Last thursday on R5 breakfast Rachel Burdon described `Sgt Pepper` as one of the most important cultural creations `in the history of mankind.`
Even though it is a current affairs station R 5 is a cultural backwater and one has come to expect hyperbole especially in respect of sport and `yoof ` culture. However it has wide appeal and it dosen`t help when even R 3 presenters are on occasion only too eager to advertise their pop music credentials, cozying up to the transient popular culture like a poor man trying to gather crumbs from a rich mans table.
It is a particularly late 20 th century phenomenon to describe musically commonplace creations in the type of language employed by Ms Burdon much the detriment of our cultural perceptions and standards. Nowadays people clearly without much knowledge of music as a discipline ( I admit not to have very much myself but I make an effort) are not embarrassed by making sweeping grandiose claims for it ( ergo Ms Burdon) Even the meanest jangly noisome invention is casually described as `great` I wonder if Ms Burdon has ever bothered to listen to a Beethoven symphony or Bach partita. If so she may have moderated her claims a bit
I suppose It originated with the DJ and Anthony Burgess was right in describing them as `electronic lice` ; Would similar claims have been made for an equivalent popular song or musical in of any other era?
|In 2012 one can accept the pop culture as significant development in our cultural history but for the sake of our general well being we must strip pop music of all its trappings and its insidious overarching influence; try and see its component parts (viz a 3 minute pop song) strictly as a musical creation . I`m probably preaching to the converted but if great music was not so marginalised on mainstream media (it probably suits the programme planners to describe it as `elitist`) it may reach into public perceptions more readily (as it used to do) clearly to the betterment of society generally.
Problem is how do we make the movers and shakers of the media understand this? I think it was Walter Legge who said something like `I don`t give the public want they want , I give them what they need`
Any ideas?
Laz
Even though it is a current affairs station R 5 is a cultural backwater and one has come to expect hyperbole especially in respect of sport and `yoof ` culture. However it has wide appeal and it dosen`t help when even R 3 presenters are on occasion only too eager to advertise their pop music credentials, cozying up to the transient popular culture like a poor man trying to gather crumbs from a rich mans table.
It is a particularly late 20 th century phenomenon to describe musically commonplace creations in the type of language employed by Ms Burdon much the detriment of our cultural perceptions and standards. Nowadays people clearly without much knowledge of music as a discipline ( I admit not to have very much myself but I make an effort) are not embarrassed by making sweeping grandiose claims for it ( ergo Ms Burdon) Even the meanest jangly noisome invention is casually described as `great` I wonder if Ms Burdon has ever bothered to listen to a Beethoven symphony or Bach partita. If so she may have moderated her claims a bit
I suppose It originated with the DJ and Anthony Burgess was right in describing them as `electronic lice` ; Would similar claims have been made for an equivalent popular song or musical in of any other era?
|In 2012 one can accept the pop culture as significant development in our cultural history but for the sake of our general well being we must strip pop music of all its trappings and its insidious overarching influence; try and see its component parts (viz a 3 minute pop song) strictly as a musical creation . I`m probably preaching to the converted but if great music was not so marginalised on mainstream media (it probably suits the programme planners to describe it as `elitist`) it may reach into public perceptions more readily (as it used to do) clearly to the betterment of society generally.
Problem is how do we make the movers and shakers of the media understand this? I think it was Walter Legge who said something like `I don`t give the public want they want , I give them what they need`
Any ideas?
Laz
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