classical" composers. But nowhere has there been any suggestion - until your own #85 - that anyone was demanding that this was a "requirement".
You've misread my expression "real contemporary classical Music" - the "real" applies to the "contemporary", not to the "Music". Whilst Adams frequently uses contemporary topics for the subject matter and titles of his work, the Music he writes flits about stylistically from various Musics written between 1920 and 1950. The subject matter is "of our time", but the Musical language is that of our parents' and grandparents' - unless one shares the bleak conception that ours is a uniquely nostalgist/necrophiliac age, in which grave robbery is a defining feature.
And we don't require it on this Thread.
Indeed it should.
This isn't happening - the "seems" is only your misreading the comments that have arisen from a misunderstanding of a post from rfg. The accusations you are making are as misdirected as if somebody now turned on you and claimed that you were saying that Adams' Music never leads listeners to other types of Music. You're not, any more than anyone else was "requiring" it to do so.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIf you can't be bothered to spell my name correctly I don't really see why I should be bothered to reply, but I've already made it clear I don't agree with the OP, and hardly anyone else has mentioned this aspect, so I wonder why it seems to annoy you so much.
I wish the situation was such that creative musicians experienced less pressure to ape the marketing techniques of commercial music. Marketing is basically to do with persuading people that a "product" no better than others is in fact more desirable than them, and applying this to music seems to me to devalue (potential) listeners to the status of passive consumers. Personally I wouldn't wish to insult people in that way.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThis isn't happening - the "seems" is only your misreading the comments that have arisen from a misunderstanding of a post from rfg. The accusations you are making are as misdirected as if somebody now turned on you and claimed that you were saying that Adams' Music never leads listeners to other types of Music. You're not, any more than anyone else was "requiring" it to do so.
On the other hand, programming work of composers like Adams is, I think, often a lazy option taken by (especially) orchestras whose programmers know very little and care less about contemporary music but feel they ought to include some, with the effect that programming diversity is reduced further than is already the case.
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