Originally posted by The Dude
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Major and Minor Scales
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostSounds and "possibilities" shouldn't necessarily be confused with music. Bodily functions make a "sound" but is that music? A car's brakes screeching - and that would be tonal - is a "sound', but it isn't music [...]
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Originally posted by Ed C View PostOne more addendum to what I wrote last night - I think music MUST have a discernible beat or pulse for it to be embraced by the public and posterity. If one cannot dance to it - well let's just say 99% all recordings that 99% of the world would call "music" is something that can be danced to. Tho I would welcome some exceptions to this rule if offered by anybody.
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Originally posted by Philip View PostThe tone of this posting, The Dude, makes one almost tremble. Do I have the temerity, dare I be the inhuman, mechanistic, cynical (and attention-seeking) clown that disagrees with you? As I don't get out much (as the saying goes), I suppose I have nothing better to do this Friday evening (but I promise to be as objective as I can) ...
!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fh1dnspEHw
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Originally posted by The Dude View Post[...]In Texas we can listen to bleating cattle - and if I was a really, really cynical human being (who wanted attention) I could record that onto a computer, add the sounds, say, of nails being driven into a piece of wood, or bathwater being thrown over the dog - put it all together and call that "art". Some clown would come along and say, 'man, you've really got something there'. But I know Stephen Colbert would be waiting to rubbish me and I'd deserve it!
On the other hand, I see no problem whatsoever taking all these sound sources (Texan cattle bleating, screeching brakes, ...) and transforming them to such an extent that their original mimetic content is entirely absent, and then go further and attempt a musical composition using the transformed material. Dare I call that art? An attempt at one, yes.
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostAll I've got to say to you, pard'ner, is saddle up and get moovin'. I've included your theme song
!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fh1dnspEHw
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Originally posted by Sorrano View PostAnd what is the "realm of the truly human"? And what is music? Any "traditional" composition can be reduced to mathematics. Does that, then, remove it from that realm? Music is all about possibilities and sounds. Without that there would be no music. The idea of creating music that is beyond the realm of human experience does not appeal to people who are confined within their comfort zones. Those who are willing and can escape those confines have a limitless approach to music and what it is.
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Originally posted by Peter View PostSurely the purpose of music is to reflect that realm of human experience not to alienate itself from it? I may be old fashioned in my tastes but it is precisely this dehumanising element in modern art and life that repels me.
That there are dehumanising elements is our lives is a given, Headmaster, and you are not the only one to suffer from them. What do you find dehumanising in modern art, may I ask?
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Originally posted by The Dude View Post[...]I tend to listen to successful musicians, with a solid performing and academic background, rather than dry academics who would-be-if-they-could-be. Interesting, too, that many of the more recent "composers" have been mediocre performers themselves, or non-performers. I agree with a couple of earlier comments from other bloggers that there is a strong element of striking a pose, and pretension with much of this 'stuff' anyway.
In any case, the people have spoken with their feet.
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Originally posted by Philip View PostI really have no idea what the "realm of the truly human" means, and it rather scares me, to be honest, Sorrano! Forgive my scientific ignorance, but cannot everything be reduced to (or expressed as) mathematical equations?
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Originally posted by Peter View PostSorrano's post is thought provoking I think in several areas - firstly about comfort zones and about definitions of music. The World health organisation has just published a study on the negative effects of noise pollution on human health, yet the avant garde have since Luigi Russolo's 'The art of noise' gone down this very road. Russolo regarded traditional melodic music as confining and envisioned noise music as its future replacement - personally I do not regard noise as music but I realise that to some this is a provocative statement!
Can we get something right once and for all : I do find certain noises appealing (car honks that create unexpected dissonant/consonant intervals that morph over time, birdsong[noise], leaves frotting, rain on a window, water over rocks, fire, crunching gravel ...), and I resent the implication that this makes me errant in some way. I find it astonishing that there are those who consider these sounds (noises) to be unmusical. As they occur in the environment without compositional intent, ok, they are noises, but more importantly they represent a rich source of musically exploitable material.
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Originally posted by The Dude View Post[...]I think when you have to start examining the definition of music you are already in real trouble, conceptually speaking.
Me? I say nonsense! Or rather merde. What is music to my ears is music.Last edited by Quijote; 04-01-2011, 09:05 PM. Reason: Cathedral bells distracted me. Music to my ears.
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