Originally posted by Mr Pee
View Post
As for "the musical dead-end of serialism", I suggest that you know far too little about the subject to dismiss it in such categorical terms. To name one example: the parametric organisation of music which the post-1945 avant-garde composers developed (from the example of Webern rather than Schoenberg of course) formed the basis in the 1960s of the construction of modular synthesizers whose architecture is still in turn the basis, one way and another, of most of the music that's made with electronic means, which includes most pop music of course: you may not like it but it's hardly a dead end in music history. Secondly, the new musical possibilities opened by serial thinking led directly to the idea that any combination of sounds could be conceived as potentially musical, which in turn led to many other ongoing developments in musical thinking such as free improvisation. In other words, Schoenberg's serial thinking may in itself not have been preserved intact in the work of succeeding generations (though the same could be said for any other innovation in music history) but that doesn't make it a dead end; rather a point of departure for very many diverse and fruitful directions music has subsequently taken.
Comment