Prompted by thinking about all the stuff around Dylan this week. It seems that (as I said on that thread) that there has been a tendency to conflate the terms "music" and "songs" for most people music means songs
Almost all the things we use to listen to music refers to music as "songs" or "tunes" (though you can buy albums by Sunn o))) on iTunes and they could hardly be considered to be "tunes" ). It's a bit like the way in which computers refer to the individual all the time in a seemingly desperate attempt to personalise, iTunes, MY computer, iPod, MY documents, MY music (actually it's not usually yours as you have only bought a licence !)
The dominance of the song as a form seems to have, in many peoples worlds, almost completely taken over the whole of music. Personally there are very few "songs" that I choose to listen to, I find the words often get "in the way" of the music and the sentiments expressed (Dylan and Elgar !) seem superficial and often pompous , so I often find myself listening to singers where I can't understand the words at all (either through language or style ). I partly think that maybe the dominance of the guitar as instrument with its associated myths of the hobo poet riding the rails and singing his (more often than not HIS) heart out, is to blame.
Also when music is often discussed on the radio (DID, The Music Room etc etc ) what it usually talked about are the words to the music/songs (because they are usually considered to be one and the same) rather than the music. Talking about music in a non technical non-geeky way isn't that difficult , many of us do it everyday (and avoid discussing uni-intervalic-non-hierachical-pan-diatonacism in those terms though the whole tone scale is a wondrous thing )
why is this ?
was it ever thus ?
and is it just me ? (actually I know it's not )
what do others think ?
Almost all the things we use to listen to music refers to music as "songs" or "tunes" (though you can buy albums by Sunn o))) on iTunes and they could hardly be considered to be "tunes" ). It's a bit like the way in which computers refer to the individual all the time in a seemingly desperate attempt to personalise, iTunes, MY computer, iPod, MY documents, MY music (actually it's not usually yours as you have only bought a licence !)
The dominance of the song as a form seems to have, in many peoples worlds, almost completely taken over the whole of music. Personally there are very few "songs" that I choose to listen to, I find the words often get "in the way" of the music and the sentiments expressed (Dylan and Elgar !) seem superficial and often pompous , so I often find myself listening to singers where I can't understand the words at all (either through language or style ). I partly think that maybe the dominance of the guitar as instrument with its associated myths of the hobo poet riding the rails and singing his (more often than not HIS) heart out, is to blame.
Also when music is often discussed on the radio (DID, The Music Room etc etc ) what it usually talked about are the words to the music/songs (because they are usually considered to be one and the same) rather than the music. Talking about music in a non technical non-geeky way isn't that difficult , many of us do it everyday (and avoid discussing uni-intervalic-non-hierachical-pan-diatonacism in those terms though the whole tone scale is a wondrous thing )
why is this ?
was it ever thus ?
and is it just me ? (actually I know it's not )
what do others think ?
Comment