You missed no point. In the Repertoire board, cpe_meyer posted -
Why? He is making an important point here: all pieces we have come to know and love can be represented by a single dash: nothing. A pause, a breath of air, a slight break in the infinite history of mankind. These pieces may very well lead from one place to another, but cpe_meyer is saying that these pieces have no meaning within themselves.
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This is a powerful statement. We all know basic sentence structure: a dash, by itself, has no meaning. However, when combined in a logical position with two separate entities, one leading and one following, we derive meaning from this symbol.
Repertoire (i.e., the various musical pieces we know, understand, comprehend, etc.) has no meaning by itself. However, when placed in combination with two separate elements, the LEADING ELEMENT and the FOLLOWING ELEMENT, we are able to derive meaning from these pieces.
The LEADING ELEMENT: the knowledge, prejudices, understandings, etc., we have before a hearing of a piece.
The FOLLOWING ELEMENT: the emotion we extract from the piece, which leads to a change in knowledge, prejudices, understandings, etc.
Therefore, the process is such:
1) We GAIN knowledge (through our previous experiences, gained from a finite list of other dashes)
2) We FUNCTION with this knowledge (faulty or otherwise, we move about our daily business and use our current knowledge during this process)
3) We HEAR a musical piece.
4) We EXTRACT meaning from this piece (how does this piece make us feel? happy? sad? energized? depressed?)
5) We TRANSLATE this meaning into further knowledge.
6) We GAIN knowledge (and the cycle continues)
If we had no knowledge before we heard a musical piece, and we gained no knowledge afterwards,
then the piece has no meaning. In a slightly less philosophical manner, we can look at music as one of the driving forces behind the advancement of our culture. In this instance, the LEADING ELEMENT is time before the CREATION of a piece, and the FOLLOWING ELEMENT is time after the creation of a piece.
cpe_meyer has made an intelligent, philosophical point with his post. We would do best to analyze his post and gain further knowledge from it.
Terry