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August 30, 2008, 11:46:17 AM
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Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Topic: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents (Read 1869 times)
i heart xenakis
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Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
«
on:
March 14, 2008, 04:02:22 AM »
I'm sick of threads being polluted by the vitriolic, anti-intellectual, Nazi, substandard-IQ feces spewing out of the mouths (or more appropriately, fingers) of users like Derek, Lau, Tehpro (possibly the most hilariously incorrect username ever), Counterpoint (when has this guy ever made a point?), cygnusdei (again, hilariously misleading screen-name), etc.
I'm not even going to bother pretending to have the pretense of trying to make this civil. It usually takes about 2 posts before it just becomes bullshit so let's skip that. This isn't about Xenakis or Stockhausen or Nono; it's just in general. If you want to gripe about how much you hate Bussotti then come do it in here instead of *** up someone else's previously intelligent (or comparitively intelligent) thread. If you want to make fun of the idiots who make fun of people like Bussotti come do it in here instead of *** up a thread. I'm also making this thread because I think it's the most fun thing to talk about, and we need one for just in general as opposed to specific pieces, because it just gets infuriating when people like Derek try to talk about specific things they don't understand. This way he/they can make broad remarks referring to every single modernist composer all at once and we can make fun of them for that. I'm just switching it up a little.
*dings bell* Who has the balls to go first?
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pies
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #1 on:
March 14, 2008, 05:10:27 AM »
Bussotti rules \m/
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pies
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #2 on:
March 14, 2008, 05:16:36 AM »
How could anyone not like his Sonatina Gioacchina?
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rallestar
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #3 on:
March 14, 2008, 07:54:00 AM »
You yourself seem quite an intellectual capacity, Mr. Threadstarter.
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retrouvailles
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #4 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:12:23 AM »
Even though I wouldn't have been as blatant about it as skepto, I see where he is coming from and share many of his views. This forum definitely has problems that need to be addressed regarding this matter.
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wotgoplunk
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #5 on:
March 14, 2008, 03:18:04 PM »
I figure this is the place to ask a question. Don't flame me, I'm innocent!
But why is modern music so complicated? Why did the composers feel the need to make their works so massively complex?
I still like it, but why did they do it?
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Petter
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #6 on:
March 14, 2008, 04:55:13 PM »
It´s also hard to be at the other end if you appreciate something and lack the knowledge or the history (like myself) about the music, but has the honest intention of finding out more without getting crucified. Which I believe is one cause to the many misconceptions and controversies around this subject. From my point of view at least.
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retrouvailles
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #7 on:
March 14, 2008, 05:25:52 PM »
Quote from: wotgoplunk on March 14, 2008, 03:18:04 PM
I figure this is the place to ask a question. Don't flame me, I'm innocent!
But why is modern music so complicated? Why did the composers feel the need to make their works so massively complex?
I still like it, but why did they do it?
I don't think that this question is really valid in many cases. For one, not all 'modern music' composers compose 'massively complex' music. For those that do (or fot hose where it seems massively complex), it might seem complex to you because you don't understand what is going on behind it. Some are complex just to be complex, like those in the New Complexity school. I'll lave this question to Alistair, who knows much more about it than I do.
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i heart xenakis
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #8 on:
March 14, 2008, 05:39:55 PM »
Quote from: rallestar on March 14, 2008, 07:54:00 AM
You yourself seem quite an intellectual capacity, Mr. Threadstarter.
I know I am. Thank you.
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i heart xenakis
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #9 on:
March 14, 2008, 05:49:48 PM »
Quote from: tehpro on March 14, 2008, 02:31:18 PM
Haha, now you are even degrading the real music for the sake of this crap. Beethoven was way better a composer than any of these wannabes who compose all the 'artistic' and 'modern' 'music'. I bet the composer of this piece was like "Yay, I'll make them shove some forks and sheep and other stupid sh*t in the piano so it could sound even more retarded".
Anyways, it seems like you derive a lot of pleasure from your false sense of superiority you get by listening to this inferior and stupid music. Good for you.
First off, my sense of superiority is not false; I am utterly superior to you, and you are utterly inferior to me. Also, the piano is not prepared, dumbass. If you even played piano you would be able to tell, but you obviously don't "pro". Also, how the hell can you compare Luigi Nono to Beethoven? That's like comparing apples and... Janet Reno. Dumb ***. You have absolutely no comprehension of music.
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ahinton
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #10 on:
March 14, 2008, 05:51:10 PM »
Quote from: retrouvailles on March 14, 2008, 05:25:52 PM
I don't think that this question is really valid in many cases. For one, not all 'modern music' composers compose 'massively complex' music. For those that do (or fot hose where it seems massively complex), it might seem complex to you because you don't understand what is going on behind it. Some are complex just to be complex, like those in the New Complexity school. I'll lave this question to Alistair, who knows much more about it than I do.
Thank you - although I think that you've already pointed out the principal flaw in the grossly over-simplistic and misleading suggestion that "modern music" = "complex music". Complexity comes in many shapes and guises and what is complex to one person is not necessarily so to another, just as what was complex in one era is not necessarily so in a later one. That said, however, there's no shortage of 16th century music that is complex in its own terms, there are plenty of relatively complex passages in Bach and, of course, scores from approximately 100 years ago such as Strauss's
Salome
and
Elektra
or Schönberg's
Gurrelieder
and
Erwartung
are obviously more "complex" in many ways than any scores from 100 years earlier. Musical "complexity" can manifest itself in any one or combination of texture, rhythm, form, melodic shape, counterpoint, etc. The worst danger is in listeners listening to music on the basis of its perceived or real complexity rather than concentrating on what it's doing and saying and responding to the effects that it has on their open minds.
Best,
Alistair
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Alistair Hinton
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wotgoplunk
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #11 on:
March 14, 2008, 06:08:29 PM »
Ok, I understand what you're saying, and yes, it all makes sense to me.
But how would one avoid generalisations? After all, not all modern music is complex, yes, but some of it certainly is. And I'm sure most people have that perception of modern music.
And that's where I think most of the dislike lies, when people can't understand it. I mean, I'll admit, a lot of what the composers are trying to get at in certain situations just goes over my head.
So would you agree the composers are in some way setting themselves up to be disliked or not understood by the general listening audience?
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michel dvorsky
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #12 on:
March 14, 2008, 06:16:11 PM »
I donno but you guys, but i tink dat Soreboobjies is a good composer. he rote such hard musik.
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ahinton
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #13 on:
March 14, 2008, 06:41:52 PM »
Quote from: wotgoplunk on March 14, 2008, 06:08:29 PM
Ok, I understand what you're saying, and yes, it all makes sense to me.
Well, at least that's a good start!
Quote from: wotgoplunk on March 14, 2008, 06:08:29 PM
But how would one avoid generalisations? After all, not all modern music is complex, yes, but some of it certainly is. And I'm sure most people have that perception of modern music.
Who are "most people" in this context? Most people who listen to all kinds of music that, for want of a better word, we could call "classical"? If so, I don't think that the problem that a majority of such people would have is one of contemporary music's complexity at all.
Quote from: wotgoplunk on March 14, 2008, 06:08:29 PM
And that's where I think most of the dislike lies, when people can't understand it. I mean, I'll admit, a lot of what the composers are trying to get at in certain situations just goes over my head.
It depends what you mean by "understand". If people find it hard to relate to certain music, contemporary or otherwise (and perhaps that's what you mean by "understanding" it), that could - and almost certainly will - be for a whole raft of different reasons, not just for its complexity of utterance.
Quote from: wotgoplunk on March 14, 2008, 06:08:29 PM
So would you agree the composers are in some way setting themselves up to be disliked or not understood by the general listening audience?
No. There's no such thing as "the general listening audience" in the first place and, in any case, composers do not and indeed cannot know in advance who will listen to their music when and where, so it would be impossible for them to set themselves up in the way you suggest, even if any of them wanted to (which would obviously be rather absurd).
Best,
Alistair
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Alistair Hinton
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wotgoplunk
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #14 on:
March 14, 2008, 07:47:48 PM »
Quote from: ahinton on March 14, 2008, 06:41:52 PM
Who are "most people" in this context? Most people who listen to all kinds of music that, for want of a better word, we could call "classical"? If so, I don't think that the problem that a majority of such people would have is one of contemporary music's complexity at all.
It depends what you mean by "understand". If people find it hard to relate to certain music, contemporary or otherwise (and perhaps that's what you mean by "understanding" it), that could - and almost certainly will - be for a whole raft of different reasons, not just for its complexity of utterance.
If you were to ask an average joe. Anyone with minimal knowledge of classical (as a whole) music. So why would people find it hard to relate to it, what are the different reasons we have? It's definitely going to be more difficult. For after all, most mainstream "classical" is fairly easy to interpret. But when you're thrown a piece based on mathematical concepts, for example, it's much more difficult to see what the composer's getting at. For the layman anyway.
Quote
No. There's no such thing as "the general listening audience" in the first place and, in any case, composers do not and indeed cannot know in advance who will listen to their music when and where, so it would be impossible for them to set themselves up in the way you suggest, even if any of them wanted to (which would obviously be rather absurd).
So where did this musical "elitism" come from? A composer of a work that's difficult to understand is going to have some notion of only certain groups appreciating his work, surely?
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thalbergmad
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #15 on:
March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM »
Oh no, here we go again. Why cannot we all just accept that we have different tastes and leave it at that?
I like John Field, but some people think that his music is meaningless crap. I hereby respect anyone who has that view, and i challenge nobody that does.
Some people think Finnissy is a genius and I think that a stegosaurus with a frontal lobe lobotomy had equal creative powers. I do not have to have a reason, I do not need letters after my name or a college education to have that view and i don't need to answer boring long winded essays.
I admit that 99.9% of the members here are superior musicians to me and probably superior human beings, but i still have an opinion that is neither right nor wrong.
Thal
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counterpoint
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #16 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:10:57 PM »
Quote from: i heart xenakis on March 14, 2008, 05:49:48 PM
Also, the piano is not prepared,
The piano is not prepared, that's right.
But there is a tape playing electronically processed piano sounds.
So it sounds like the piano is prepared, if you do not see the speakers.
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indutrial
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #17 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:20:56 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM
Oh no, here we go again. Why cannot we all just accept that we have different tastes and leave it at that?
That approach never worked and it turned far too many threads into the forum equivalents of abandoned minefields. Except if you dare to venture back into one of them, the mines don't kill you. They just rain ten tons of verbal feces your way instead.
Taste can be very overrated and does nothing but bring intellectual discourse to a temporary stalemate. I'd rather see threads talking about the pieces rather than just the typical course of action:
1. NAMEDROP
2. POSITIVE OPINION 1
3. POSITIVE OPINION 2
4. ATTEMPT AT DISCUSSION or ANECDOTE
4. NEGATIVE OPINION 1
5. EMPTY-HEADED FLAME of (1.)
6. NEGATIVE OPINION 2
7. (2.) and (3.) FLAME of (5.)
8. (5.) FLAME of (1.), (2.), (3.), and (7.)
and what do we have....
dogshit
Saying that you don't have to state reasons for disliking something but still feeling the need to say anything at all adds nothing to a thread and is an annoying deviation from any shades of progress. It's not a matter of education as much as it is simply a matter of having an explanation behind your own words and sentiments. Otherwise, the words you speak have no clout whatsoever. Just a bunch of diarrhea. It's annoying when people feel like it's soooo important for them to be the frigging judge of everything without explanation, but then they get annoyed and recalcitrant when somebody else judges their own judgments. The way some people act and think of themselves here makes me feel like it would be more constructive to debate with schoolchildren about ice cream flavors.
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retrouvailles
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #18 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:25:15 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM
I like John Field, but some people think that his music is meaningless crap. I hereby respect anyone who has that view, and i challenge nobody that does.
People don't go around bashing John Field whenever his name is mentioned though. This happens to a lot of the controversial contemporary/modern/20th century/what have you music that is talked about on this forum. And you are included in that bunch, with your condescending and passive-agressive posts toward these composers.
Example 1:
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM
Some people think Finnissy is a genius and I think that a stegosaurus with a frontal lobe lobotomy had equal creative powers.
I could go through many of your other posts and point out other examples, but I still like you, Thal, despite some of your views.
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pies
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #19 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:26:08 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM
Oh no, here we go again. Why cannot we all just accept that we have different tastes and leave it at that?
That's a good question. Perhaps you should follow your own advice?:
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM
Some people think Finnissy is a genius and I think that a stegosaurus with a frontal lobe lobotomy had equal creative powers
This is not an opinion; this is a retarded troll.
To get to the music itself: describing Finnissy's music as just some very abstract, crazily complex, and hard to swallow shi
t
written by a retarded dinosaur is an overgeneralization, believe it or not. Some of his earlier works and Folklore are really nothing like English Cuntry Tunes.
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cygnusdei
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #20 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:35:02 PM »
Aah .... true to form, pianostreeters!
But back to business. I posted this question in rachfan's thread but it didn't get much traction, so here it is again:
Is the use of 'perversion' to describe music ever warranted?
Full disclosure: the backdrop is art in general. While art is subjective, some certainly crosses the boundary of legality.
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thalbergmad
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #21 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:40:31 PM »
Quote from: pies on March 14, 2008, 08:26:08 PM
This is not an opinion; this is a retarded troll.
Then i must be a retarded troll, i do not deny it.
Even if i was a spotty faced needledicked American schoolboy, i would still be entitled to have a view.
Thal
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pies
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #22 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:45:04 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 08:40:31 PM
Even if i was a spotty faced needledicked American schoolboy
troll
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 08:40:31 PM
i would still be entitled to have a view.
no one here is debating this, Voltaire
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indutrial
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #23 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:50:17 PM »
Quote from: retrouvailles on March 14, 2008, 08:25:15 PM
People don't go around bashing John Field whenever his name is mentioned though. This happens to a lot of the controversial contemporary/modern/20th century/what have you music that is talked about on this forum.
I've noticed that tons of composers from the twentieth century who are NOT as radical as the usual suspects (Finnissy, Xenakis, etc...) don't provoke any responses at all, let alone good or bad ones. I've honestly not seen enough decent threads covering topics like Bartok, Stravinsky, and Schoenberg to expect that anything decent whatsoever can come out of threads about composers who came after them. The fact that I've never read a constructive thread on any early 20th century composers (even someone as widely likable as Milhaud or Gershwin) is very telling.
A search for the former's name brings up mind-bending a-hole threads like this:
http://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,19278.0.html
It's kind of like that jazz debacle that ensued recently. Jazz gets bashed, and the only names that came up in support of that asinine notion were Gershwin, Jarrett, and a bunch of anonymous and meaningless nobodies at the complainer's college. To me, arguments in that context have nothing to offer simply because of the giant void of UNINFORMED-NESS (Jazz's development from 1950-2008) that is sitting there like the proverbial giant pink elephant.
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indutrial
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #24 on:
March 14, 2008, 08:58:15 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 08:40:31 PM
i would still be entitled to have a view.
Thal
Yes... but most users need to know that they are also entitled the right to hold back their views until they have some bearing and usefulness.
This reminds me of the scene in Big Lebowski when Walter is citing the Supreme Court in the diner after the waitress asks him to stop cursing out loud in front of the other dining families.
"C'mon man...this isn't a first amendment thing..."
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thalbergmad
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #25 on:
March 14, 2008, 09:02:13 PM »
Quote from: pies on March 14, 2008, 08:45:04 PM
troll
Grow some pubes before insulting me.
Thal
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pies
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #26 on:
March 14, 2008, 09:24:09 PM »
Quote from: cygnusdei on March 14, 2008, 08:35:02 PM
Is the use of 'perversion' to describe music ever warranted?
Certainly. When you perform it.
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ahinton
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #27 on:
March 14, 2008, 09:51:48 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 07:55:23 PM
Oh no, here we go again. Why cannot we all just accept that we have different tastes and leave it at that?
I like John Field, but some people think that his music is meaningless crap. I hereby respect anyone who has that view, and i challenge nobody that does.
Some people think Finnissy is a genius and I think that a stegosaurus with a frontal lobe lobotomy had equal creative powers. I do not have to have a reason, I do not need letters after my name or a college education to have that view and i don't need to answer boring long winded essays.
I admit that 99.9% of the members here are superior musicians to me and probably superior human beings, but i still have an opinion that is neither right nor wrong.
Thal
NOW WILL PEOPLE PLEASE TAKE NOTE Of THIS? WHETHER AND TO WHAT EXTENT I MAY OR MAY NOT AGREE WITH THE SPECIFICS HERE, THAL HAS A POINT - SO PLEASE TAKE NOTE OF IT AND MAKE UP YOUR OWN MINDS - ASSUMING THAT YOU HAVE MINDS TO MAKE UP...
Sorry - rant over - but please think, people - and use the ears that whoever it was gave you and the brains to which those ears are connected. In the meantime, please think of accepting from a composer that all this stuff is really deeply tiresome and that we all just do what we need to to in order to say what we're trying to say and have to stand or fall or both by what we do and nothing else.
Most of you arguers are not composers, so it's easier for you...
Best,
Alistair
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Alistair Hinton
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pies
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #28 on:
March 14, 2008, 10:17:49 PM »
Quote from: thalbergmad on March 14, 2008, 09:02:13 PM
Grow some pubes before insulting me.
Thal
Lose some weight before posting! All of that fat has clogged not only your arteries, but apparently your neurons as well.
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cygnusdei
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #29 on:
March 14, 2008, 10:23:01 PM »
Quote from: pies on March 14, 2008, 09:24:09 PM
Certainly. When you perform it.
That gives me too much power. So whether something is a perversion or not is all up to me?
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wotgoplunk
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #30 on:
March 14, 2008, 11:01:28 PM »
This forum is beginning to sound like Lord of the Flies
Can't anyone ask a question or show without being flamed??
Back slightly on topic, I have come up with another question, does anyone find modern music beautiful?
I still appreciate modern music, and some I do enjoy. But unless it's neo-romanticism, I find there isn't much music from that era I can listen to and find myself filled with emotion, whereas that comes easily from other times.
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Petter
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #31 on:
March 14, 2008, 11:10:11 PM »
Pianostreet has taught me alot of new english words.
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webern78
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #32 on:
March 14, 2008, 11:15:39 PM »
A poster is not intelligent unless they blindly embrace contemporary music. Gotcha.
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webern78
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Re: Ultimate Modernism-hater discussions + Vents
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Reply #33 on:
March 14, 2008, 11:31:12 PM »
Quote from: wotgoplunk on March 14, 2008, 03:18:04 PM
But why is modern music so complicated? Why did the composers feel the need to make their works so massively complex?
They aren't. There's nothing complex about contemporary compositions, it's just not music. Anything that requires copious amounts of extra-aural justifications corroborated by a massive dose of double think and self delusion doesn't have the single stretch of artistic merit to it, but then, artistic concerns are of no interest to the progressive, who's only reason d'etre is to
push things forward
for the sake of pushing things forward and little more.
I mean, really, any art form which includes second rate phonies like Stockhausen or John Cage among their "greats" must be a little bit suspect, at the very least, don't you think? But then, according to the post-modernist credo, there is no such thing as "greatness" and everything is relative to t