I think there are some flaws in your assumptions, HG.
Proms 2014
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HARRIET HAVARD
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostHere's a toon for you
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
What on earth do you mean by "something to say" ?
There's not much new music in the Proms so i'm not sure what your gripe is?
I'm looking forward to the Lachenmann weekend (well we can only hope )
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Originally posted by HARRIET HAVARD View PostYou are kidding I guess. Unless music has something to say it is, at best merely "musak", at worse, merely noise.
Some music simply "says", "have a listen to this, it's fragile and beautiful and doesn't need a composer to impose a spurious meaning onto it"
(In an unexpected last minute change I did make it to the Lucier film which is worth finding and he answers this question wonderfully )
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostA lot of good music and musicians have nothing to 'say' and have been saying it loud and long.
Also............
What do YOU mean by "noise"?
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Honoured Guest
Maybe HH means, by music with "something to say", music which engages the listener's full concentration to pay attention to the sounds in the air with the memory of those just heard and the anticipation of those to follow. As opposed to "muzak" which is composed so as not to be actively listened to, or background "noise" which isn't either composed or performed and isn't been made as "music" to be listened to.
However, HH admits that she is averse to "plink plank plonk" music because she personally cannot engage with it, although it does of course have "something to say" to people who are able to hear it.
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Originally posted by Honoured Guest View PostMaybe HH means, by music with "something to say", music which engages the listener's full concentration to pay attention to the sounds in the air with the memory of those just heard and the anticipation of those to follow. As opposed to "muzak" which is composed so as not to be actively listened to, or background "noise" which isn't either composed or performed and isn't been made as "music" to be listened to.
However, HH admits that she is averse to "plink plank plonk" music because she personally cannot engage with it, although it does of course have "something to say" to people who are able to hear it.
Now I'm really confused. Not only do I not get the 'music/muzak/noise/sounds demarcations, but now there are questions as to whether things have been 'composed' or 'performed', or not, as the case may be!
.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe argument's becoming a little black and white.
Where ?
Originally posted by Honoured Guest View PostMaybe HH means, by music with "something to say", music which engages the listener's full concentration to pay attention to the sounds in the air with the memory of those just heard and the anticipation of those to follow. As opposed to "muzak" which is composed so as not to be actively listened to, or background "noise" which isn't either composed or performed and isn't been made as "music" to be listened to.
Memory and anticipation are fine
but not always necessary
Are you suggesting that only music that has intentionally been made as "music" is worthy of attention?
What happens if (and this happens many times) something I listen to has been made for a completely different reason?
I gave a friend a CD of this for Christmas, he is a well known music academic, he loves it
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
One of my favourite CDS
Released on compact disc in 2007 by GD Stereo, Favorite Intermissions collects surreptitiously recorded improvisations by symphony musicians before and between orchestra concerts. The album’s…
one of my favourite labels
Gruenrekorder ::. Phonography & Sound Art - Gruenrekorder understands itself as an organisation with the aim of promoting soundworks and phonography. It is as a form of art and culture, that Gruenrekorder promotes phonography. We therefore organise events, lectures, publications and exhibitions as well as artistic projects in the fields of phonography and soundwork.
and so on
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostOpinion masquerading as fact again methinks
But then what's commonly called 'muzak' (the stuff broadcast in supermarkets, airports, on your telephone, etc) did originally 'have something to say', whether it's by Vivaldi or Aretha Franklin, & becomes muzak through mis-use & repetition (does much of what's played on 'Breakfast' then qualify as muzak through repetition?)
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostI think that's a little unfair to HG - I think he/she was simply suggesting what HH was thinking when she (or he?) said that music either has 'something to say' or is muzak (isn't that a trade name for the company that issues the stuff?).
But then what's commonly called 'muzak' (the stuff broadcast in supermarkets, airports, on your telephone, etc) did originally 'have something to say', whether it's by Vivaldi or Aretha Franklin, & becomes muzak through mis-use & repetition (does much of what's played on 'Breakfast' then qualify as muzak through repetition?)
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It is important to use the power of the internet to check facts a bit don't you think ?
Satie ?
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