@Errikos said:
What's happened to the Humanities in general in the past few decades? I have had some close contact with academia the past few years and the dropping of the standards in the disciplines that fall under this category are astounding. I don't know how many of you get to read doctoral theses and articles in specialist periodicals, but the change - even in the last 10 or 15 years - in quality, standard and, most importantly, vision and scope, is palpable! It doesn't matter how many disclaimers appear on institutions websites, publications, etc. regarding targeting originality in contribution, dialectics, free-thinking, and other lofty causes, the result is, you are either part of the status quo, or not at all... The facelessness, the facsimile of everyone's papers, the pseudo- (and it is pseudo) arguments from supposedly opposite positions, and worst of all, the axiomatic presumption of the 'current' method or school of thought and the always perfunctory (as is mandatory) consideration of the antithesis before its premature and total dismissal are today's harvesters of mediocrity and exterminators of talent...
I am not going into details here on why I think this has eventuated, but why shouldn't this also happen to film music? In different ways it has happened to 'serious' music long ago... These days anybody can participate, anybody's contribution is meritorious... These days anybody can get a PhD "provided they don't rock the boat" - how disheartening and appalling, and "if they do the work" - as if it were a cleaning job.
This entire very true statement makes me think of Deconstructionism, which seems to be the philosophical incarnation of the relativism you are talking about. Everything is only a text, nothing is really true, everything is only relatively valuable, etc. if you incorporate that concept into your everyday life, you will literally die very soon. So the professors who think all day long about Deconstructionism quickly suspend it when they encounter on the street outside their office a text called "that bus going 60 is about to run over your fat ass." Then they get real old-fashioned, fast. So it is a philosophical game that is being played by academia. But it reflects perhaps a larger trend such as what you are talking about, aided by the total democratization of everyone enabled to a large extent by technology and the internet. Writing an actual theme as opposed to simple little motifs or just chords is not something that fits into this mindset. It is an old-fashioned attempt at doing something meaningful that cannot be taken apart just as removing one note from a great melody ruins it. It is basically discouraged in the homogenizing process of today's film scoring. Symphobia fits in perfectly. Composers now are doing Symphobia with live orchestras - that is the only difference.
BTW I apologize for the tone of that other thread and promise to be good, always. [A]