JBM
You don't understand the very first thing i wrote: the title of the thread.
I am not reationary - my whole point is that the modernists are now the reactionaries. Music has moved far beyond them.
My other point is that smaller minds need a single style of composition to work within. I find a composer capable of anything from pure romantic melody to serialism to aleatoric to medieval homophony to psycho-acoustic experimentation to be the true innovator of today.
People like Boulez - and he is absolutely the worst of the worst of his kind - want to establish categories of what is "good" and what is "bad" based on a single system of musical thinking. This is simplistic, not to mention stupid. It is obvious at this point in musical history that there is no one system that is the ultimate "perfected" form of musical expression. The naive aplication of the 19th century notion of "progress" - analogous to technological progress - is utterly and laughably superceded. And yet the "post-modernists" (an amusing term now since they are no longer "post" nor "modern") still keep plugging away at it.
In music today, there are many different, often mutually exclusive systems of composition and performance. And they all have a validity (except for disco - I won't budge on that). That Boulez would dare - I repeat DARE - to criticize a composer like Shostakovich, who wrote single compositions worth ten times more than Boulez's entire excruciating output and startingly mediocre conducting put together - is an outrage. Comparing Boulez to Shostakovich is an analogy roughly similar to comparing a flatworm to Einstein.
Nick
I agree with your statement that modernism in its first flowering (perhaps not the correct metaphor) emancipated composers from the necessities of post romanticism. Also your point that viewing dissonance as necessarily a shock is an example of older musical thinking in itself. For example Ligetti's "Lontano" is completely unshocking and even mesmerizing, yet microtonal.
However the entire concept of basing a criticism on whether a composer brings "something new to musical vocabulary" is absurd. In other words, the value of a piece of msic is based on whether it is new, not whether it is good. The problem with this is you can have a new piece of shit. Or an old fashioned work of genius. But many of today's composers' value systems are so skewed to originality at all costs that they overvalue to the point of absurdity the fact that no one ever heard a particular kind of sound. Therefore, it must be genius. Uh-huh. Yeah right.
A perfect contradiciton of this mentality is found in J.S. Bach vs. his sons. (Of course Bach is another composer the astoundingly arrogant Boulez does not like so it would not matter to him.) Though his sons had gone far beyond him in their "progress" and "musical vocabulary" Bach's greatest, late masterpieces were all written when he was hopelessly old-fashioned.
You don't understand the very first thing i wrote: the title of the thread.
I am not reationary - my whole point is that the modernists are now the reactionaries. Music has moved far beyond them.
My other point is that smaller minds need a single style of composition to work within. I find a composer capable of anything from pure romantic melody to serialism to aleatoric to medieval homophony to psycho-acoustic experimentation to be the true innovator of today.
People like Boulez - and he is absolutely the worst of the worst of his kind - want to establish categories of what is "good" and what is "bad" based on a single system of musical thinking. This is simplistic, not to mention stupid. It is obvious at this point in musical history that there is no one system that is the ultimate "perfected" form of musical expression. The naive aplication of the 19th century notion of "progress" - analogous to technological progress - is utterly and laughably superceded. And yet the "post-modernists" (an amusing term now since they are no longer "post" nor "modern") still keep plugging away at it.
In music today, there are many different, often mutually exclusive systems of composition and performance. And they all have a validity (except for disco - I won't budge on that). That Boulez would dare - I repeat DARE - to criticize a composer like Shostakovich, who wrote single compositions worth ten times more than Boulez's entire excruciating output and startingly mediocre conducting put together - is an outrage. Comparing Boulez to Shostakovich is an analogy roughly similar to comparing a flatworm to Einstein.
Nick
I agree with your statement that modernism in its first flowering (perhaps not the correct metaphor) emancipated composers from the necessities of post romanticism. Also your point that viewing dissonance as necessarily a shock is an example of older musical thinking in itself. For example Ligetti's "Lontano" is completely unshocking and even mesmerizing, yet microtonal.
However the entire concept of basing a criticism on whether a composer brings "something new to musical vocabulary" is absurd. In other words, the value of a piece of msic is based on whether it is new, not whether it is good. The problem with this is you can have a new piece of shit. Or an old fashioned work of genius. But many of today's composers' value systems are so skewed to originality at all costs that they overvalue to the point of absurdity the fact that no one ever heard a particular kind of sound. Therefore, it must be genius. Uh-huh. Yeah right.
A perfect contradiciton of this mentality is found in J.S. Bach vs. his sons. (Of course Bach is another composer the astoundingly arrogant Boulez does not like so it would not matter to him.) Though his sons had gone far beyond him in their "progress" and "musical vocabulary" Bach's greatest, late masterpieces were all written when he was hopelessly old-fashioned.