Prokofiev's grandson composed a concerto for turntable and orchestra recently and sold out the concert hall.
Respighi did that already in 1924 I know, that many so-called "new" composition are written and performed. But do they sound new? No - they sound like "same procedure as every year"...
So you are saying music is dead then?
I mean, the new music that appears and you dont even know, its all either bad or worthless... and the music that was new in the past 50-60 years is not good. LOL
So, I guess music is like an old museum to you?
Plus, how NON progressive do you want music to be,
There is no point in going on about this.
-of course, that does leave one problem, you feel the avant garde is old fashioned... ok... so what is liszt then to you? Beethoven? Mozart? Bach? Palestrina? If old fashioned is a bad thing, and their is nothing left to be composed, and I guess its boring to hear works that are old fashioned... then, there is no more music for you.
Why did I know that this whole thing was going to boil down to the question of style? It has nada to do with style. There are composers from all eras who knew what they were doing, and an even larger number who had no clue. The reason we still listen to composers like Bach, Beethoven, Stravinsky, Bartok, etc. is because they were the cream of the crop. In 100 years there will probably only be a handful of composers from our time who will be listened to...the ones with a solid craft or the ones who had no clue? I'd put my money on the ones with craft (and not even all of them to boot).Re: aesthetics ... it isn't necessarily related to craft. A good example is our friends who find Stockhausen's music appealing. The man has no craft, he just has a very strong philosophical backing. It's like building a piece of furniture using the theory of furniture building rather than knowing how to properly sand a piece of wood. Nonetheless, some people find it aesthetically pleasing. Thus, aesthetics does not necessarily have anything to do with craft.
In my opinion, this topic isn't even worth commenting on unless one has completely mastered counterpoint, harmony, orchestration, and form. I am not saying that I have mastered any of these (I have not), but in studying them thoroughly I have noticed very profound things in seemingly simple textures.
You also say that craft has nothing to do with style. Who are you to say what is acceptable as far as "craft" is concerned, and by whose rules do you presume to judge this music?
OK, so you haven't "mastered" them. But in saying that one should not comment in this thread unless one HAS mastered them seems to put you in a contradictory category.
I mean no one who hasn't mastered them has license to knock established great composers. Stockhausen is not in the same category as Beethoven, for example...wait 200 years and then we'll talk about it.
I'm not attacking you. I'm attacking your ideas and I do feel sorry you have such a closed mind. How do you expect music to evolve if you only consider composers of the past to be great composers? That's a slap in the face to the composing community. I see that to you music is dead.
I would put very few composers in the same category as Beethoven. No one's arguing with that. Beethoven is not going to compose anymore obviously. He's dead. Where do we go from this point on in your opinion?
What do you mean where? You mean in terms of this post?All I wanted to say from the very beginning is that unless we have first mastered a metier (something basic and common to all great composers) then we have no real jurisdiction to knock the music of great composers (Beethoven, Bach, Mozart, etc.); the simple reason being that the comments would be superficial. This post was started as a response to "The most overrated composer" post...I was simply saying that, aside from the purpose of amusement, it wasn't even worth commenting on and was essentially meaningless.
"The most overrated composer" thread was specifically related to piano music, and it's quite obvious that for both Mozart & Beethoven, it was not really the best part of their works, especially Mozart, but even Beethoven, precisely because his "craft" or "style" or whatever you want to call it was much more suited for orchestra, and also, probably, because the instrument in the classical period was not as rich and evolved as it became from the XIX century on...
Beethoven's 32 sonatas are not an essential part of his output (not amongst the best of his work)? The 4th piano concerto? And Mozart did absolutely nothing for the piano sonata or concerto...right...detect the sarcasm? That's not even worth commenting on...yet here I am commenting .
Regardless, Mozart and Beethoven "not at their best" is still pretty damn good.
Anyhow, your concept of "craft" is largely debatable, the evolution of composition, in a constant way, has been to loosen the framework, the rules, the canons of structure, harmony, counterpoint etc. In the end of the day, a musical work is appreciated or despised according to subjective, emotional reactions, and not through objective, technical criteria. So it's not even a debate on "style" it's a debate on "taste". Composers aim at striking an audience, not a small milieu of universities and competition juries.Let's not forget that Bach in his time was considered a second rank composer by his peers and by the public. Because his music did not match the concept of a composer's "craft" which was valid in his time.
Being prolific is not a guarantee of quality.
That's what I call subjective...
to mcgill: do you think "gruppen" by stockhausen is a piece devoid of any "skill" No control of counterpoint? Timbre? Texture? Form? etc
In fact, I would like you to PM me a sample score of something of yours, as to me it seems like you must be one hell of a composer to be able to state such a claim.
I don't think you understand my point. The way evolution has designed our ears to hear relationships among sounds is not subjective...quite the contrary.
I disagree. For instance, I strongly enjoy the sounds of Krzysztof Penderecki's Cello Concerto No. 1; most people on this forum would become crippled with migraines half-way through that piece. There are people who would prefer to listen to Led Zeppelin than listen to a Wagner Overture, and I'm sure that the Zeppelin people would find the Wagner boring, and vice-versa. How can this be true if what music someone thinks "sounds good" isn't subjective? Or are you referring to the ability to appreciate sound? Personally, I can not appreciate either the sound or the construction of Nine Inch Nails' music, as I'm sure a lot of people on here can not appreciate (100% sure, there has been a rather prolific thread about it =P) EITHER the sound or construction of say... "Synaphai" by Iannis Xenakis. Now, would you say that Rachmaninov's Prelude in C Sharp Minor is a worthless piece because at the time he had very little theory? I mean, the piece is extremely harmonically simple. What about the works of Philip Glass, possibly a bit more complicated in their construction but still extremely simple harmonically? No matter how incredible the Glass Violin Concerto sounds, would you still say it is an inferior piece because inferior or pedestrian construction was used? And on the note of Stockhausen, you state that his music does not follow traditional musical construction methods, therefore it is displeasing to listen to, and because what sonorities are enjoyable is unsubjective, everyone must hate Stockhausen Klavierstuck X. I like it, certainly more from the sounds it creates than that gaudy monstrosity of a score, I can promise you that
Fair enough. It is a monstrosity of a score!!! I can't believe Richter learned them...what patience lol.
Now, how can one judge the "value" or "quality" of a piece like this based solely on constructional aspects?