Originally posted by light_calibre_baritone
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Whitacre, Eric (b 1970)
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Originally posted by jean View PostI'm not an 'enthusiast', but I would say from my limited experience that any piece you choose sounds quite impressive - but then all the other pieces sound much the same.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI guess it might sound that way if you've never heard anything by Arvo Pärt! Also, a composer who can say "The human attention span lasts about 10 minutes, so when composing, I try to take the audience on a journey. So far I haven’t found anything that needs to be a longer journey" is not one I find it easy to take seriously.
10 minutes ? That's one note
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostFor me the linear interest (viz. counterpoint) of the last three composers is crucial factor in their music's stature.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIn an interview I once read, Penderecki asserted that counterpoint was particularly idiomatic to vocal ensembles...
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Originally posted by jean View PostI don't understand this:
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I would have thought this true of any type of music. Isn't counterpoint necessary to some extent or other in order to maintain a listener's interest over any length of time? Short homophonic compositions can be effective, but a half-hour piece consisting of nothing but homophonic chords really doesn't bear thinking about.
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostIsn't counterpoint necessary to some extent or other in order to maintain a listener's interest over any length of time?
Anyway, what Penderecki meant was certainly not so extreme. I take him to have meant that a music which is principally driven by linear relationships between its constituent parts is particularly suitable for vocal ensembles, in a way that it might not be for, say, wind ensembles.
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostI would have thought this true of any type of music. Isn't counterpoint necessary to some extent or other in order to maintain a listener's interest over any length of time? Short homophonic compositions can be effective, but a half-hour piece consisting of nothing but homophonic chords really doesn't bear thinking about.
(a short part of a much longer piece)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI guess it might sound that way if you've never heard anything by Arvo Pärt! Also, a composer who can say "The human attention span lasts about 10 minutes, so when composing, I try to take the audience on a journey. So far I haven’t found anything that needs to be a longer journey" is not one I find it easy to take seriously.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhat I understood him to mean was either or both of (a) contrapuntal textures are more suited to vocal ensembles than for example homophonic ones are; (b) vocal ensembles are more suited to contrapuntal music than are other types of ensemble. I wish I could remember exactly what he said; it was probably a lot clearer than I can manage now!
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light_calibre_baritone
Originally posted by jean View PostWell that puts me in my place!
RB, Arvo Pärt sounds nothing like Eric Whitacre.
Incidentally, researchers now believe the human attention span to be about 8 SECONDS - http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2...anks-to-smart/
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light_calibre_baritone
Originally posted by ahinton View Post... as I have from the outset of working on it always regards my string quintet as a piece for six singers of whom five happen to play stringed instruments; I hope that this does not sound pretentious, for it's certainly not meant to be so...
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Originally posted by light_calibre_baritone View Post
RB, Arvo Pärt sounds nothing like Eric Whitacre.
BUT maybe i'm using a different listening strategy ?
To me EW sounds a bit like teenage Pärt pastiche though that might be to do with how the sounds of these types of choirs have a very similar spectral profile.
Incidentally, researchers now believe the human attention span to be about 8 SECONDS -
hey, look at that squirrel
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light_calibre_baritone
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostNot to my ears
BUT maybe i'm using a different listening strategy ?
To me EW sounds a bit like teenage Pärt pastiche though that might be to do with how the sounds of these types of choirs have a very similar spectral profile.
The choirs sounding the same is interesting... I can see how that could create difficulty when listening, particularly if the same approach is taken for each composer.
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