Originally posted by Ian
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What qualifies someone to be called a classical composer?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSo I guess the musicians in courts and churches did all their rehearsals in their houses then ?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThis has been nagging my subconcious for the past few days.
When I've heard teenagers talking about their Musics, they have no problem "fragmenting" the different styles that they listen to and/or avoid: Rap, Drum & Bass, Dub, Math(s) Rock, Gothic Grunge - they love being able to hear and identify the different genres.
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And I wonder if that's the point: by lassooing such an enormous menagerie of styles into the single term "classical Music", it encourages the non-cognoscenti into thinking the words BeethovenTchaikovsky and imagining people playing violins whilst somebody sings in a noisy way. No wonder there is wide-spread confusion and hostility to the Music: it's perceived as a single, homogenized mush of sound. By not being specific, by being scared of putting off the non-cognoscenti with what we worry might be "elitist" terms, we put off the non-cognoscenti.
If a label like 'classical music' is off-putting or intimidating to the public, considered as a 'mass', what exactly is the reason? Will a change in labels make any difference? Would things change if orchestras were casually dressed and audiences chewed sweets, drank coca-cola and chatted to their friends? I mean, like, would they?
In addition to pestering the BBC to make more programmes of and about these repertoires, I suggest the next best thing we can do for "classical Music" is to stop calling it "classical Music", but to make "19th Century Russian Nationalism", "Late Classicism", "Mediaeval Isorhythm" and "Post Serialism" as familiar as "Delft Pottery", "Dystopian Fiction", "Georgian" or "Arts & Crafts Movement".
The linguistic problem with changing the label 'classical music' is that (unlike where there was a category gap, such as that filled by 'world music') it's dictating that it should be dropped and its various constituent parts separately labelled, and considered along with, say, music theatre, film music, crossover: you have actually deprived people of describing a grouping which they understand (albeit that they may have disagreements about detail). Abolishing it to make them think along properly, prescribed lines is what I would call 'language fascism'. "You're mistaken in your thinking and we must guide you into a correct way of thinking about these subjects..."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 french frank View PostAbolishing it to make them think along properly, prescribed lines is what I would call 'language fascism'. "You're mistaken in your thinking and we must guide you into a correct way of thinking about these subjects..."
However on a pragmatic note
I specifically avoid talking about "Classical" music when working with young people , not because I don't think its "cool" or some PC thing but for the very reason (which i've done to death i'm sure ) that when you use that word the word "boring" comes along in a few minutes. It's much better to talk about Orchestral music or even music from the Classical Period etc than to use a word which the vast majority of people (youngsters and adults) associate with boredom irrespective of the actual sound it makes............ given that many young people are fascinated and knowledgeable about the niches that music inhabits I have fond that it's easy to "get" the idea of Baroque music , for example, one calls it that and not use the C word.
ps> I don't think that Rap, Drum & Bass etc are "Youth" musics ....... they are often made (and enthused about ) by adults, the idea that somehow we "grow" out of "youth" music and finally enter into Valhalla is a bit of a myth ...... (take a look at the thread about Rock et al etc )
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSome interesting thoughts Frenchie
However on a pragmatic note
I specifically avoid talking about "Classical" music when working with young people , not because I don't think its "cool" or some PC thing but for the very reason (which i've done to death i'm sure ) that when you use that word the word "boring" comes along in a few minutes. It's much better to talk about Orchestral music or even music from the Classical Period etc than to use a word which the vast majority of people (youngsters and adults) associate with boredom irrespective of the actual sound it makes............ given that many young people are fascinated and knowledgeable about the niches that music inhabits I have fond that it's easy to "get" the idea of Baroque music , for example, one calls it that and not use the C word.
ps> I don't think that Rap, Drum & Bass etc are "Youth" musics ....... they are often made (and enthused about ) by adults, the idea that somehow we "grow" out of "youth" music and finally enter into Valhalla is a bit of a myth ...... (take a look at the thread about Rock et al etc )
When I use 'youth', this introduces another fascinating area . What is 'youth'? The BBC recognises the demographic of 'middle youth' which probably goes up to ... we-e-e-ll ... 45 at least. It seems to be a cultural term, rather than an age grouping, and refers perhaps to the post war generations who 'consumed' the popular 'mass' music (aimed at youth) as the dominant one of their own youth and which was a musical mainstream which they remained with, regardless of whether they are now 60/50, or 40: they are in the same wide musical 'mass' as those of 30 and 20. They may or may not have had a 'classical' upbringing in being from a home where classical music was played, and perhaps was the parents' choice. They may or may not have a strong interest in both streams. For those generations, the youth/popular music of their youth and of this generation remains a valid one.
My (over) sensitivity about the deliberate alteration of language usage (rather than natural evolution) stems from an awareness of the way language can be used to manipulate thinking. This may be with the best of intentions and for the best of reasons (the way that racist terms which were once common are now taboo, for example). But I would need to hear rock (no pun intended) solid reasons as to what is beneficial about dropping the term 'classical music' and what usages are proposed in the various contexts.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 french frank View PostAnd where is 50s-style rock 'n' roll now?
for starters.
Rather annoyingly my local paper, the Inimitable Penarth Times, can't seem to miss a week without a plug, complete with period dress photo, of this or that local Rock 'n Roll band playing at the Paget Rooms - once they have cleared away bring and buy stalls.
edit: I don't believe it: I've just been asked, completely out of the blue, whether I fancy going to jive classes!!
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Originally posted by Ian View Posthttp://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_...n+roll&x=0&y=0
for starters.
my local paper, the Inimitable Penarth Times, can't seem to miss a week without a plug, complete with period dress photo, of this or that local Rock 'n Roll band playing at the Paget Rooms - once they have cleared away bring and buy stalls.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 french frank View Post'as familiar as "Delft Pottery", "Dystopian Fiction", "Georgian" or "Arts & Crafts Movement"...? Familiar to whom?
The linguistic problem with changing the label 'classical music' is that (unlike where there was a category gap, such as that filled by 'world music') it's dictating that it should be dropped and its various constituent parts separately labelled, and considered along with, say, music theatre, film music, crossover: you have actually deprived people of describing a grouping which they understand (albeit that they may have disagreements about detail). Abolishing it to make them think along properly, prescribed lines is what I would call 'language fascism'. "You're mistaken in your thinking and we must guide you into a correct way of thinking about these subjects..."
To say to somebody, "You've managed to grasp the concept of the Post-Impressionists, Surrealists, and Art Noveau, but you can't possibly cope with equivalent movements in Music, so just call it 'classical Music' and we'll know what you mean" is, I would suggest, the sort of patronizing attitude that makes potentially interested people so hostile to the whole idea of the Musics.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 04-06-12, 14:09.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by french frank View PostMy (over) sensitivity about the deliberate alteration of language usage (rather than natural evolution) stems from an awareness of the way language can be used to manipulate thinking.
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Originally posted by Ian View Postexactly, so surely it's important to get it right. And that can only mean striving for interpretations that are consistent, logical, and neutral.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostTo the same audiences who watch Waldemar Janusczek, Michael Wood, Lucy Worsley, Andrew Graham Dixon, The Antiques Roadshow, Dan Cruickshank, Bargain Hunt ... This is the audience (and it includes a number of under-35s - maybe even some of those in your "experience") that could be turned on to the Musics of the middle ages, the Enlightenment, the Romantics, the early 20th Century - the audience who, whilst fascinated by the Art, Literature, Architecture, and History of the times, at the moment, are turned off by "classical Music".
These days TV has to look good above all else.
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amateur51
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSome interesting thoughts Frenchie
However on a pragmatic note
I specifically avoid talking about "Classical" music when working with young people , not because I don't think its "cool" or some PC thing but for the very reason (which i've done to death i'm sure ) that when you use that word the word "boring" comes along in a few minutes. It's much better to talk about Orchestral music or even music from the Classical Period etc than to use a word which the vast majority of people (youngsters and adults) associate with boredom irrespective of the actual sound it makes............ given that many young people are fascinated and knowledgeable about the niches that music inhabits I have fond that it's easy to "get" the idea of Baroque music , for example, one calls it that and not use the C word.
ps> I don't think that Rap, Drum & Bass etc are "Youth" musics ....... they are often made (and enthused about ) by adults, the idea that somehow we "grow" out of "youth" music and finally enter into Valhalla is a bit of a myth ...... (take a look at the thread about Rock et al etc )
Being the age I am, I worried about their being noisy & disruptive but all I heard were noises & positive comments of appreciation, particularly after The Rite of Spring "Man I never knew it was so LOUD!" sorta thing
At the end I turned round for a chat & discovered that they'd really enjoyed it and that they'd come again
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIts hard to be "neutral" when the majority of people think that what you are talking about is something other than what it is (if that makes sense ?)........
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Originally posted by Ian View PostI think classical music (or whatever you want to call it) suffers in our visual-media driven age by not being particularly visually stimulating - It's not often not a 'good look'
These days TV has to look good above all else.
... oh for a courageous Producer with vision instead of image![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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