View Poll Results: What do you prefer in music, originality or tradition?
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
As to the rest of your post - I see just as withering, sort of patronising attempts at putting it down because you don't like it. Oh yeah, and that old canard - the dogmatic serialist compostion teacher, of which there were plenty apparently. What unexamined presuppositions are you talking about?
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12-07-2024 05:51 PM
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Originally Posted by James W
What all of that stuff can do is provide a 'shock of the new' for those unfamiliar with it. In today's incredibly culturally rich and interconnected world this can happen in a very atemporal and personal way. In earlier times it was usually connected to a prevailing culture. Records and radio started to change this. Now we have the web.
OTOH we've had this cult of tradition in classical music for much of the 20th century. It's fascinating to me that there was no historical repertoire in Mozart's time. The only music played was contemporary.
As to the rest of your post - I see just as withering, sort of patronising attempts at putting it down because you don't like it.
Oh yeah, and that old canard - the dogmatic serialist compostion teacher, of which there were plenty apparently.
I dunno, my own experiences have been positive.
What unexamined presuppositions are you talking about?
So, I would say the main aspect that I want to draw attention to that its top down approach to culture is in stark contradiction to the way culture has always arisen in history.
Adorno is both an insightful and also vaguely comic figure in this context. The fact that I think he has many amazing insights (he was a very very clever man) doesn't alter the fact that I think he was blind to the possibillties of popular culture. It was all the culture industry to him.
Boulez for instance believed his musical revolution could be effected through cultural capture of radio stations and concert halls, as well as the foundation of new cultural centres such as IRCAM. This TBF seems a very French way to go on.
It is very funny to me to me that none of this really worked as expected in the long run. Serial music didn't achieve much in the way of cultural hegemony. Technocratic projects often go that way, and I take great comfort from this fact. Berio kind of got it, I think.
And yet, these Boulezian projects did open up people's ears to the possibilities of avant garde art. The BBC Third Programme in 60's UK for example. It's just that rock musicians for instance, saw this art as part of an eclectic array of choices and sounds they could use in their own expression.
And yet exposure to different kinds of music can be hard to find in mainstream culture these days. And yet things come up. Partly it’s a responsibility of the educator.Last edited by Christian Miller; 12-07-2024 at 07:53 PM.
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Originally Posted by Peter C
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I tell you what might be 'original', not Indian singing to bebop but scat singing a la Ella to Indian music. Imagine.
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How to classify Miles Davis' bands in the 80s?
For me it's music.
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
But sure - why shouldn't that serial composition assignment be innovative? My point is that the expansion of musical possibilities continues to this day and it includes serial techniques as well as other techniques.
Case in point - how old do you think canonic technique is? At least 800 years, something like that off the top of my head. And yet composers still use it to this day and in the right hands it still sounds fresh. For example, listen to this piece starting from 1:27 -
So it's a little odd to claim that serialism was innovative for how long? (you don't mention) several decades ago, then for some reason stopped being innovative. Would I be expecting too much of you for you to provide evidence for these assertions of yours? (I might add that 'serialism' means little in and of itself, but I think we're using it in the sense of being synonymous with the music of the post-WW2 musical High Modernists).
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Originally Posted by James W
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Originally Posted by James W
It is understood that he would alter the pitch choices etc after the procedure was run, using serialism as a way to generate initial material but not to dictate the nature of the final music. You can see that in his later scores where there are many occurrences of repeated notes and consonant intervals, quite unlike the dodecaphonic Webern works.
It seems to that this is in part using a compositional procedure to defeat the dreaded Blank Page problem - which comes for us all in the creative endeavours. We all need ways of doing that. I find it always easier to work on an idea than come up with one. (Obviously that’s why people have notebooks etc.)
So it doesn’t seem to me that many of his works can be said to be serialist. He was following some sort of intuitive aesthetic principle. So this is what I mean by ‘moving on.’ He didn’t abandon the aesthetic of that music, but neither did he carry on with what he was doing in his 20s.
OTOH my favourite Boulez piece is probably the orchestral Notations (aren’t they orchestrations of early total serial works?). This is largely because of the sense of instrumental colour which is present in all his ensemble music. I have to say I perceive this music as being more about gesture and colour (and sometimes rhythm) than about pitch choices. I’m sure I’m being basic.
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLast edited by Christian Miller; 12-08-2024 at 07:17 AM.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by James W
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
I'm also not an authority on the group Trio HLK or their chronology; I just love listening to them. I do think that by fixating on the performance of the wonderful vocalist Varijashree Venugopal, we're not hearing the depth of the composition and arrangement of "Anthropometricks", of which there is a live performance dating back to 2019 without vocals. Great move to include her in the studio recording though.
I mean, they have also collborated with the great Evelyn Glennie on vibraphone (she's deaf - check her out on ted.com) but that doesn't mean they're going for a Metheny / Gary Burton thing.
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Ant’s another student of Asaf, my Konnakol teacher, but he’s gone far more into it.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Look at your posts from no. 83 onwards. You've alternately described serialism as only innovative 80 years ago, to something that only happens at music school, and that it's easily assessable, that it became conservative etc. All falsehoods which I felt the need to contradict, though I never said serialism was by definition innovatory, just that its most notable practitioners generally have been innovatory.
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I want you two to get along, so I’m going to give you a common enemy.
I hate serialism so much.
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Originally Posted by James W
I said for instance that serialism was a technique that was innovative 80 years ago but is now very much established.
As an exercise witting a short serial piece is something that is teachable. You teach the technique and assess how well it is applied.
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLast edited by Christian Miller; 12-08-2024 at 09:40 AM.
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But rather than go back and pick apart the wording of rather long posts, I’ll just ask you if you agree with the statement I made post #111 because that’s what I was arguing by against. I don’t think anything I said is very relevant if you don’t agree with that.
EDIT: it doesn’t seem that you do.
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLast edited by Christian Miller; 12-08-2024 at 09:41 AM.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by James W
Obviously you should be a mind reader.
I ask because the thing I felt I was disagreeing with was the assertion that serialism is an innovative technique, whereas I feel it’s well established and somewhat representative of a somewhat classical style in contemporary composition.
I also pointed out that historically there are a lot of people who got alienated not just by the music (which I think is a shame) but by the self righteous attitude of the practitioners. You don’t seem to think this was a thing.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Aus den sieben Tagen - Wikipedia
It's possible in rebutting your original categorical assertions I may have made at least one of my own. To be more nuanced: serial technique can to this day be used for innovative ends.
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
You need to take a really controversial position like ‘I don’t like serialism much, but really like Schoenberg’s twelve tone works.’ Then *everyone* will disagree with you.
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Originally Posted by James W
Is the aesthetic effect of serial music much different to free “atonal” music? If not, then certainly the aesthetic of that music has had a huge influence on European improvisers.
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Originally Posted by Litterick
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'Serialism, which emerged in the early 20th century, particularly through the work of composers like Arnold Schoenberg, Anton Webern, and Alban Berg, was indeed an innovative approach to composition. It represented a significant break from traditional tonal music, introducing a systematic method of organizing pitch, rhythm, dynamics, and other musical elements. The innovation lay in its ambition to move beyond tonality, allowing for greater freedom in expression and a new way of thinking about musical structure.
In terms of whether serialism is still considered innovative today, opinions vary. In the mid-20th century, it was at the forefront of contemporary classical music, influencing many composers and leading to the development of further techniques, such as total serialism, where other parameters (like dynamics and timbre) were serialized in addition to pitch. However, as musical trends evolved and postmodernism emerged, many composers began to explore other styles and techniques, moving away from strict serial methods.
Today, while serialism may not be at the cutting edge of musical innovation as it once was, it still holds importance in the history of music and influences some contemporary composers. It may be viewed as an innovative tool within a broader palette of compositional techniques rather than a dominant or standalone movement.
Overall, the innovation of serialism lies in its historical context and the way it expanded the possibilities for musical composition. Its influence can still be felt in various avant-garde and contemporary works, but its novelty as a groundbreaking technique has diminished as musical language has diversified.'
Inflation?
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