Just a question...
However, I thought of it recently while listening to Mahler's 8th, the 70s Solti/Chicago Symphony performance recently re-released on CD. This particular work of both performance and composition has been called "the single greatest performance and recording of the greatest music ever composed." While I'm not sure that is absoluely true, it is surely one of the best. But what I was pondering had to do with listening, related to composing.
One may listen to this work of great mastery and genius complete, in one sitting, via an ordinary little CD player. But what is one really hearing? While I am tremendously impressed by all the work that went into this particular performance, all the world-class soloists, the great conductor, the (arguably) greatest orchestra in the world, the excellent recording etc. - what I really hear, with headphones clamped upon my head - is Mahler's ideas. In other words, the ideas that were in his head are transfered directly into mine. That is in my opinion, the whole point.
We live in a time when performers are everything. The composer has become a servant of the performer. And so many snobs will say, "well this recording is all well and good, but nowhere near as fine as hearing it in person." Why? So you cannot be within the concert hall with all those performers? But there are many distractions there. Like some joker talking in the seat right next to you. Or the fact you have indigestion that night. Or any number of other distractions. But with a composer's ideas that have been encoded into a perfect artwork like this CD, you have no distractions whatever - just those ideas that were in Mahler's brain being transfered directly into your own.
All this has a great deal to do with why I am so attracted to samples, which intensify the purely compositional aspect of musical sound. But it also raises the question of what people are ultimately after when they listen to music. And what, exactly, is music? An idea, or a performance? Being a composer I am biased and think it is an idea (or huge set of ideas as in Mahler or Beethoven). And performers are really the servants. Though they always strive to reverse the situation.
However, I thought of it recently while listening to Mahler's 8th, the 70s Solti/Chicago Symphony performance recently re-released on CD. This particular work of both performance and composition has been called "the single greatest performance and recording of the greatest music ever composed." While I'm not sure that is absoluely true, it is surely one of the best. But what I was pondering had to do with listening, related to composing.
One may listen to this work of great mastery and genius complete, in one sitting, via an ordinary little CD player. But what is one really hearing? While I am tremendously impressed by all the work that went into this particular performance, all the world-class soloists, the great conductor, the (arguably) greatest orchestra in the world, the excellent recording etc. - what I really hear, with headphones clamped upon my head - is Mahler's ideas. In other words, the ideas that were in his head are transfered directly into mine. That is in my opinion, the whole point.
We live in a time when performers are everything. The composer has become a servant of the performer. And so many snobs will say, "well this recording is all well and good, but nowhere near as fine as hearing it in person." Why? So you cannot be within the concert hall with all those performers? But there are many distractions there. Like some joker talking in the seat right next to you. Or the fact you have indigestion that night. Or any number of other distractions. But with a composer's ideas that have been encoded into a perfect artwork like this CD, you have no distractions whatever - just those ideas that were in Mahler's brain being transfered directly into your own.
All this has a great deal to do with why I am so attracted to samples, which intensify the purely compositional aspect of musical sound. But it also raises the question of what people are ultimately after when they listen to music. And what, exactly, is music? An idea, or a performance? Being a composer I am biased and think it is an idea (or huge set of ideas as in Mahler or Beethoven). And performers are really the servants. Though they always strive to reverse the situation.