Originally posted by heliocentric
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Hear and Now - 26th November 2011 - British Composer Awards, Skempton's Lento
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heliocentric
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postwhile I may bow to your privileged judgement
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"A patronising cock"
Has this strange phrase ever occurred in english, literary or demotic, before?
But it wouldn't matter even if it had since it is no male equivalent of "patronising cow".
"Cow" IS sexist and insulting because it is gendered and has no male equivalent as a term of abuse.
I can't agree either that meaning is always "something you bring to what you see". Meaning is also inherent in context and in previous usage.
If a schoolboy calls something or someone "gay" as a term of abuse he does so because he knows that meaning is already there in the cloud of possible meanings associated with the modern usage of "gay", underlined by what it is applied to and tone of voice; he can't claim that it's only an insult if you choose to see it that way.
"Cow" is a term of abuse applied exclusively to women, but like the n-word in a white mouth, it is worse used by a man, because of the history of dominance, dismissal and condescension.
Originally posted by hackneyvi View PostAs a jibe at a patronising kite. If her name had been Gordon, I'd likely have referred to him as:
"a patronising cock"
Would you and jayne lee be making noises about the sexism of that remark, do you think?
I put it you, heliocentric, that you and jayne lee have neglected to remember that meaning is something you bring to what you see. It's not (even) simply intrinsic.
But if either of you are able to and wish to submit some persuasive private correction to me, I shall read it with care.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post"A patronising cock"
Has this strange phrase ever occurred in english, literary or demotic, before?
But it wouldn't matter even if it had since it is no male equivalent of "patronising cow".
"Cow" IS sexist and insulting because it is gendered and has no male equivalent as a term of abuse.
I can't agree either that meaning is always "something you bring to what you see". Meaning is also inherent in context and in previous usage.
If a schoolboy calls something or someone "gay" as a term of abuse he does so because he knows that meaning is already there in the cloud of possible meanings associated with the modern usage of "gay", underlined by what it is applied to and tone of voice; he can't claim that it's only an insult if you choose to see it that way.
"Cow" is a term of abuse applied exclusively to women, but like the n-word in a white mouth, it is worse used by a man, because of the history of dominance, dismissal and condescension.
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Originally posted by hackneyvi View PostMusic is more real because it involves " ... people who've had homelessness issues recently"?! Good Christ! And here she comes again, babbling away on the Skempton.
Secondly, I would take issue with Radio 3 on the constant intellectualising about a piece of music that we are about to hear from presenters, conductors and soloists. I admire Martin Handley's boundless enthusiam for a Haydn symphony that he must have introduced for the umpteenth time, but in the end it is just chatter. Presenters of contemporary music are in a more difficult position since the music breaks conventional classical boundaries, and therefore they have to search for ways of describing the music, and for describing unconventional sounds to an audience that might be largely unfamiliar with it. But what we get more often than not is 10 minutes of chat, followed by one minute of music.
I wish presenters would say what is needed to be said and then get out of the way.
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Originally posted by heliocentric View PostLet me put it another way then. The number of instances of composers deliberately carrying out a "scam" such as you describe is extremely small. One celebrated example has been mentioned. I can't think of any others. Surely therefore it's safer to assume, in the complete absence of any evidence of your own, that the composer meant what he wrote in this case?
My description of "Lento" as a scam has caused considerable upset, and taken as a personal slur against Mr Skempton. The latter was not my intention. If Skempton had actually intended scamming the criticalia by writing "Lento", having recovered from my intial anger after hearing the work's broadcast premiere, and now after seeing a serious programme devoted to it, I might well have reconsidered and been on his side. I had rather hoped Skempton to be reading all this and smiling, but if this is not the case I withdraw my statement and offer my apologies.
S-A
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Originally posted by ahinton View Postone may as well seek to impute something similar about the incorporation of tangos into the fourth symphony and eighth and twelfth string quartets of his marginally more senior compatriot...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post"A patronising cock"
Has this strange phrase ever occurred in english, literary or demotic, before?
But it wouldn't matter even if it had since it is no male equivalent of "patronising cow".
"Cow" IS sexist and insulting because it is gendered and has no male equivalent as a term of abuse.
I can't agree either that meaning is always "something you bring to what you see". Meaning is also inherent in context and in previous usage.
If a schoolboy calls something or someone "gay" as a term of abuse he does so because he knows that meaning is already there in the cloud of possible meanings associated with the modern usage of "gay", underlined by what it is applied to and tone of voice; he can't claim that it's only an insult if you choose to see it that way.
"Cow" is a term of abuse applied exclusively to women, but like the n-word in a white mouth, it is worse used by a man, because of the history of dominance, dismissal and condescension.
I was "bursting" to write that
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post"Es ist genug"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 ahinton View PostI knew that someone would say that!
This is a thread about the British Composer Awards (Skempton's Lento) if anyone has anything on topic to say.
I'm not very clear on the juxtaposition - has he just gained an award for Lento?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 french frank View PostI'm not very clear on the juxtaposition - has he just gained an award for Lento?
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThis is a thread about the British Composer Awards (Skempton's Lento) .
I'm not very clear on the juxtaposition - has he just gained an award for Lento?
Re Howard Skempton - no one has mentioned Erik Satie yet?
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