Xenakis, Iannis

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  • MrGongGong
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 18357

    #31
    Originally posted by Beef Oven View Post
    Simon I think, was being provocative in tone. Allow for that, and many people would agree with him.
    Many people believe all sorts of nonsense

    (some even think that we aren't in Europe )

    The problem with some folk is that they seem to think that there are always only 2 choices
    Bach OR Boulez
    Pan Sonic OR Palestrina
    when one can simple choose both some or all

    Interesting that on my drive to the station just now and listening to the EMS the parallels with Xenakis and architecture leapt out !

    (but I guess Xenakis isn't really "music" so what do I know ? )

    Comment

    • Simon

      #32
      Leaving aside the hilarious idea that a certain member who can't even understand posts on a MB would understand erudition ...

      FHG, IMO you are making a category error. That musical fashions have changed is undoubted, and that music has developed over the centuries is clearly something that everyone knows.

      But it isn't the fact that it has changed in this way that I'm referring to. The relativist ideas that there are no musical absolutes and that any noise, however created, is de facto a musical event, is what I'm talking about.

      You can draw a line from Ockeghem right through to Philip Moore, and despite the vast range of difference between their work, there is a continuity. They are part of a continuum that includes many creative functions, and perhaps even mental attitudes to audience and motivation, without which I argue that music cannot exist honestly.

      The idea that all modern compositions are on this same continuum is, to my mind, a nonsense.

      To use an analogy to better explain, I hope, consider railways. From the very first ideas about them, through Rocket, Mallard, the Deltics and the Bullet trans of Japan right up to whatever is the latest in such travel, there have been fundamentals pervading all the various designs. Stephenson would gape at Branson's Pendolinos, but he would nonetheless recognise the function and the achievement - they both do what they are meant to so, albeit in an astonishingly different way, and they all have the same basic methodology - wheels running on pre-laid tracks.

      But show him a nuclear submarine and tell him it's a kind of railway - no way. That it's a form of transport, is undoubted. That it's a railway - never.

      And that's the difference between, as you mentioned, Palestrina, Mozart and Xenakis. If you had said Palestrina, Mozart and Shostakovitch - or even switched genre and substituted Fleetwood Mac instead of Shost - you'd have been absolutely right. But Xenakis isn't on the same continuum. He's HMS Ambush to Rocket, Mallard and Royal Scots Grey! As are people like, of course, Berio and Stockhausen.

      Sculpture is the same, as are paintings: start with the unknown sculptors of the ancient world, through Michaelangelo, Rodin - and then think about so-called sculptors of today, who manage empty rooms, lights going on and off, and random piles of bricks. It's not just not the same continuum, it's a different universe entirely! And whatever you may say about the society in which they live, and its influences, cannot in my view alter that.

      You may not agree, of course! Thanks for your earlier post - it was good, not to say refreshing , to read your reasoned comments, even though as yet they haven't convinced me.

      bws S-S!

      Comment

      • LeMartinPecheur
        Full Member
        • Apr 2007
        • 4717

        #33
        Originally posted by Simon View Post
        Leaving aside the hilarious idea that a certain member who can't even understand posts on a MB would understand erudition ...

        FHG, IMO you are making a category error. That musical fashions have changed is undoubted, and that music has developed over the centuries is clearly something that everyone knows.

        But it isn't the fact that it has changed in this way that I'm referring to. The relativist ideas that there are no musical absolutes and that any noise, however created, is de facto a musical event, is what I'm talking about.

        You can draw a line from Ockeghem right through to Philip Moore, and despite the vast range of difference between their work, there is a continuity. They are part of a continuum that includes many creative functions, and perhaps even mental attitudes to audience and motivation, without which I argue that music cannot exist honestly.

        The idea that all modern compositions are on this same continuum is, to my mind, a nonsense.

        To use an analogy to better explain, I hope, consider railways. From the very first ideas about them, through Rocket, Mallard, the Deltics and the Bullet trans of Japan right up to whatever is the latest in such travel, there have been fundamentals pervading all the various designs. Stephenson would gape at Branson's Pendolinos, but he would nonetheless recognise the function and the achievement - they both do what they are meant to so, albeit in an astonishingly different way, and they all have the same basic methodology - wheels running on pre-laid tracks.

        But show him a nuclear submarine and tell him it's a kind of railway - no way. That it's a form of transport, is undoubted. That it's a railway - never.

        And that's the difference between, as you mentioned, Palestrina, Mozart and Xenakis. If you had said Palestrina, Mozart and Shostakovitch - or even switched genre and substituted Fleetwood Mac instead of Shost - you'd have been absolutely right. But Xenakis isn't on the same continuum. He's HMS Ambush to Rocket, Mallard and Royal Scots Grey! As are people like, of course, Berio and Stockhausen.

        Sculpture is the same, as are paintings: start with the unknown sculptors of the ancient world, through Michaelangelo, Rodin - and then think about so-called sculptors of today, who manage empty rooms, lights going on and off, and random piles of bricks. It's not just not the same continuum, it's a different universe entirely! And whatever you may say about the society in which they live, and its influences, cannot in my view alter that.

        You may not agree, of course! Thanks for your earlier post - it was good, not to say refreshing , to read your reasoned comments, even though as yet they haven't convinced me.

        bws S-S!
        Simon: I'm sure that everyone on this message board agrees that there is for them 'music I like' and 'music I don't like'. The problem surely is when the latter category slips over towards 'You may call it music but if I don't like it, it isn't music.' Don't you see a problem with this?

        There are, I would assume, types of auditory input that you and everyone on these boards would agree isn't music - street pneumatic drills, the noise in an office, etc. You seem to have categories for 'Auditory inputs that I don't like but do recognize as music' and 'Auditory inputs I don't like and don't recognize as music even though a lot of other people do'. But what gives you the right to set your judgments as binding on others?

        If your comment "The relativist ideas that there are no musical absolutes and that any noise, however created, is de facto a musical event, is what I'm talking about" is aimed at the likes of 4'33", surely you're missing the point. Cage wasn't surely saying that all noise is music, he was seeking to open the ears of particular audiences sitting in particular halls to the fact that even when the pianist plays no notes at all there is still a lot to listen to. Close listening to acoustic events and patterns of events for a few minutes can be treated as a musical event, and is very good for the ears and brain. OK, there's a large joke element in it as well and the copyright issues are interesting, but surely it's idle to argue from the randomness of this event to the proposition that anything that sounds like noise to me shouldn't be regarded as music by anyone else.

        No doubt you'll tell me which category errors I've perpetrated here...
        I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

        Comment

        • Simon

          #34
          Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post

          "'You may call it music but if I don't like it, it isn't music.' Don't you see a problem with this?"
          Hello LMP. I would see a problem if it were true, as it's untenable... but as you seem to realise in your next paragraph...

          Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
          "You seem to have categories for 'Auditory inputs that I don't like but do recognize as music' and 'Auditory inputs I don't like and don't recognize as music even though a lot of other people do'."

          ..it is this position that I would accept as being close to my own, rather than the former one


          Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
          But what gives you the right to set your judgments as binding on others?
          Nothing. I don't want to bind anyone! What I do want to do is to offer a rationale, that anyone can take or leave, for dismissing the fraudulent and the unpleasant if and when it is, in my view, misclassified as music.

          Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
          If your comment "The relativist ideas that there are no musical absolutes and that any noise, however created, is de facto a musical event, is what I'm talking about" is aimed at the likes of 4'33", surely you're missing the point.
          It wasn't. I really don't want to bring Cage into any discussion about music (though I do find some of his philosophical comments interesting) but as regards

          Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
          even when the pianist plays no notes at all there is still a lot to listen to.
          I agree with you. But I would argue that it is sound, rather than music. As I said earlier, and as you agree - your comment about drills makes that clear - not all sound is music.

          It's where we draw that line that interests me, though up to now on here we've never really been able to have a rational discussion about it, because some people prefer to disrupt and insult.


          PS. No category errors, I don't think.

          Comment

          • LeMartinPecheur
            Full Member
            • Apr 2007
            • 4717

            #35
            Originally posted by Simon View Post
            Hello LMP. I would see a problem if it were true, as it's untenable... but as you seem to realise in your next paragraph...




            ..it is this position that I would accept as being close to my own, rather than the former one




            Nothing. I don't want to bind anyone! What I do want to do is to offer a rationale, that anyone can take or leave, for dismissing the fraudulent and the unpleasant if and when it is, in my view, misclassified as music.



            It wasn't. I really don't want to bring Cage into any discussion about music (though I do find some of his philosophical comments interesting) but as regards



            I agree with you. But I would argue that it is sound, rather than music. As I said earlier, and as you agree - your comment about drills makes that clear - not all sound is music.

            It's where we draw that line that interests me, though up to now on here we've never really been able to have a rational discussion about it, because some people prefer to disrupt and insult.
            Thank you Simon. That clarifies things, and it will be interesting to see if anyone disagrees. I don't, except perhaps a tiny bit on whether 4'33" and its like is music. I see a performance of it as some sort of artistic event and since it is aimed at our brains via our ears and there are no words, music seems a reasonable category Though I guess theatre is another possibility, particularly at the first performance, before people knew what to expect
            I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

            Comment

            • ahinton
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 16122

              #36
              Sorry to spoil (or at least interrupt) the party, but who, in the present context, is "al"?

              Comment

              • LeMartinPecheur
                Full Member
                • Apr 2007
                • 4717

                #37
                ah: I guess it's "Pierre Boulez, Luciano Berio, Edgar Varese, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Luigi Nono", as per Beef Oven's OP.
                I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

                Comment

                • amateur51

                  #38
                  Originally posted by ahinton View Post
                  Sorry to spoil (or at least interrupt) the party, but who, in the present context, is "al"?
                  What context is that, ah?

                  Comment

                  • ahinton
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 16122

                    #39
                    Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
                    What context is that, ah?
                    There are times when I might wonder that myself, but the one that I had in mind was that of the OP; at least I feel reasonably confident that "al" is not me (but then who knows for certain, really?...)...

                    Comment

                    • Beef Oven

                      #40
                      Originally posted by ahinton View Post
                      Sorry to spoil (or at least interrupt) the party, but who, in the present context, is "al"?
                      Al

                      It's as per LeMP's post #28, plus similar composers. I was not referring to your good self.

                      Comment

                      • ahinton
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 16122

                        #41
                        Originally posted by Beef Oven View Post
                        Al

                        It's as per LeMP's post #28, plus similar composers. I was not referring to your good self.
                        No, I know that, but which composers are "similar" to Xenakis? (a question which was at the heart of my previous one). Xenakis was one of the most outstanding and courageous individual voices of 20th century music, whatever some people may think that they feel about listening to his music; I for one find it impossible to "equate" him and his work to other 20th century composers and theirs.

                        Comment

                        • MrGongGong
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 18357

                          #42
                          Simon (and anyone who might agree with you ?)
                          one simple question
                          so to make it simple for you as you seem to struggle with contexts

                          Is the wind machine in RVW's Antarctic Symphony music ?

                          Comment

                          • Beef Oven

                            #43
                            Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
                            Simon (and anyone who might agree with you ?)
                            one simple question
                            so to make it simple for you as you seem to struggle with contexts

                            Is the wind machine in RVW's Antarctic Symphony music ?
                            I hope we're not going to try to define music on this Fred

                            Comment

                            • MrGongGong
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 18357

                              #44
                              Originally posted by Beef Oven View Post
                              I hope we're not going to try to define music on this Fred
                              Oh go on
                              My Daughter is at the Lucier gigs in Scotland today and yesterday
                              she would wipe the floor with some of us

                              It is a serious question though

                              Comment

                              • Beef Oven

                                #45
                                Originally posted by ahinton View Post
                                No, I know that, but which composers are "similar" to Xenakis? (a question which was at the heart of my previous one). Xenakis was one of the most outstanding and courageous individual voices of 20th century music, whatever some people may think that they feel about listening to his music; I for one find it impossible to "equate" him and his work to other 20th century composers and theirs.
                                Yes, you are right to ask the question and make the point. For the purposes of this thread, I am 'lumping' all those composers, or works, that are 'avant garde', so as to speak.

                                At this precise moment, Takemitsu's 'Seasons' is transiently filling my living room, Henze's 'Prison Song' having recently finished. I am convinced that Max's 'Turris Campanarum Sonantium' will follow-on.

                                Comment

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