I'm not "afraid" of 20ieth century music, but I think, a great part of it is totally unlogical, and I hate unlogical music.
Mr(s). Nicco:Your original anwser was "fur elise". Then, Mr. Gymnopedist wrote "It's the Eroica symphony, by Beethoven.". And so you modified your comment. Why did you do something like that? Do you want to seem clever than you actually are? No further comments...
in the 22th century they will all find fantastic what composers compose nowdays, while we find it terrible. (...)
(...)Maybe they will experimentate with electronic music, preperad piano's etc. (...)
(...) I think it's pity to lose the essention of music. (...)
(...)But I'm always sure it will happen like this, after a period they always search after something new. (...)
(...)Although I think they will always appreciate Bach and Chopin. I hope so...(...)
i think a lot of people here dont like 20th century music because they dont care to explore it. either that, or because some of it is an acquired taste (like xenakis, schіnberg, and other atonal composers). there are others, like kapustin for example, that are very ear-friendly, and if people gave them a listen, they would fall right in love. also, some of you guys just dont care to break outside of your proverbial bubble of common and classical-romantic composers. just remember: there is a lot of undiscovered 20th century music out there, but admittedly, in the words of hamelin, "there is a lot of trash" also.
define "unlogical".
I'm not "afraid" of 20ieth century music, but I think, a great part of it is totally unlogical, and I hate unlogical music.The composers who wrote the most logical music were J.S.Bach and Alexander Scriabin.I could play their music day and night. (By the way: I love dissonances!)
That's not easy to explain.There is a feeling of what notes or chords or rhythms do match to another and others who don't match. It's not, that for example a chord sounded dissonant, but that the voices don't move in a logical sense. Okay, I can't explain it.
you cant explain it because there really is no such thing as "unlogical music". you may not understand what you are hearing, which makes it seem "unlogical" to you. once you understand it, if you ever do, it will seem logical and you will see the composer's reasoning behind it. (...)
(...)this piece, btw, is one of my favorite 20th century pieces.
Most of his technique can be easily understand as "unlogical", especially by his own contemporaries.
If the people don't understand the music, you can't blame the composer!
bleh...I can't stand Messiaen. I have a lot of respect for people who play it, (and play it really well, like Hotaik), but it sounds like crap.
Like when the melody doesn't seem to make any sense, rhythmically. It sounds like there is no time signature.
What would you give as an example of illogical music?
This music is out of tune. Why Debussy writes 5 flats at the beginning, when he wants to write an atonal piece? It doesn't sound very dissonant, but it doesn't sound, as if there were any rules, whether to use this note or another note at a special place. It looks for me, as he thought: let's write some notes, doesn't matter which, in tierces that go up and down and do some bass notes that don't really fit. It sound so undecided to my ears. Compare this to Debussy's wonderful Preludes. It's like night and day.
(...)Debussy writes 5 flats as key marking, which could be Eb minor(...)(...)A Gb is an augmented second, very weird notation(...)(...)This music is out of tune. Why Debussy writes 5 flats at the beginning, when he wants to write an atonal piece? (...)
@thalbergmadSurely you do know Bartoks Allegro barbaro.What do you think of it?I think, it's much better than Prokofieffs Toccata.Very romantic and very modern.Or Scriabin "Vers la flamme". Wonderful piece!
It's not 20th century music I don't enjoy. There are many beautiful pieces from the period.It's atonal, experimental or exceptionally dissonant pieces I don't care for. I don't enjoy those kinds of compositions in any musical genre, not just classical. Melody and harmony are such gorgeous companions and I prefer them happily married and making babies, not at odds, fighting it out and demanding that I acquire an understanding for the challenging nature of their harsh, cacophonous squabbling.
(...)My roots are in the Romantics and that is where i will remain.(...)
(...) - Italy: Dallapicolla, Ghedini, Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Berio, Aldo Clementi, Donatoni, Petrassi, Scelsi, Togni, Federico Ermirio; - France & Spain: Debussy, Ravel, Milhaud, Poulenc, Satie, Messiaen, Boulez; Mompou, Turina; - Great Britain: Bennett, Berkeley, Britten, Maxwell Davies, Ferneyhough, Tippett, Dillon; - German & Austria: Hindemith, Stockhausen, Werner Henze, Lachenmann, Rihm; Schoenberg, Webern, Berg, Krenek; - Eastern Europe: Bartok, Enescu, Martinu, Szymanowski, Tansman, Gorecki, Raubenstock-Ramati, Lutoslawski, Kurtag, Ligeti, Xenakis; - Scandinavia: Rautavaara, Edlund, Abrahamsen, Borup Jorgensen, Ruders; - Russia, former CCCP, etc: Myaskovsky, Prokofiev, Rachmaninoff, Shostakovich, Stravinsky, Part, Schnittke, Ustvolskaya, Kabalevsky; - North America: Barber, Copland, Cowell, Gerswhin, Ives, Babbitt, Cage, Carter, Rorem, Feldman, Chavez, Ardevol; - South America: Villa-Lobos, Camargo Guarnieri, Mignone, Nobre, Gnatalli, Ginastera, Kagel, Piazzolla, Santorsola; - Asia, Africa: Takemitsu, Volans. (...)
Hi there! Just another day I had post in another thread a (very personal and incomplete) list of 20th century composers of piano music. So, I quote it under this subject to ask: what other composer do you would mention in a list like this? Use the criteria you want: history, aesthetics, personal taste, pedagogic, etc. Thanks in advance!
I'm sorry but the Prokofiev Toccata completely destroys allegro barbaro, I don't care what ppl say, I believe that it kills it hands down.
I don't really like this unlogical person called Counterpoint.