First of all, I apologize for the formatting of this post, I really can't figure this forum software out.
Secondly, I was hesitant to admit that I was a student before because I imagined it would add a lot of baggage to your view of me that would in turn cause you to read more into my posts than are actually there (maybe in the same way that I did to William....?? ooh the shoe is on the other foot now, isn't it!) I'll try to correct these as they come along, but suffice to say your view of me isn't very accurate :)
The only Rochberg I know are a couple of symphonies - "early" works, unlike what you're suggesting, but I thought the oboe and violin concerti were late enough in the day and they don't sound like Beethoven to me at all... Perhaps you can point me to something else?
I won't be able to link you to it, but the 3rd Quartet is when Rochberg begins to explore Beethovenisms. He isn't doing totally common practice stuff at this point, but he was basically a tonal composer from then on.
Still, that doesn't negate my argument, it just frames it into an obvious point. Most artistic and pseudo-artistic output is hoo-boy especially in the last 100 years. Perhaps you will agree with my sentiments if I add the term "relatively". You don't have to dig up Herrmann, I have the quote myself, and I also know how he felt about the majority of 'serious' music while we're at it.
Of course we're all familiar with the idea that 90% of everything is crap (or 99% or whatever you choose to believe). My point is I truly think the % now isn't really any different than it was back then, but you are of course free to disagree. I can't imagine we'll be able to get much further with this argument without taking a lot of time, and it boils largely down to opinion anyway.
I thought he also fired David Shire from that assignment.
No idea, but I think it was North who had the 100% completed score (you can even buy it on CD now)
Ok This next bit will take some unpacking:
Let me affirm here that I also know my ***, and I was a student before the days of Wiki (you know you know) and YouTube, when we had to read books, lots of them!... You won't accept this now, but your real knowledge, aesthetics, and sensibilities, await you long after you graduate...
First of all, remember I never said you didn't know your shit (I'm pretty sure that was clearly directed at William, and even then only in regards to the subjects at hand, but I'm not going to go back and check). I quite like books, so I don't know what that whole thing is about, and I completely agree with everything else you said.
University is not there these days to give you knowledge; it is there to challenge you, and to make you aware of tools and their use in your subsequent search for knowledge - if you're up to it...
This is a little bit more complicated, but I think you're generally correct. Of course there are many less idealistic views of universities. You still haven't told me if you're European or American, but suffice to say many American Universities are less about challenge in an intellectual sense or "learning how to think" or whatever, than about preparing for the job market. I'm sure you already know this, however, and we don't really need to discuss it.
Having said that, Cage never interested me enough to write a thesis on him, but I have (sadly) listened to countless works of his, read Paul Griffiths' book on him (not just his entry in several compedia), several of his 'acrostic's and other writings, had a look at a couple of his interviews and a few of my teachers had met him personally. If our opinions differ, it is certainly not due to me not knowing my ***...
I'm sorry if you thought I was accusing you of not knowing your shit. You seem to be very educated and informed, if maybe a little hostile (which is fine by me - recall how I entered the thread - hostility can be fun, as we both seem to know). It was William who I accused, and I still stand by it.
However, I refer you to the Oxford Companion to Philosophy's definition of 'nihilism' (not Wiki): "The extreme view that there is no justification for values and, in particular, no justification for morality. It is sometimes used to mean the active rejection of and attack on such values."
If you substitute the terms 'values' and 'morality' for 'musical systems' and 'tonality', you find Cage.
This is spotty logic. After all, if we do what you say and create that sentence:
"The extreme view that there is no justification for musical systems and, in particular, no justification for tonality. It is sometimes used to mean the active rejection of and attack on such values."
We're still not talking about Cage, but we're also not talking about Nihilism, and it's also just a bad sentence. Values and morality are too different from musical systems and tonality to do the exercise you're trying to do here.
Of all the "revolutionaries", he was the one that broke with tradition the most.
This is probably true - at least he did it the most famously.
That, in combination with his superficial Zen beliefs of "everything is beautiful", "shedding the illusion of a substantial self", and "no objectivity correct and definitive perspective on anything"... What else do you need for musical nihilism, when music, among other things, is an intrinsic system of hierarchies?...
Well, again just as with the "Themes" discussion we were having earlier in this thread, we're only talking about semantics now. Suffice to say "accidentally creating musical nihilism," which is your charge, is very different than "being an nihilist." Hopefully that is clear. Of course, I don't regard Cage's works as being accidentally nihilist anyway, but that would take longer to explain and I'll only do it if you really think it's worth the time.
I know how Penderecki writes since I own quite a few of his works and having met him personally.
That's cool, he seems like a nice guy.
Of course I don't mean tonality as Mendelssohn understood it (my! do you guys in the west coast believe you are the exclusive Mecca of knowledge these days?...)
Haha this is where you're starting to assume things about me. One definition of tonality refers to common practice tonality, and if you read through the thread again, you can see why I thought we might be using the same word to mean different things.
Recall 1) I don't know anything about you, including how you might want to use certain words
2) In the short time I've been in this thread, I've had about a billion semantic arguments with people because, lets face it, certain musical terms are vague.
I didn't want to imply anything about you, I just wanted to make sure we were on the same page.
I again say, do your research, find 15-20 'big' international composition competitions (most directly related to institutions), and try to find the recordings of the finalists. Then we can resume our discussion.
By this definition, the Pulitzer prize reflects the important developments of art music in general, which I think we both know it doesn't. Who ends up winning a prize certainly says [i]something[/i] about the state of a system, but judges and prizes and the lot are historically very conservative, and thus prone to be a few years behind the curve, if they aren't just totally off the mark entirely (as the Pulitzer folks usually are).
You don't have to quote Louis Andriessen to me, I knew about him when you were still in grade school, and I can quote you quite a few others, but that's not the point...
Again, please don't read any animosity into my post that wasn't there. I made sure to explicitly state that I don't know who you are or what you know. If we don't lay out these road posts of common names and terms and try to get on the same page, we're bound to wind up in semantic conflicts, or arguing about things that we both agree on. That's all I was trying to do, and that's why I used a very famous and accessible example. It goes without saying that his fame and power as being one of the foremost composers of the world and a famous expert on Stravinsky to boot seems to support my point.
The point is, dinosaurs and not, who are the current "champions" in composition; not what will happen in the future... Who is big today? You'll find that 90% are atonalists...
I disagree, but again we have to be very specific about what we're talking about.
Are we talking about composition in terms of who fills concert halls? I think John C. Adams, Joan Tower, and all those types would be very surprised to find out they are atonalists (again, sorry for my America bias - you still haven't told me where you're from -of course, it's no different in Europe. Who is the champion in the concert hall, Ferneyhough or Part/Tavener? we both know the answer).
Are we talking about who has success in academia? What kind of success and at what age?That's more difficult, I would again argue that times are changing and things aren't the way they were 10 years ago. I wish you wouldn't have glossed over my point about expanded just intonation, because I find that whole avenue very important - academia has realized that "rip it up and start again" doesn't work, and they're once again trying to build on what was there before. It might not be true of the "city fathers," but it's true of the majority of working professors.
I don't think you can dismiss my dinosaurs point. Boulez is still alive after all - but who cares? The same fate awaits Ferneyhough. They are a dying breed, that's the whole point. Everyone can feel it, including (I imagine) Ferneyhough. They still exist, and they still wield immense bureaucratic power (prizes and the like), but in real cultural terms they are toothless.
You really need to delve deeper into Cage... Then again, maybe you need to get as far away as possible...
Again, you're assuming things about me. Student or not, I think I know at least as much about Cage as you (This is why I didn't want to say I was a student - this kind of thing always ends in a pissing match). I'm not going to say you're ignorant, you clearly know plenty, but don't assume that I am either. And of course, keep in mind that regardless of how much you've studied him, I've studied him much more recently :)
Now you are donning the robe William was talking about, there is nothing academic in this phrase, just wishy-washy puerile mysticism.
The idea of negative space comes from art, which I'm sure you know, and John Cage (like Feldman) was hugely influenced by the abstract expressionist painters, as well as the minimalist painters that followed. Negative space is a very concrete term - you might argue that saying negative space has a positive value (if you haven't already watched a very old Cage talk about traffic: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcHnL7aS64Y - traffic being the negative space of city life, and he lays out his views about that) reeks of wishy washy mysticism, and I'm not going to argue that Cage wasn't a mystic - but wait a second, don't mystics by definition believe in something? How can a mystic be a nihilist? Oh, but of course he isn't a real nihilist, he's just accidentally making musical nihilism (which is a completely different thing, even if it is true, but we'll get to that later in this post).
Again I am not donning any kind of robe. I wish you would believe me that I don't subscribe to Cage's views - at least not wholesale. I see in his ideas the same kind of value that I see in Satie's, but that doesn't mean I'm going to give up on Beethoven.
I'm not saying Cage was propagating 'nihilism' per se, I am saying the practical applications of what he believed onto music produce 'nihilism'.
Here we are at the heart of the matter, and uuggh this could take years to unpack. But I know what you're saying, and it's a reasonable view to have. I still maintain that it's wrong, but at this point it would take so long and so much effort to argue that, unless you're very curious about what I have to say (and since you don't seem to like Cage or care about him, I doubt that you are) I say we just end the Cage discussion here. You already have my recommendation to read the Taruskin article, so if you are genuinely curious, I say that's where you should go.
Haha I'm sorry that I have to add "maybe you've heard this before" or "of course you probably already know that" to everything I say as clarification so that I don't offend you. I wish you would have thicker skin and just accept that I'm not talking down to anyone in this thread except for William (and even then, I backed off), and only then because he was so obviously verifiably wrong. I'm sure you can appreciate that. Also you are free to recommend obvious things to me as if I hadn't heard them, and I won't be offended (like did you know Beethoven wrote a 9th symphony? who knew?!)
Listen, William posted that John Cage was "not a composer." That was an untrue statement, and I refuted him very clearly with traditionally composed works (the sonatas and interludes). I felt this was an important thing to do, because, firstly, he was wrong (haha and not just about that either, just about everything he said about Cage was either wrong or in the wrong order), and I'm going to stick to that, but secondly his view is a widely held belief about John Cage, and if it gains traction it means really great work like the Sonatas and Interludes will just be forgotten in the wash of alleatorism and silence.
But really, the point is that I was arguing with William about that, not you. William was dead wrong about something, whereas we just have different opinions. Fair enough, right? I understand that me coming into this thread and being patronizing towards a regular poster might seem like I was being patronizing to all of you, but if you look back, I wasn't.
In fact I had no intention of getting into this thread at all (because internet arguments are awful), but a post as bad as William's couldn't go unchalleneged.