Well, I think anything new is interesting just because it's new. It's also a non-committal way for people to comment on something when they're afraid of looking stupid.
It's also a non-committal way for people to comment on something when they're afraid of looking stupid.
I know quite a few "interesting" people then...
True - but it can also result in undue praise ... if a relatively intelligent individual knows this, he or she can create something that is rather complex or obscure so that many people will not understand it. This can easily gain them praise, even if the creation is, deep down, not very good.
Of course, that is very common. Many people are smart but not creative. So they create very complex smokescreens to hide behind. They know if they can confuse the hell out of everyone, they can hide their incompetence. Truly profound things are almost always said in a way that people can understand.
eg Mozart once said:"Je cherche les notes qui s'aiment"
As far as I'm concerned, 'interesting' is most often code for 'I thought it was crap but I don't want to hurt anyone's feelings'. You know, like when someone says, 'What did you think of my performance' and you answer 'Isn't Bach a wonderful composer?'
Why is it that many people claim something to be 'interesting' just by virtue of it being modern? I know that not everyone is guilty of this, but I hear it often enough to be annoyed by it. It is just as ridiculous as someone who says Mozart is interesting because he wrote music near the end of the 18th century. What are your thoughts?
My thoughts passively remind me that every second I spend reading this thread could have been used for something...anything more interesting.
Is your life really so empty and pathetic that you have to take out your anger and frustration on an online forum? I read through your other posts and the vast majority of them only aim to insult people.
Forums are a good old distraction while I'm at the office, and it would be nice if a forum about piano music would actually involve positive and inspired discussions about piano literature rather than read your tiresome and intellectually useless thoughts on why music is called "interesting" and how intellectually-driven composers are really using "complex smokescreens" and such.
The whole point of this thread is to encourage criticism that is based in the tangible elements of music, and not abstract notions. I think you may have misinterpreted my purpose in posting this thread - or perhaps I was unclear and too quick to pull the trigger.
End result...who cares what people say when it's boiled down to one word. Even if someone used a slightly less ambiguous term like "good" or even "marvelous", it's possibly total bullcrap.
Well, I wasn't really trying to start any piefights on here. I just think that the tangible notions of music, which might mean the things that immediately spark a layman's reaction of good, bad, ugly, beautiful, etc...., have really been severely depreciated because laymen are just too god-damned scatterbrained, preoccupied, anxious, overcaffeinated and mentally dull to formulate adequate opinions on things anymore.
By the tangible elements of music, I meant things that can be objectively (more or less) judged, such as: the quality of the counterpoint, the context of the harmony and whether or not it works, the formal structure, orchestration, etc.
Trying to be objective is pretty futile really, even if you are able to comment objectively on these qualities you list above, whether or not they make a piece good/bad/interesting is utterly subjective, and hence so are any conclusions you draw.
So based on this view, subjective opinion is the only thing that differentiates the level of mastery between, say, Beethoven's Op. 111 and Philip Glass' 'Trilogy' sonata?
In all honesty, of course it is. There is no objective basis by which we can measure 'level of mastery.' There isn't a scale for it or a unit of measurement, so of course it is subjective.That said, I'm a big fan of subjective opinion. You shouldn't dismiss it as if it's worthless. Subjective opinion created things like The Human Rights Act. It can be a wonderful thing.
Also, I think that a certain amount of weight must be given to conclusions that are frequently reached by people who demonstrate an active expertise in their area of study. For example, several great composers have described the brilliance of Beethoven's 9th symphony in detail ranging from a few words, to several pages. This sort of commonality seems to say something beyond mere subjectivity, no?
I don't like defining objectively as an average of everyone's point of view. This is probably because I'm a snob. But if you think about it, the average of views is probably that 'Hit me baby One More Time' is better than anything in Beethoven's catalogue (the average person is a fool!) So anything that leads to this conclusion is out in my book.But yes, I have developed a v high opinion of academics and their works, and I see your point that there seems to be a lot more to say about many of Beethoven's works (rightly so) than other 'compositions', this quantity seems perhaps objectifiable, but I wouldn't be brave enough to dive in and say it is (I don't like being wrong, so I try to remain moderate).