Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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What is Modern Music?
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI'd say that it means whatever the user wants it to mean, it's so vague.
Sometimes it's used pejoratively (I don't like this modern music), sometimes in an elitist way (yes, but it's not really 'modern' is it? - a criticism I've had, in those very words)),
Such a broad range of uses make the term useless unless you take the time to explain the context.
I'm very passionate about 'modern music' and I would therefore not be nonchalant about it (I think there's a modicum of nonchalance in your post).
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI think the discussion has identified that it can't mean whatever people want it to mean (not sure what 'the user' is), and I'm not sure there is anything vague about the Britannica description...I'm very passionate about 'modern music' and I would therefore not be nonchalant about it (I think there's a modicum of nonchalance in your post).
No discussion can identify whether anything can or cannot mean X. Suggestions and possibilities can emerge from discussion, and a consensus can appear. If I have missed the post that amounts to an agreed definition of 'modern music', please enlighten me; I was commenting on Ferney's description of it as a "a flexible general term that works only so long as you don't enquire what precisely it means". Clearly, both Ferney and I were mistaken and it is indeed a very precise term.
Or this might be a good example of the "no true Scotsman" fallacy.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostOh dear!
No discussion can identify whether anything can or cannot mean X. Suggestions and possibilities can emerge from discussion, and a consensus can appear. If I have missed the post that amounts to an agreed definition of 'modern music', please enlighten me; I was commenting on Ferney's description of it as a "a flexible general term that works only so long as you don't enquire what precisely it means". Clearly, both Ferney and I were mistaken and it is indeed a very precise term.
Or this might be a good example of the "no true Scotsman" fallacy.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostIf fernie thinks that the term 'modern music' is either 'so vague' or 'a very precise term', I would say he is indeed quite mistaken and shouldn't have said it. And more fool you for following him.
All I have been addressing throughout is the terminology; you seem to have missed this. You will continue to be passionate about 'modern music' and will define it exactly as you like, completely unaffected by my dislike of an imprecise term.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostFerney will of course have to answer for himself.
Clearly you don't agree that 'modern music' is "a flexible general term"
but that's what I was addressing. For my pains you accused me of 'nonchalance'.
All I have been addressing throughout is the terminology; you seem to have missed this. You will continue to be passionate about 'modern music' and will define it exactly as you like, completely unaffected by my dislike of an imprecise term.
"Any music, composed from 1890 to present, that radically breaks from the past and either deliberately or accidentally forms a symbiosis with the concurrent forms of new and different forms of expression, in the arts."
And yes, irrespective of this 'discussion', I will remain passionate, committed and in the thrall of modern music.Last edited by Beef Oven!; 08-01-16, 04:48.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostMore importantly, speak for himself in the first place (you put the two peas in the pod, not me)..
As for the rest of your post, you did "think there's a modicum of nonchalance in [my] post", which is at least a half-hearted accusation. Also, although you might have supplied a definition with which you are satisfied, that is not to say that others are satisfied with it, or that they are forbidden from saying the term 'modern music' is vague. You would have to show first that your definition is so widely accepted that it would be perverse to call it 'vague'. I doubt you can do that.
This is why I referred to the 'no true Scotsman' fallacy: your definition is the right one, so nothing else is 'true' modern music.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI'm very passionate about 'modern music' and I would therefore not be nonchalant about it (I think there's a modicum of nonchalance in your post).
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI'd say that it means whatever the user wants it to mean, it's so vague. Sometimes it's used pejoratively (I don't like this modern music), sometimes in an elitist way (yes, but it's not really 'modern' is it? - a criticism I've had, in those very words)), sometimes very broadly so as to distinguish it from previous styles (modern music is not constrained by the expectations of Late Romanticism), sometimes very narrowly to allow for individual innovation (Schoenberg's system, Grainger's Free Music machine, and so much more). Such a broad range of uses make the term useless unless you take the time to explain the context.
It also happens to be a contribution with which I agree, and which doesn't seem to me to be at odds with the Beefy view (with which I also agree) on terminology which is what this thread is about..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post...It also happens to be a contribution with which I agree, and which doesn't seem to me to be at odds with the Beefy view (with which I also agree) on terminology which is what this thread is about...
[Now, where should I leave the brown envelope?]
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Aubade
In my book, modernism very firmly refers to the replacement of naturally artistic expression, which involves an element of emotion, with cerebral concept(s). For example, modernism is the movement in the visual arts that started in 1906 when Picasso and Braques sought to represent subjects using concepts — the features on the other side needn't be ignored simply because they are out of sight. The simplest example is the Magritte painting of a pipe, which contains the caption "Ceci n'est pas une pipe", ie it's not a pipe but a picture of a pipe, and, by the way, Magritte entitled the picture "Chanson". Or composers like Webern and Schoenberg took the idea that the accepted Pythagorean scale was an arbitrary construct and so replaced it with a conceptualised mode that left people thinking, hey, they've replaced the music that could conjure with my emotions with a cold, bloodless intellectual idea. Similar abasements were attempted by Joyce and Eliot in the printed word. Fast forward and you find a pile of bricks in the Tate with an unmade bed in the next room. Both could be argued to engage us intellectually but neither is capable of touching or calling on our emotions. Except possbly derision.
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