Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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8 composers you can live without
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI thought cheesey meant that they all had an "er" sound in their names - Schönberg, Berg, Webern, Gerhard, Steravinsky, Eliserbeth Lutyens ...
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostGosh, you're right, I hadn't thought of that. But - that must mean Babbitt, Stockhausen and Nono weren't serial composers! This makes the Snowden disclosures look trivial.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostGosh, you're right, I hadn't thought of that. But - that must mean Babbitt, Stockhausen and Nono weren't serial composers! This makes the Snowden disclosures look trivial.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by cheesehoven View PostTo say that serial pieces do not possess certain stylistic traits is disingenuous.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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I am sorry if my meaning has been misconstrued here. I thought my contribution (to what I mistakenly thought was a light hearted thread) was clear enough, but obviously I was wrong, unless certain people here are willfully trying to misconstrue?
It seems to me obvious that there are certain stylistic criteria that one must use in order for something to be called serial or any other form. These tags can be loosely applied but that does not mean they do not exist. For example, in serialism that the highest note in a phrase should be brief so as not to draw too much attention to itself or that no note should be played until all other notes have been heard. Do you deny these represent stylistic traits?
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Originally posted by cheesehoven View PostI am sorry if my meaning has been misconstrued here. I thought my contribution (to what I mistakenly thought was a light hearted thread) was clear enough, but obviously I was wrong, unless certain people here are willfully trying to misconstrue?
It seems to me obvious that there are certain stylistic criteria that one must use in order for something to be called serial or any other form. These tags can be loosely applied but that does not mean they do not exist. For example, in serialism that the highest note in a phrase should be brief so as not to draw too much attention to itself or that no note should be played until all other notes have been heard. Do you deny these represent stylistic traits?
(Smilies are equivalent to resolutions when deciding if a thread is serious or not).
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Originally posted by cheesehoven View PostI am sorry if my meaning has been misconstrued here. I thought my contribution (to what I mistakenly thought was a light hearted thread) was clear enough, but obviously I was wrong, unless certain people here are willfully trying to misconstrue?
It seems to me obvious that there are certain stylistic criteria that one must use in order for something to be called serial or any other form. These tags can be loosely applied but that does not mean they do not exist. For example, in serialism that the highest note in a phrase should be brief so as not to draw too much attention to itself or that no note should be played until all other notes have been heard. Do you deny these represent stylistic traits?
Second, I do not know any Serial work in which "the highest note in a phrase should be brief so as not to draw too much attention to itself" - and the openings of Moses und Aron or the Requiem Canticles immediately put paid to the "no note should be played until all other notes have been heard" idea - even if we don't mention Serial works that use Series with fewer or more than twelve notes.
I understand a "stylistic trait" to be something like Tchaikovsky's fondness for scalic and sequential passagework, Webern's liking for ending pieces with a sudden forte descending figure, Chopin's delight in rubato, Reich's preference for tempo meccanico. Serialism is just a way of putting material together - once a composer has decided to use the technique(s), the sound of their Music can be as lushly heady as Berg's Lulu, as astringent as Barraqué's Piano Sonata, as coolly refined as Webern's Symphony, as lyrical as Dallapiccola's Goethe-lieder, as perky as Babbitt's All Set, as elemental as Stockhausen's Gruppen. And I do not hear any common "stylistic traits" between these works.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Thanks for your serious response FerneyHough and perhaps I was wrong in using stylist as a term. I'm not sure. What is interesting is how defensive the whole serial debate is. If I had said "all baroque music sounds the same to me", I think it would have passed without much comment. But criticise atonality and the instant rebuttal industry moves into place.
I guess it goes to prove how different people's ears are Ferney. I can hear what I term these stylistic tendencies in serialism notwithstanding composer's individualistic takes on them and personally find it an annoyance. Anyway I never posted here to set out a universal law merely to state my opinion on the matter. Incidentally I also hear this "straight jacketing" in the classical style (in the strictest sense) which is why I put Haydn at the top of the list of composers I could live without. I could almost have written "any classical composer" instead, again without much controversy I think.
So I guess plagal cadences can be stylistic traits in certain contexts.
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Originally posted by cheesehoven View PostThanks for your serious response FerneyHough and perhaps I was wrong in using stylist as a term. I'm not sure. What is interesting is how defensive the whole serial debate is. If I had said "all baroque music sounds the same to me", I think it would have passed without much comment. But criticise atonality and the instant rebuttal industry moves into place.
I guess it goes to prove how different people's ears are Ferney. I can hear what I term these stylistic tendencies in serialism notwithstanding composer's individualistic takes on them and personally find it an annoyance.
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