The sound of a sweetly hit 7 iron approach shot that rolls to within a foot of the cup!
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@lgrohn said:
Let me put down some provocative theses:
1) There is nothing that could called "music theory". What is called "music theory" is just a set of conventions and rules. So Music theory" in not a THEORY. It is just a useful set of rules. And there are hundreds of sets of rules in different cultures. The word has historical background. The was "practice" and "theory" (rules). The word "theory" is used in the sense that a man on the street used that word. In sciences that word has another meaning.
2) There is nothing that could called "music analysis". What is called "music analysis" is just analysis of the score but not analysis of experience. The latter chould be called as "music analysis". If one can detect the tonal mode or find Schenker level based on the score etc. that doesn't not have much to do with listeners's experience.
Lauri Gröhn
metacomposer
http://www.synestesia.com">http://www.synestesia.com
@DanimalSnacks said:
However, I think that definitions of such things as music and art in general are useless.
@hermitage59 said:
or golf.
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Music analysis is based on a score. Every conductor/orchestra gives a different interpretation of the score. So analyses based on score are always wrong. I guess the whole idea of music analysis is wrong.@William said:
In other words, you might believe yourself to be studying very intelligently and fastidiously the developmental techniques of a Beethoven symphony, but what you are really getting out of it is simply prolonged exposure to great melodies. .
Actually one can't do more than that even in physics. That's what all the models ONLY do. LG@William said:
But what a composer who creates a great lasting work does is something else entirely. It reminds me of all the attempts to explain consciousness, including those by the most prominent scientists. They never explain it - they only describe it in more or less detail.