Well, obviously, there are no two composers the same, but by your logic, it would also be impossible to characterize all political movements, or make any general claims about any movement at all.
The modern composers all share the same common red thread running through them, that I've described earlier. And no, that doesn't mean that any music written while the first modernist composer was alive is modern music, and I beg you to stop looking at this as a matter of time - It's a matter of thought, of ideology, rather.
were Jonathan Powell playing a 1½ hour program of Xenakis and Finnissy, there is no way I would go. To put it short, I would come to the above program to listen to the Chopin and Rachmaninoff, and listen to the rest out of curiosity.
But you see, I might even like a modern work
It just won't be for the reason the composer intended.
If by some random chance I found a Xenakis work that I liked, it would not be for the perfectness of it's mathematical abstraction, but rather if I simply liked the sound of it.
The exact random chance that the abstract mathematics Xenakis builds his work on actually produce something that sounds remotely like music.I just don't see this huge variety amongst modern composers that you're talking about. It's like communists discussing the huge difference between trotskyism and maoism. There's only a difference in modernist composers to modernist followers. If a composer composes radically different from the soundworld of that, he's simply not a modernist composer, just a contemporary one.
The exact random chance that the abstract mathematics Xenakis builds his work on actually produce something that sounds remotely like music.
I just don't see this huge variety amongst modern composers that you're talking about.
It's like communists discussing the huge difference between trotskyism and maoism.
There's only a difference in modernist composers to modernist followers.
If a composer composes radically different from the soundworld of that, he's simply not a modernist composer, just a contemporary one.
Let's give it a rest then - I stand by my dislike of all modernist composers.
I have explained to such extent now the reason for that dislike and the ideology they more or less share as a common foundation for their composition, regardless of minor differences, and why I dislike that ideology. I know that you disagree. There is not much more to be said.
I don't really want to take the time to describe this modernism into great depth.
All of the impressions I have been getting about modern composers seem to convince me in the direction that most of them subscribe to modernism in some way.
I think our disagreement might lie somewhere in that statement, in that you require me to give very in-depth thoroughly researched reasons for that statement. I don't have to - It's my opinion.
There is no dividing line.
You are again and again trying to make this a case of black and white
and if I can't define exactly what modernist ideology is (in the relatively short confines of this forum) and which composers are part of it, my argument has no validity.
I believe it has, speaking generally.
I can't say that I hate every modern work, I can't say that I hate every modern composer. What I can say is that I dislike the modernist ideology as described earlier, and that it's my opinion that most modern works and composers that I know of fall into this category.
It seems that you are not (or at least believe yourself not to be) part of this modernism. Good for you. I frankly don't know your work, but would be interested in hearing it.
How about the finale of Schönberg's Piano Concerto? Or thr first movement - Partita - of Carter's Symphonia: Sum FluxæPretium Spei? (not that these are especially atonal to my ears, admittedly). These examples don't do it "like" Bach, of course, any more than they sound "like" Bach (as you'd expect), but I think that what you're getting at here is that certaon contemporary music is emotionally restricted because there are certain emotions that it both cqannot and doesn't seek to express. I do not believe that at all. What you're really doing is telling us about your tastes. That's fine, as far as it goes, but it doesn't address what is presumably intended by the question.Best,Alistair
I'm sorry but you can't put words in my mouth. Thank you for the examples - I'm not familiar with them but I'll try to find some recordings.Or perhaps you misunderstood my original post. I was not referring to Bach specifically but to the giocoso title. Unless the term does not mean what I thought it did?
wow
Well, it is pretty hard to be part of something that doesn't exist on any plane aside from la-la-land. Being a modernist is not the same being a card-carrying member of the Communist Party or the YMCA. Artists are artists, and modernism was and remains a simply-defined inclination towards deviating from tradition, if it has any substance at all. Indeed, sometimes the break with the past is more harsh than at other times and occasionally groups of people have organized themselves around some kind of manifesto, but that is not an absolute. None of peoples' theories or criticisms can ever possibly be true. It's all just words and opinions. To me, modernism is kind of a shitty term, because it blankets over a whole ton of more specified artistic movements and phenomena and ultimately becomes a giant bulls-eye for people who feel the need to categorize anything and everything. Another annoying aspect of this term to be is that it's often used to label specific artists from without, by critics and other secondary individuals. I'd like to actually gather all the quotes I can from musicians and composers who actually stated something like "I am a modernist, watch now as I break with the past." That's about as unfeasible as imagining Columbus sitting on the poopdeck in the middle of the Atlantic saying something like "I am an explorer who's out to discover America." Most of these guys were too preoccupied in doing their business as composers to worry about what camp they fell into. I've met plenty of composers who really could give two s**ts how their music is categorized by critics and fans. I play in a very technical rock band and hang with lots of rock musicians, and nothing was more annoying than the pigeonholing tendencies of kids who feel the need to instantly bust out terms like "math rock", "post-rock", "post-hardcore", "proto-punk", "peace-punk", "nintendo-core" and a million other dumb micro-genre terminologies that make little sense to me. I can understand the importance of something like music theory, which can help one attempt to understand the non-understandable and possibly lead to new musical ideas and challange the brain, etc... but all of the controversial views between one -ism and another is just pure bullshit that can hinder a new listener's perspective and annoy the living hell out of those who simply don't care about that crap.
Speaking of rock/hardcore/whicheveroddgenreofmusic, one thing I've noticed about such non-classical musicians is that they (and probably their fans) are generally much more open to experimentation than your typial 88street pianist. This probably extends to the general classical audience, which reinforces the stereotype that they're musically conservative, elitist, and crazy.
I have described this ideology already as being the wish to make music for some higher purpose, whether it be completely objectivity through mathematics or some other abstract, the purpose of modernIST composers is rather to satisfy their own ideas of what music should be rather than as to serve the historical and from progression shown path. You must not have read my earlier posts. I can't believe you continue to believe I haven't made this very clear.
I don't think isms are for ists.
Only in your world, where you try to hide yourself from the facts by semantic arguments over whether or not modernism is clearly enough defined for you, or whether or not most modern composers belong to this ideology.
indutrial, your post would make sense if it wasn't because it's founded on the basic misunderstanding, IMO, that the progression and development sought by modern composers is the same as that of earlier composers.
I'm sick of you both trying to avoid facts by semantic arguing whether or not every single *** composer born since 1910 subscribes to this ideology.
Obviously they don't, but those who do constitute the vast majority, and as you both have provided plenty of proof for,
in today's music world, it's simply not accepted to be of a different opinion with regards to the modernists.
That alone should indicate that obviously this movement has a strong power within music circles.
Man, the more I think about this the more pissed off I get.
If anyone dares to post something that states the obvious, that modern music is completely out of touch with almost all listeners' tastes,
you all get fired up and want serious arguments, and go off firing bs like "oh, so said the conservative critics in the romantic period". So someone brings heaps of arguments explaining in plenty more detail than you ever took to make your unfounded claims, only for you to claim that it's not good enough. You hide behind your stupid semantics and try to put your head in the sand from the thought that maybe there really is a difference, maybe modernist composers really do have a common thread running through them (how else could you defend them all anyway), and maybe that common thread is just an intellectual ivory tower to make them feel like collectively better people, who can sit patting themselves on their back, safely assured that they've reached human perfection, while in reality, everyone who hasn't been tricked by the continous, consequent, never-ending self-assuring back-patting and shunning of the non-believers, can simply lay back, enjoy the music of the great masters and throw a short chuckle in the direction of this soon-to-be-over parody of music, which is what I am going to do now.
You won't hear more from me here,
so for the time being, the pseudo-intellectuals here can continue feeling good about themselves while exploring the great emotional depths of the mathematic skill of Xenakis.
You gotta see the funny side of this thread really.
I have just listened to some "music" by a masterful composer called Ferneyhough. The only way I can describe it is to ask you to imagine a drug addicted soprano who is constipated and desperate to get to the toilet, only to find that her way is blocked by a swimming pool full of flutes.Undoubtedly, some members of this forum probably think this is a work of genius and would take 900 or so words to describe why. I suggest we let them do it and just sit back and laugh.
I have just listened to some "music" by a masterful composer called Ferneyhough. The only way I can describe it is to ask you to imagine a drug addicted soprano who is constipated and desperate to get to the toilet, only to find that her way is blocked by a swimming pool full of flutes.
Don't jinx it!Not that anyone cares about Elliott Carter. Most people here seem to be infatuated only in pieces with a tonality and melody staring them in the face. Or anything "not modern", however they define it. Don't expect a big celebration here when he turns 100. Same with Messiaen.
Is there a problem if I am "infatuated" with tonality and melody???
He said "infatuated ONLY", not to mention that he only said it "seems" that way. Read the post more than once before attempting to start another semantic piefight. It's obviously okay to be infatuated by melodies and tonalities....The issue at stake here is that some people are letting that infatuation radiate into intolerant, unhinged criticism and frail pet theories about ideology and musical ethics.
You're not talking about this:
No need to be so condescending... I was only looking for clarification (which you did) not to start a fight, my apologies if it looked that way.. Don't mind me anymore, I'll go back to spectating now.
The answer to the question is that there are Rakhmaninovs in the telephone directories of several countries and, whilst that is not exactly a serious response, it seems to me to be as serious as the question itself.
I don't somehow think that FFJ ever sung any Ferneyhough; let's wait for Thal to tell us who the soprano concerned actually was (if he chooses so to do).
Etudes Trancendales
but who was the soprano?
You tell me oh great and knowledgable spelling corrector. I have no idea who the "singer" was. I assume she is now safely back in her cell.Surely this compostition (correct spelling when describing this) has not been recorded more than once.Thal
You tell me oh great and knowledgable spelling corrector. I have no idea who the "singer" was. I assume she is now safely back in her cell.
Surely this compostition (correct spelling when describing this) has not been recorded more than once.
I'd like to thrown in yet another spin to the ever-morphing thread:Is the use of 'perversion' to describe music ever warranted?
Thank you so much.I will endevour to find a recording of this 4th Quartet.Perhaps