@William said:
That is a great post by Errikos. Holy crap! He should be teaching class!
One example of somebody who never went to school was Erich Korngold - he didn't need to. He wrote the Sinfonietta when he was 16! Has anybody here heard that ? Listen to it. It is Mozart-level genius, and absolutely unfathomable how a callow teenager could write that. It shows what Errikos is talking about in an extreme degree. He just had it in him. No need for hard work.
That corresponds in an extreme way to something I've always thought - if you can write a good melody, you can do anything in music. If you can't, everything you do will be forgotten, guaranteed.
(Naturally I'm a bit concerned about whether or not my melodies are good...)
Thanks a lot!
I've never heard the Sinfonietta, and would be keen to at some opportunity. I also agree with the first part of your aphorism regarding melody, and I know people who agree with the whole thing. In fact, off-hand, I can think of ONLY two great composers (out of so many), with no gift for melody whatsoever, and no great gift for harmony either - they seem to go hand in hand most of the time, and that deficiency actually was so important as to steer their careers to the directions they took:
Sometimes I think of Stravinsky as a magnificent, technicolor, circus-like juggling, pyrotechnic charlatan!! Because he could absolutely not come up with the first note of a melody (spare me the folksong stuff, that was a desperate half-measure for such an otherwise cosmopolitan and urbane man), he just used his incredible ear and innate musical personality and incredible technique to fill the obvious void, coming up with unprecedented awe-inspiring dazzling musical events, even for a Russian. That is yet another reason why his music sounded so new and fresh, he freed himself single-handedly from the ties of strict motivic considerations - they became thematically equal to his exorbitant flights and inventions in his work. No matter what anyone says, practically all of his greatest music was episodic in character, for that was the form which fitted his particular gifts the best. He was like a cripple who through talent, invention, determination, and all the rest, managed to tower above able-bodied people in physical feats.
The other great composer that was plagued by the same impotence was of course Bartok, who went to the ends of the known universe in desperate search for the rudiments of melodic structures (musicological interests my ****), and as with Stravinsky, he reluctantly fell back to a very inventive and intelligent use of folksong (for who would do that happily all of his mature career if he could write his own melodies?). It is no coincidence for me, that these two composers were unequivocally the two pioneers, masters of rhythm. I believe it came as naturally to them as melody and harmony come to others.
Come to think of it, even Beethoven was possibly one of the least gifted melodists of his time, and he also had to deal with that and find his own solutions inside the bag of his remaining monumental gifts (including the rhythmic vitality). In fact he is considered by some as the father of symphonic melody.
To downgrade the point a little, I find in film-music that those who are extremely and "naturally" gifted in one of these two respects, they are deficient in the other (I'm not talking about their imitators). For example Williams and Morricone.
Now I know this is a shocking, radical post for most, I expect people will have the strongest of disagreements, and I'm stuffed if I know what it all has to do with VSL's competition with HS...
P.S.: WIlliam you don't have to worry about the quality of your melodies in Earth and Paradise - I'll be reviewing them shortly, and I'm encouraging everyone here to buy them. They are great!