Are questions on pop music legit. for University Challenge?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostLike, 'What's the leading note in the scale of C# minor?' They'd have to B# to get that.
Moving swiftly on, an awful lot of pop and pop-musicians rely very heavily on a few common chords (shoot me down, Gongers, I am Tita-ni-um) meaning that they are innately very, very conservative. Jazz musicians OTOH are quite cool on the harmonic front. I think I'd be OK with jazz questions on UC.
Plenty of rock/pop/whatever based on a few common chords that doesn't sound remotely conservative, to my ears, in one way or another, not least because context is so very important.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostI'm not sure that anything is too light for University study these days. I know someone who's thesis subject was the 'Carry On' films. Probably comes under popular culture or something.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMoving swiftly on, an awful lot of pop and pop-musicians rely very heavily on a few common chords (shoot me down, Gongers, I am Tita-ni-um) meaning that they are innately very, very conservative.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWilfrid Mellers, if I recall. It was considered at least debatable! Second thought: didn't he say they were as good as Schubert?
Further research suggests Tony Palmer - but Mellers devoted a book to the Beatles.
I happened to be doing a PGCE in language teaching at York University 1971-72. The music department there had a very eclectic series of events which some of us music enthusiasts attended. These included Prof Mellers' brilliant series of Beatles lectures (later a book) liberally illustrated with songs played through some massive speakers (first time I had heard about pentatonic melismata). Fritz Hennenberg from Leipzig on Brecht and music. We spoke to him afterwards and I later got to know him and have been in touch with him ever since, he's over 80 now. A diverting evening with John Cage who chatted and played the piano. A piano recital by Roger Woodward with Hammerklavier, Takemitsu and Scriabin - different colour lighting for each composer. Thomas Hemsley, baritone, Lieder recital, including Dichterliebe ... just music.
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Are the UC questions about general knowledge AND more specialist subjects? If general knowledge, yes, 'most' people nowadays (the younger the more likely) know about pop music: for them it is general knowledge, because the majority know about it at a 'general' level. Once it becomes treated as a specialist subject (and I don't question this), there should be no more questions than about maths, science, history, classical literature, classical music. Whether the UC format with 'Starters' makes this more difficult, I don't know.
But an example of how popular culture excludes by its sheer uniquity [oops, typo!]: A few days ago there was a BBC news story about this year's BBC Music Day under the headline 'Which pop stars deserve a blue plaque in their honour?' The public was invited to suggest 'pop legends' - people or places - that deserved Blue Plaques to commemorate their contribution to the nation's music heritage. There were 5 helpful suggestions: George Michael's school, Peak Cavern in Derbyshire (venue which 'has hosted gigs by the likes of Richard Hawley, Mystery Jets and The Vaccines'), Freddie Mercury's market stall, Delia Derbyshire's childhood home and Beachy Head (connections with David Bowie, The Cure, Throbbing Gristle, The Who).
Right at the bottom of this long story - with six large pictures of various 'pop legends' - it says 'any genre of music is permissible'. Yeah, right: pop, rock, heavy metal, R & B, hip hop …
Before one start blaming BBC Music (on this occasion), one could look at their press release, second paragraph: 'Whether you’re rooting for a country guitarist, a classical composer or a famous jazz venue - we need your suggestions for a range of people and places that have made a significant musical contribution.'
The news story was written by a reporter who I would estimate to be in his late twenties and tweets under the name of @mrdiscopop. For him, clearly, classical music doesn't even exist. Nor jazz. Music IS pop.
But this is why UC concentrates on pop music/culture: it's the comfort zone of those involved. Can one change it? Should one even try? If so, how? Will dumbing down [see OED definition] help at all?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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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by french frank View PostAre the UC questions about general knowledge AND more specialist subjects? If general knowledge, yes, 'most' people nowadays (the younger the more likely) know about pop music: for them it is general knowledge, because the majority know about it at a 'general' level.
I'm sure I would have struggled at that age with many (most) of the classical music questions. I remember our college team, chosen in a beery open session in the JCR (circa 1968, it was less professional in those days), contained a classical music buff, but sadly he didn't get a chance to show it in the actual contest.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI'm sure I would have struggled at that age with many (most) of the classical music questions. I remember our college team, chosen in a beery open session in the JCR (circa 1968, it was less professional in those days), contained a classical music buff, but sadly he didn't get a chance to show it in the actual contest.
As a postgrad I mixed with more undergrads in the late 60s, early 70s and The Beatles featured - and folk song. Nothing much else, that I remember - I had just bought my first 'record player', good enough, I remember requesting, to play classical music on; so not a Dansette. As a teacher, the only music I came across among other lecturers (mostly late 20s-early 30s) was classical. I've no idea what sort of music students were playing then, just that when they gathered in the TV room in the union it was usually to watch the children's programmes …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 gurnemanz View PostWas not one big breakthrough for pop being taken seriously the article by William Mann, Lied expert, in the Times 27 Dec 1963? Reprinted here. I was 14 and didn't read the Times, being more into the Beatles Fan Club mag, but I was aware of its impact. Now there was just music.
I happened to be doing a PGCE in language teaching at York University 1971-72. The music department there had a very eclectic series of events which some of us music enthusiasts attended. These included Prof Mellers' brilliant series of Beatles lectures (later a book) liberally illustrated with songs played through some massive speakers (first time I had heard about pentatonic melismata). Fritz Hennenberg from Leipzig on Brecht and music. We spoke to him afterwards and I later got to know him and have been in touch with him ever since, he's over 80 now. A diverting evening with John Cage who chatted and played the piano. A piano recital by Roger Woodward with Hammerklavier, Takemitsu and Scriabin - different colour lighting for each composer. Thomas Hemsley, baritone, Lieder recital, including Dichterliebe ... just music.
That is not to say that there wasn't a strong sense of history. It was just a different sort, residing between course work and pubs with an odd feeling that it felt like the 1960s in a different way. Later, I realised a part of it was the shops there hadn't yet acquired "big light". The music education took place in the shared house. The NME for the times. Friends who had old rock records to borrow which while they were theirs were so old they could have been their brothers'. Riverside Records was there briefly for the eclectic second hand. I bought "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts" and a cassette of RVW 2 on the same day, falling asleep to its beauty as the sun shone in and my mates attended a lecture by Professor Sathyamurthy. That Will Mann, article. It's good. But he contradicts himself. The Fab Four can't have been Merseyside unblemished by America and influenced by American blues.
Originally posted by french frank View PostYes, I was thinking back. I don't think it was the case that in the 1960s we got together discussing classical music (though as an undergraduate the only concert I went to with another group of students was an early performance of Britten's War Requiem - someone in the know about what was 'important'). But equally we weren't much interested in popular music, as a group - no idea what people listened to privately.
As a postgrad I mixed with more undergrads in the late 60s, early 70s and The Beatles featured - and folk song. Nothing much else, that I remember - I had just bought my first 'record player', good enough, I remember requesting, to play classical music on; so not a Dansette. As a teacher, the only music I came across among other lecturers (mostly late 20s-early 30s) was classical. I've no idea what sort of music students were playing then, just that when they gathered in the TV room in the union it was usually to watch the children's programmes …Last edited by Lat-Literal; 23-02-17, 12:04.
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