"Music While You Work".
mmm, I wonder if this is a clue as to a possible distinction that might be made between 'light' and 'serious' music.
I know that I have CDs which I can happily have on while I am pottering about doing other things - say, Telemann, Lefebure-Wély, Boccherini - and then there is other music - Bach, Haydn, Beethoven, Bruckner - which requires all one's attention.
For me, at least, there is a real separation between these two types of music / listening. I enjoy both, but I know which is more 'important'.
I am not sure that the easy statement - that there are only two types of music: good music and bad music - is really very helpful. Does it then lead on to the question as to how the other distinction - that there are only two types of music: music I like and music I don't like - might map on to it? Do the two coincide? Probably not. But then, if there is music I somehow recognize to be good but which I dislike - how is it that I don't like what I know to be good?
mmm, I wonder if this is a clue as to a possible distinction that might be made between 'light' and 'serious' music.
I know that I have CDs which I can happily have on while I am pottering about doing other things - say, Telemann, Lefebure-Wély, Boccherini - and then there is other music - Bach, Haydn, Beethoven, Bruckner - which requires all one's attention.
For me, at least, there is a real separation between these two types of music / listening. I enjoy both, but I know which is more 'important'.
I am not sure that the easy statement - that there are only two types of music: good music and bad music - is really very helpful. Does it then lead on to the question as to how the other distinction - that there are only two types of music: music I like and music I don't like - might map on to it? Do the two coincide? Probably not. But then, if there is music I somehow recognize to be good but which I dislike - how is it that I don't like what I know to be good?
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