Busting myths in jazz history
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWell I tend to trust in my intuitions when it comes to detecting degrees of unpremeditativeness
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt can always be argued of course that the "detached" composer at his or her "score" is best placed for receptivity. Given that jazz is equally capable of calling on a broad range of musical means, the main difference consists in that it happens quicker than interpretation or rationalisation allow, and this accounts for its impact. I know how difficult reviewing gigs can be - have I missed some crucial juncture in my write-up? Reflection comes later: whether in tranquillity or not is another matter!
I think Richard B seems wants to focus the attention on the listening subject and a way of listening, but I do think that there is something inherent in the best of jazz that is as you describe. I have often pondered the relationship between what's inherent in some music and the extent to which a listener brings their faculties to perceive what's inherent or not.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
Well put, especially the point about it happening quicker in jazz, wherein lies much of its impact. And of course there is jazz where reflection and after-the-event creative acts occur, e.g. Bitches Brew.
I think Richard B seems wants to focus the attention on the listening subject and a way of listening, but I do think that there is something inherent in the best of jazz that is as you describe. I have often pondered the relationship between what's inherent in some music and the extent to which a listener brings their faculties to perceive what's inherent or not.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostDo you think that one could be trained to hear jazz in an alternative way?
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostMaybe it's just a foible of my own, but actually I do find it enlightening to at least try (sometimes) to forget all I know about those things, or, conversely, to listen to "classical" music as if it consisted of them. This has a tangential relationship to the original topic, since I think this is one of the ways of piercing the membrane I was talking about before, between everyday and altered states of consciousness, but without ingesting hallucinogenic substances. Sorry if this is getting convoluted.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
Last sentence "inherent.. to perceive". Isn't this the way at least initially how we view modern/abstract art? We attempt to find form in it, say with Jackson Pollock, who's work however "random" does indeed have form. And with modern abstract music, classical or jazz. To understand humanly is to.look for first the familiar, and then seek to impose a pattern. Which is what we do in everyday life. We interpret in this way.
That is the basis of theories about seeing pictures in glowing embers, or how images visualised in Rorscach ink blots are supposed to reveal insights into the mind of the person seeing them useful to crime investigators. I have to admit to never actually having read anything about how this is claimed to work.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThat is the basis of theories about seeing pictures in glowing embers, or how images visualised in Rorscach ink blots are supposed to reveal insights into the mind of the person seeing them useful to crime investigators. I have to admit to never actually having read anything about how this is claimed to work.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostIt's a hypersensitivity to patterns in the environment which has developed over millions of years of evolution - a classic example is that it's better (from the point of view of natural selection) to see the stripes of a tiger in a dark forest when they aren't actually there than not to see them when they are there. So although this propensity is genetic in origin, one of its effects has apparently been to instil attentiveness and eventually the basis of a sense of beauty in how patterns reveal themselves in our sensory input.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostSA, it's a pity you deleted your long reply to one of my posts. I was looking forward to reading it.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
I just got tangled up in circular self-contradictions, adding on the one hands and on the others to a point of syntactical incomprehensibility. I seem to have rinsed myself out of the conversation, hopefully temporarily! I'll try and re-engage anon - Jay to Zee is now on!
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