Originally posted by light_calibre_baritone
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Whitacre, Eric (b 1970)
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Last edited by Richard Barrett; 17-01-17, 09:33.
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Originally posted by light_calibre_baritone View PostOh, only as pretentious as taking listeners on a "journey" (length of which TBC).
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Originally posted by jean View PostWell that puts me in my place!
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Originally posted by Alison View PostWhat if Mr Whitacre posted dismissive comments on a public forum about our (much admired by me) forum composers?
Wouldn't we think that was rather bad form?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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Originally posted by Alison View PostWhat if Mr Whitacre posted dismissive comments on a public forum about our (much admired by me) forum composers?
Wouldn't we think that was rather bad form?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI fully admit to not having been entirely clear - I'm remembering something I read a long time ago whose significance for me probably now has more to do with my turning it over in my mind so many times in the intervening years than with what KP originally said, whatever exactly that was! I think it has something to do with the obvious fact that we're hearing human voices, which are in general more identifiable as individual strands than instruments might be, because our listening apparatus is fine-tuned to recognising and understanding voices, their individualities and articulations, even with many other sounds going on simultaneously (there's a relationship here to what psychologists call the "cocktail party effect" no doubt). Hence polyphonic structures might be more readily followed in vocal form than in others. I don't know whether this has been investigated scientifically but I feel it to be the case.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostThe explanation could be as simple as choral music usually having words. For example, it must be easier to hear a connection between two non-simultaneous but similar melodic shapes if the text is the same - which often it will be.
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Originally posted by Ian View PostThe explanation could be as simple as choral music usually having words. For example, it must be easier to hear a connection between two non-simultaneous but similar melodic shapes if the text is the same - which often it will be.
In fact when listening to polyphonic choral music, the words aren't much help at all - which is why I get really annoyed when they're not printed in the programme.
Richard's post above is interresting - I'm going to think about it a bit more before replying.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostFor sure, but my point was more to do with hearing the lines as discrete strands rather than just with the connections between them.
And talking about words, one the big differences between EW and AP is their approach to word setting. EW’s output seems to largely consist of choral ‘songs’ - where the words are crucially important. They are much more settings of particular words/poems than you tend to get in AP where, as lovely as his music can be, the texts used (often conventional Latin texts) are pretty interchangeable.
I think that when you are setting a text as a ‘song’ there is much less room for ‘compositional processes’ - it all comes down to creating a memorable feel and mood that works with the text.
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Originally posted by jean View PostBut in fact, a 'tune' in the top part with judicious underpinnings of chords with every new syllable (typical of later choral music) is easiest of all to 'hear', whether the music choral or instrumental, surely?
That might be true, but if you're going to have some counterpoint a composer can still use the text in a way to make the lines clearer.
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Originally posted by light_calibre_baritone View Post
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.
This is not to say that it IS all "the same" (the first time I played in a Balinese Gamelan it all sounded the same and I couldn't distinguish between one piece and another, I think Cage said something like this about Shakuhachi music and why he enjoyed listening to it ?).
I do think if one is used to listening to 'sound based' (as opposed to 'note based') music this is maybe more apparent?
But this
Eric Whitacre's "Alleluia" is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I've ever heard. Recording by the Eric Whitacre Singers for Eric Whitacre's album "Wa...
this
'I saw Eternity' by Alexander CampkinCathedral de Dol de Bretagne, FranceLanglais International Festival 2010The Oxbridge Singers, Conducted by Alexander Cam...
this
Here's our performance of Arvo Pärt's Nunc Dimittis at Sofia church, Stockholm on June 12th 2014.Soloist: Marie HagenfeldtWe in Sofia Vokalensemble attended ...
and so on
(they might not be the best examples ?)
I do find something a bit superficial in the way that EW feels it's fine to "borrow" anything he likes which is a bit much IMV
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Originally posted by Ian View PostIsn’t that, sort of, the same thing? Surely you can make out the discrete strands of, say, a fugue if the entries also have the same words?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhat I'm saying is that you could also (possibly more precisely) make out those discrete strands if the entries had different words. Especially in a fugue, where imitation between voices is going to emphasise their interrelatedness rather strongly. An extreme example of discrete voices might be the polytextual motets of the middle ages, whose voices often sound almost as if they belong to different pieces that just happened to land together in this interwoven state.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostWhat if Mr Whitacre posted dismissive comments on a public forum about our (much admired by me) forum composers?
Wouldn't we think that was rather bad form?
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