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Old 11-19-2009, 03:08 PM   #51 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by PartisanRanger View Post
Pretentious douchebags can be found clinging to any genre of music. I'd doubt you'd find a disproportionate number associated with classical.
Anything can be found anywhere. But yes, there are indeed a very disproportionate number of pretentious douchebags to be found in the world of classical music.
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Old 11-19-2009, 06:13 PM   #52 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Urban Hatemonger View Post
I don't know why everyone feels the need to mention jazz or prog to justify any other type of modern music.

The main riff to 1969 by The Stooges or the bassline to Waiting For An Alibi by Thin Lizzy just to name two examples are just as much a thing of beauty as anything any classical composer has ever composed.

If you don't think it is then it's just snobbery in my opinion.
Urban, I feel that saying one finds a particular song more beautiful than another is not pretentious or snobbery, but instead just shows a particular person’s tastes. For example, I don’t feel my musical tastes are pretentious...favorite songs of mine include the “Inchworm” song and Naked Eyes’ “Always Something There to Remind Me.” Yet after your post when I listened to Iggy & The Stooges “1969" main riff and Thin Lizzy’s “Waiting for an Alibi” baseline, I found I much prefer Bach’s Cello Suite No.1, i-Prelude because of the feeling I have when I listen to it. To me this Bach piece is beautiful while "1969" is not.

I am curious how it happens that people (almost all of whom I feel are fundamentally similar) develop such different musical tastes, because to be blunt I would actually prefer to listen to silence than to Iggy & The Stooge’s “1969" (except for the point several seconds after 3:40 when the lead singer makes a very funny gagging, strangled sound, which amused me...heh heh...I actually listened to that several times). My dislike for the song overall doesn’t mean there is anything wrong with liking the song or with that style of music, but the song and the riff just don’t affect me like they must affect you, Urban. I actually had a hard time forcing myself to listen to the whole of "1969," but I can handle the Bach cello piece very easily, enjoying it time and again:



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Originally Posted by SuperFob View Post
Is it? Or is there any modern music that can hold up? Can John Williams's work, for example, compare to that of any classical composer?
SuperFob, I've been thinking more about your original question over the last several days while listening to Bach as well as other music, trying to come up with a clearer answer than the one I gave before. I feel that studying older classical music probably gives people a set of terminology and concepts with which to understand other types of music better, but older classical music doesn’t include all innovations in the musical world, obviously, and so can never be "better" than newer music...just different than more recent “classical” music compositions (such as those by Aaron Copland and John Williams) or other genres of music.

The reason an older form of classical music cannot really be a yardstick by which to measure the value of newer music was explained well by a classical musician, Stephen, who posts visual representations of classical music online (Music Animation Machine). When one of his listeners recently wrote, “I do firmly believe that J.S.Bach's music is the yard-stick by which all other classical music must be measured,” Stephen (my newly discovered hero) replied as follows:
Quote:
Stephen: "Saying that music is a yardstick is a metaphor, and metaphors are necessarily imprecise, so it would be equally imprecise to say that you are wrong. Bach was a great composer, but many musical techniques and ideas were developed by composers that came later, and with respect to those musical elements, you can't say 'Bach did it better' because Bach didn't do them at all. For example, in the areas of orchestration and thematic development ...” http://www.youtube.com/comment_servl...%3DJTQsxs0mzc0
One other little comment for SuperFob: my preference for lyrics is always to be able to understand them, too!
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Old 11-19-2009, 06:17 PM   #53 (permalink)
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Theodore Adorno anyone?

[spoiler]He's an idiot[/spoiler]
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Old 11-19-2009, 06:20 PM   #54 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by PartisanRanger View Post
Pretentious douchebags can be found clinging to any genre of music. I'd doubt you'd find a disproportionate number associated with classical.
True, but most of them were aspiring Julliard fuckawks so it was only convenient to me at the time.
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Old 11-19-2009, 09:01 PM   #55 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by VEGANGELICA View Post
Urban, I feel that saying one finds a particular song more beautiful than another is not pretentious or snobbery, but instead just shows a particular person’s tastes. For example, I don’t feel my musical tastes are pretentious...favorite songs of mine include the “Inchworm” song and Naked Eyes’ “Always Something There to Remind Me.” Yet after your post when I listened to Iggy & The Stooges “1969" main riff and Thin Lizzy’s “Waiting for an Alibi” baseline, I found I much prefer Bach’s Cello Suite No.1, i-Prelude because of the feeling I have when I listen to it. To me this Bach piece is beautiful while "1969" is not.

I am curious how it happens that people (almost all of whom I feel are fundamentally similar) develop such different musical tastes, because to be blunt I would actually prefer to listen to silence than to Iggy & The Stooge’s “1969" (except for the point several seconds after 3:40 when the lead singer makes a very funny gagging, strangled sound, which amused me...heh heh...I actually listened to that several times). My dislike for the song overall doesn’t mean there is anything wrong with liking the song or with that style of music, but the song and the riff just don’t affect me like they must affect you, Urban. I actually had a hard time forcing myself to listen to the whole of "1969," but I can handle the Bach cello piece very easily, enjoying it time and again:
No no no no no, You totally missed the point of what I was saying.

I gave those examples of those songs I find to be just as beautiful as anything ever written by anybody. My point was basically if you totally dismiss modern rock music LIKE those songs just because they're not classical you're an elitist snob.

If you listen to them & decide that they're not to your taste I have no problem with that at all.
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Old 11-20-2009, 07:11 AM   #56 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Urban Hatemonger View Post
No no no no no, You totally missed the point of what I was saying.

I gave those examples of those songs I find to be just as beautiful as anything ever written by anybody. My point was basically if you totally dismiss modern rock music LIKE those songs just because they're not classical you're an elitist snob.

If you listen to them & decide that they're not to your taste I have no problem with that at all.
Oh! I see your point. Thanks for clarifying it. I guess most people I've met who hate particular songs don't hate them because of their genre but because of how they sound...which is sort of the same thing. I agree with you, though, that if people don't even *listen* to a song because they have been told it is modern rock and they think "modern rock is awful," then those people might be a bit pretentious or at least guilty of stereotyping, since songs within a genre are not all the same. A related example would be when a person who dislikes "Achy Breaky Heart" dismisses all country music because she doesn't like that song and also has the negative stereotype that "country folk are silly and uncool bumpkins, and country songs are always uninteresting, corny love songs."
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Neapolitan:
If a chicken was smart enough to be able to speak English and run in a geometric pattern, then I think it should be smart enough to dial 911 (999) before getting the axe, and scream to the operator, "Something must be done! Something must be done!"

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Old 11-20-2009, 07:15 AM   #57 (permalink)
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Anything can be found anywhere. But yes, there are indeed a very disproportionate number of pretentious douchebags to be found in the world of classical music.
What makes you say that?
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Old 11-20-2009, 11:35 AM   #58 (permalink)
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What makes you say that?
An uncanny ability to see the really obvious things most other people seem able to see as well.
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Old 11-20-2009, 11:35 AM   #59 (permalink)
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Is it? Or is there any modern music that can hold up? Can John Williams's work, for example, compare to that of any classical composer?
Humm, I dont think so. The composing styles and skills are so different.

What we have now is more a "popular" music, music for the people.

The great composers like Bethoven, Mozart, Wagner did not compose for the people. The goal is not to entertain the ppl, the goal is something bigger in my opinion. You have to have a certain degree of musical knowledge to understand what the great composers did. Not that you have to be a musician, no. But you have to understand formats and geaographical issues to fully understand some classical pieces.

Then here is the question: why dont we have more "classical-like" composers nowadays? Where are the great composers?

My answer to this question is: they are in the movies industry.

See Danny Elfman for example. His work is amazing.
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Old 11-20-2009, 11:51 AM   #60 (permalink)
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I disagree with that as well. You mean to tell me you think all music that gets created today outside the handful of composers is made to entertain a large group of people? I think the best musicians will always be the ones who make the music they like. Those that completely ignore what anyway says about them or their music and do what they enjoy. If you talk to a true musician they will often tell you they create music not just for fun but because they feel a need to do so.
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