I used to listen to Mahler's sixth in the car and I would keep turing the volume up higher and higher to hear that little whispers...
Wham! There is that huge blast that always caught me by surprise. I had to stop listening to that in the car for the safety of myself and other drivers.
Now I try to listen to either pop music or harpsichord music while driving. They both maintain about the same decibel level.
lvbfanatic,
I agree that the value of recordings should not be discounted. I have gotten great enjoyment out of LPs, CDs and tapes during my lifetime. Some of my best experiences have been with scratchy, low fidelity audio. I'm not sure how to explain that, but I think we can appreciate recordings more when we don't consider them only a pale imitation of real life. It is not unlike looking at a faded black and white photograph and only thinking how unlike real life it is. There is a value to the photograph itself, not only that moment it is trying to capture, true? This is getting a bit philosophical.
Your facile analysis of composers bothers me a little. Mahler and Chopin are both masterful composers who each represent a world of culture, sensibility and tradition. It seems to me they giving them 10 or 20 turns on the CD player and then kicking them out is a little harsh.
Wham! There is that huge blast that always caught me by surprise. I had to stop listening to that in the car for the safety of myself and other drivers.
Now I try to listen to either pop music or harpsichord music while driving. They both maintain about the same decibel level.
lvbfanatic,
I agree that the value of recordings should not be discounted. I have gotten great enjoyment out of LPs, CDs and tapes during my lifetime. Some of my best experiences have been with scratchy, low fidelity audio. I'm not sure how to explain that, but I think we can appreciate recordings more when we don't consider them only a pale imitation of real life. It is not unlike looking at a faded black and white photograph and only thinking how unlike real life it is. There is a value to the photograph itself, not only that moment it is trying to capture, true? This is getting a bit philosophical.
Your facile analysis of composers bothers me a little. Mahler and Chopin are both masterful composers who each represent a world of culture, sensibility and tradition. It seems to me they giving them 10 or 20 turns on the CD player and then kicking them out is a little harsh.
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