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  • Hi William [:D]
    Wonderful post, really awesome!! [[;)]]
    I am glad someone shares my ideas about music.... and we are not alone : I thought I could share some very nice music quotes I have collected around from people we have heard of (famous writers, composers, painters, etc...):

    "Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent"
    Victor Hugo

    "Music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy, it is the wine of a new procreation, and I am Bacchus who presses out this glorious wine for men and makes them drunk with the spirit."
    Ludwig V. Beethoven

    "Music isn't just learning notes and playing them, You learn notes to play to the music of your soul".
    Kathy Greenwood

    "Music is well said to be the speech of angels; in fact, nothing among the utterances allowed to man is felt to be so divine. It brings us near to the infinite".
    Thomas Carlyle

    "Music is your own experience, thought and wisdom. If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn".
    Charlie Parker

    "...Yes, (music) must come from above, that which strikes the heart; otherwise it's nothing but notes, body without spirit, isn't that so? What is body without spirit?"
    Ludwig V. Beethoven

    "Music is the movement of sound to reach the soul for the education of its virtue."
    Plato

    "We live in this world to compel ourselves industriously to enlighten one another by means of reasoning and to apply ourselves always to carrying forward the sciences and the arts".
    Mozart

    "I think music in itself is healing. It's an explosive expression of humanity. It's something we are all touched by. No matter what culture we're from".
    Billy Joel

    "Life is like music, it must be composed by ear, feeling and instinct, not by rule."
    Samuel Butler

    (I like every quote here but Beethoven is definitely my favourite!!) [H]

    And this are my personal quotes, thoughts and opinions from my "inspirations page"[:O]ops: [:O]ops:
    "In music as everything in art, Inspiration is Revelation and can be described as a woman of incredible power and beauty. She comes and visits you suddenly, during the night or in the day... and when she knocks at your door you have to be awaken, ready to follow her to the place she wants to take you".

    "When I start writing a piece I never know what the final result will be,
    I don't have any precise scheme it just comes out freely.
    It is an "adventure in the soul's land" towards another amazing dimension.
    Yet only when the piece is finished I realize its message and I find out
    how universal is , without limits of space and time.
    I believe a song/composition is never exclusively of the artist that wrote it
    for it is directed to everybody... so it is like a baby
    whichi is not property of the parents but belongs to the world".

    Swanyce [:)]

  • William,

    Thanks for the kind words...though I'm not sure I would call my comments particularly insightful. I scratch my head and reach for perspective every day...as I'm sure all of us do.

    There's a part of me that envies those on this forum - and elsewhere - who are in a situation in which they NEVER have to change a note. No overhead...no employees...no financial responsibilities as a factor when deciding which work to accept, or dictating when and how you compose. Daily, I deal with the frustration of clients giving direction with little or no real understanding of music, or the process by which we create it. Is it a compromise? Sure. But like everything, there's a flip side.

    When I put my shingle out as a full-time composer 14 years ago (after 8 years of doing it freelance around my broadcasting day gig), I never dreamed that today we would have three composers (myself included), a full time sound designer and support staff...not to mention a mortgage on a piece of commercial real estate. On one hand that means payroll to meet, health insurance to pay, and constant pressure to generate a certain amount of revenue each month. On the other hand, it means I get to work with some incredibly creative, talented folks who keep me sharp...keep me inspired every day. Our collective creative energy is greater than my own, and I learn from them as I hope they learn from me. In that regard, the time I have to spend as a "businessman" is well worth it. It's a means to an end. And though it takes time that I could be using to compose...I think I'm a better composer for it.

    This next thought is probably the one that will generate the most discussion, but what the heck...

    As for clients making me change my music? That's not necessarily ALWAYS a bad thing. My feeling is, a good idea is a good idea. I've come this conclusion: Who am I to think my idea is always the best one? I view most of the projects we work on as collaborative efforts, and getting finely attuned to the sensibilities of the person calling the shots can often take me in musical directions I would have NEVER have thought to venture into on my own. As a result I learn. I stretch. I grow.

    I think of those times when clients have requested what I thought were ridiculous changes. Sometimes a funny thing happens. When I make the change, then TRULY listen objectively, occasionally the end result is better. When a client bends their ideas based on MY input as well, that's true collaboration. And in the context of specific fields of work, that's not an artistic compromise...that's the way it SHOULD be. And I think I'm a better composer for it.

    Are there situations in which I refuse to compromise? Yep. The need to sharpen my own musical voice has led me to begin a solo project, during which I will neither solicit or entertain feedback of any kind. I do it PURELY as an artistic and creative endeavor. When it's done it's done, and I don't really care whether anyone likes it or not.

    So for me, I feel like I get the best of both worlds. And if I might add...

    I'll be using some cool stuff on my solo project that I NEVER could have afforded without the revenue from my little company.
    [[;)]]

    Fred Story

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    @Fred Story said:

    I do it PURELY as an artistic and creative endeavor. When it's done it's done, and I don't really care whether anyone likes it or not. Fred Story



    Now you're talking!

  • Originally posted by Fred Story
    I do it PURELY as an artistic and creative endeavor. When it's done it's done, and I don't really care whether anyone likes it or not. Fred Story

    Exactly!!
    That's the point here.[:D]

    Swanyce

  • "As for clients making me change my music? That's not necessarily ALWAYS a bad thing. My feeling is, a good idea is a good idea. I've come this conclusion: Who am I to think my idea is always the best one? I view most of the projects we work on as collaborative efforts, and getting finely attuned to the sensibilities of the person calling the shots can often take me in musical directions I would have NEVER have thought to venture into on my own. As a result I learn. I stretch. I grow."

    This is what happens to me too, I have reached directions I could never imagine thanks to the collaboration with other people. Obviously it's a mutual "exchange" that nourishes both parts, though you may also meet "odd" people . But I could never think of creating or writing a piece under schemes I honestly don't like at all just to make money out of it and please the customer. I always try to understand what they ask, then we find a point we both share and we start from there. I must say sometimes the results are incredible, and when you finish you say "wow did we really do it?" It's amazing, you can reach so many dimensions. [:D]

  • Thanks for the thumbs-up, guys. But I want to make sure my point wasn't misunderstood.

    We can all agree that the freedom to follow our muses without compromise is a good thing. (And I certainly won't re-open the 'artistic integrity' discussion that got so out of hand not long ago.)

    My point is that re-thinking and re-shaping a composition at someone else's request (or insistence) is not necessarily ALWAYS a bad thing. (Though it certainly CAN be. Plagiarism and plain bad ideas being two notable examples.) Taking to heart the ideas of GOOD directors and producers have helped me improve as a composer...to look at things from a different creative perspective...however you want to put it.

    And now that I've started this solo project, there's no way some of that experience won't come into play - to hopefully make the outcome better than it would have been without it.

    To those who say, "I'll never change a note of music for anybody"...I salute you. When it comes to how we make music, we need to stick to our guns.

    For me, dealing with demanding clients, constant deadlines...AND having to make changes...have sharpened me in a way that I find useful when it comes to my personal writing. They co-exisit quite peacefully, and I feel fortunate to be able to do both.

    Fred Story

  • Swanyce,

    I think we were posting at the same time...and making essentially the same point.

    Fred Story

  • Swanyce,

    Thanks for those quotes - it is good to hear someone talking about the basis of inspiration here, in other words, the reason why you are doing music in the first place. I agree on the Beethoven quote. Two of my other favorite quotes are:


    "Music is the only bodiless entry into a higher world of knowlege which comprehends mankind, but is not comprehended by it."
    -Beethoven


    The musician's art is to send light into the depths of man's soul."
    -Robert Schumann

  • And when it comes to making money with our craft, let's not forget this classic...

    "The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side."

    Hunter S. Thompson

  • [:'(] unfortunately that's so true. I think everybody who is already working out there has had his own good big portion of "poison to swallow" with music business... collaborators (composers like us, managers, agents etc..) may be on top of the list. But nowaydays you can find "poison to swallow" in any fields not just music.

    ... anyway I always try to keep a positive attitude.
    Swanyce [:D]

  • Fred,

    I don't need Hunter S. Thompson's trendy negativism.

    I am talking about people who have real ideas - like Beethoven and Schumann.

  • William,

    I visited your website, I love your music, so passionate! I like all of your mp3s, Elegy is my favourite. It moved me and it's not easy for me to find music that can touch me this way nowadays. Your music talks to the soul. I wish you all the best of success, you really deserve it. [:)]

    Btw, you have a lot of beautiful quotes on your site about music.
    Schuman and Beethoven are the best, I agree with them.

    Swanyce [:D]

  • I've been reading some of the comments in this thread with great interest. It is good to know that there are so many different approaches to music making.

    I think that one of the reasons that I work best to a deadline is that being a performer, the excitement of the pospective performance seems to spur me into action. The funny thing is that I don't write by improvising. When I do, I find that I have already limited myself to what my hands can easily do; not always a good thing. Many past masters were also excellent at improvising, but still had to spend a huge amount of time thinking about their music away from the keyboard to hammer the composition into shape (I'm thinking of Beethoven here, as many people have quoted him).

    The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc. All I can do is try to produce the best that I can and hope that someone enjoys the experience of listening to it.

  • "The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc."

    I believe that when something is truly inspired, not just because you think it is inspired, other people generally recognize that for it causes deeper emotions. But there is also envy and competition out there, especially from people in the same field (other composers, musicians, etc..) that may talk just to say something against you, with the purpose of "praising" themselves by humiliating you or your work. Your "music mates" can become your enemies number one: they can steal ideas, works, etc...
    Anyway don't let anyone deride your music, if they do, just take only constructive advices. I think all composers and all creative people in the music field should receive respect towards their works, no matter how banal, unispired they may sound.
    How many composers have been derided during their lives... take J. S. Bach for example, who was considered a mediocre. Or take Giuseppe Verdi, who was rejected twice at the Milan Conservatory and was never allowed to attend!! Only after his death they named the Conservatory after his name (what a shame).
    And the list could go on and on...

    I personally think Inspiration refers to whatever the Spirit suggests when you create. You let the Spirit "run free" without schemes. You try to listen and follow such a "suggestion" at your best. No matter what people say. You must believe in what you are doing. This is about creation. If you are a conductor, obviously your job is based on schemes but you may be "inspired" in the way you conduct (choosing the right rests - speed - etc -you add your personal "touch" even if the composition is not yours). The same with musicians....
    This is my own vision, I just wanted to share it with you. [[;)]]

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    @Swanyce said:


    I believe that when something is truly inspired, not just because you think it is inspired, other people generally recognize that for it causes deeper emotions. But there is also envy and competition out there, especially from people in the same field (other composers, musicians, etc..) that may talk just to say something against you, with the purpose of "praising" themselves by humiliating you or your work. Your "music mates" can become your enemies number one: they can steal ideas, works, etc...
    Anyway don't let anyone deride your music, if they do, just take only constructive advices. I think all composers and all creative people in the music field should receive respect towards their works, no matter how banal, unispired they may sound.


    Thanks for that; I'm trying to write something for a broadcast planned for a few weeks time at the moment. The orchestra is booked, schedules printed, so I'm hoping that todays offerings will have some sort of inspirational input [:)]

    DG

  • Have a good, "inspired" work [[;)]]
    Wish you the best.

    Swanyce [:D]

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    @William said:

    Fred,

    I don't need Hunter S. Thompson's trendy negativism.

    I am talking about people who have real ideas - like Beethoven and Schumann.


    Simply meant as a moment of levity, my friend.

    But, must we engage in this sort of 'hand slapping'? It's the reason I post here so seldom.

    Fred Story

  • Swanyce,

    Thanks a lot for those kind comments. Your website is great, a very elegant design. Though I haven't been able to download any music yet because of my Jurassic Era modem.

    Also, I agree with your response to DG writing: "The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc." This does happen, but usually if you are really inspired (which means nothing more than being excited about an idea) it WON'T be trite and banal. The best way to come up with things that are good, is to do things you can get excited about. I don't think DG or anyone shold worry about whether what they do "measures up" to some supposed standard. In a sense, the attitude of a child drawing pictures with crayons is the perfect way for an artist to behave: he is doing it not because he thinks he is an "Artist" but just because it is FUN. When that same child grows up he will stop doing pictures, because adults have taught him that he is not an"Artist." But why? There are some artists who had little technical skill, like Joseph Cornell, or Ives Tanguy, but who had a desperate urge to create. And so they found a style of their own, and changed the course of art history.

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    @Swanyce said:

    I believe that when something is truly inspired, not just because you think it is inspired, other people generally recognize that for it causes deeper emotions.


    I wouldn´t be so sure. First, who decides if something is really inspired? The one with the deeper emotion? Pah. I don´t buy that.
    One and the same music can make the one smile and the other puke, it´s out of your hand. There´s nothing 'objective' in music. The response depends totally and absolutely on the listener, not on you as a composer.
    Inspiritation is a nice overestimated feeling of joy on onesself, nothing more. Stravinsky talks of an emotional disturbance. Ok.
    The root of artistic creativity lies in curiousity and appetite, not in emotional disturbances. You get nowhere with that.

    Puh, had to say that. Always when things get to neo-romantic I feel the urge to talk back. There are good reasons that this era ended 100 years ago. And I´m totally happy about that.

    Having said all that, welcome, Swanyce, on board of this little forum. It´s great to have more females here. (And of course thanks for your kind words on my site.)

    Fred Story, as usual I appreciate your posts. Please post more! And I agree totally that defending and changing ones work against clients sharpens ones own work. There are points which indeed can´t be discussed anymore but one should try to extend this line as far as possible.

    Ok, let´s finish this little rant,
    bests,
    - Mathis

  • Ok, I didn´t totally get the meaning of the quoted sentence. So I add something: I understand that a inspired masterpiece is recognized through a multitude of deeply emotionalized human beings. Right?
    Did you ever think about other cultures? (To make things black an white.) Do you really think you understand the "inspiration" of a gamelan player? (I doubt that he even thinks in terms of "inspiration"). And he yours? Do you believe an Eskimo will understand your inspiration? I sincerely doubt that.
    And I doubt that your neighbour will fully understand your inspiration like you´ve experienced it. And then there are all people in between.
    Mind you: "Inspiration" is an invention of the romantics, as is the whole "art" attitude. Art was invented very late, maybe in music with late Beethoven. There´s absolutely no reason to be convinced there still exists "art" in music nowadays. This was a temporary nice thing. It ended with the 70´s when art still ment something essential. Since then there´s something else, but still I don´t know what.

    For me Edgar Varèse was a truly inspired composer (if I´m ever forced to use this word). I don´t think he made many people feel deep emotions.

    I hope to have started a really controverse discussion!