@Errikos said:
Well!... I can't leave you guys unsupervised for a few hours and there you are at each others' throats again.... SImply incorrigible aren't they Dietz?...
@mikezaz I don't exactly understand what you suggest I did by looking into Rochberg by siting the Haydn example, unless you were referring to collage works (imitation?) such as he, Berio, and others wrote. If that is the case and you disapprove we are in agreement; the only person that quotes successfully in my view is Crumb.
You must be joking or need to elaborate when you say that soundtracks during Herrmann's time were anything like today's garbage. We are talking about film music from the '40s to the mid '70s and going backwards it encapsulates much of Goldsmith's, Legrand's, Barry's, Rota's, North's, Delerue's, Jarre's, Mancini's, Fielding's, Bernstein's, Rosenman's, Addison's, Tiomkin's, Rozsa's, Steiner's, and of course Herrmann's own, careers. Unless I'm mistaken this is close to a pantheon, unless you mean that most film music has always been garbage, which is a different discussion to this one.
You are right in saying that Beethoven's 5th is unbelievably thematic throughout including the 1st movement in question; the second subject is almost Brahmsian after all; but surely you realized that the misunderstanding was purely a semantic one among the contributors here; however, the record is straight now and nobody disagrees.
Yes, some of what Williams is saying is old news indeed and to recommend Ross' book to anybody is fine as it is well thought out with a great range. However, to use the word l a y m a n on him is just too much for a guy with his great output, both in quality and quantity, and I fully understand his wanting out of this discussion and I'm actually surprised at the restraint in his post... The principle of a lot of what he says is still latent these days in much of the academic world.
And no! Tonality is not the norm everywhere and atonality is very much alive! Let's procure most composition competitions' finalists' works and compare. The fact that these works are not Boulezian in toto and somewhat freer in pitch construction and allocation does not make them tonal works.
Taruskin is a formidable figure and I don't know his specific view of Cage, but he is not the exact opposite of a nihilist. In fact, he is the epitome, the dictionary definition of a musical nihilist.
Best wishes,
E.
P.S.: There have been some new postings since I started writing this (damn telephone) and some things have been sorted out, I am glad.
Hi Errikos,
I brought up Rochberg because had a very dramatic turn later on in his life, from strict atonality to Beethoven style tonality. It's very interesting and very dramatic. He was literally "writing like Beethoven." I thought you would be interested in this - I certainly was, when I found out.
Here is why I argue most film music from the era of Herrman was garbage: There were sooooooooooooooooooooooooo many films being made then that have been forgotten. Even a lot of the films that we remember culturally have awkward or kitschy music, but if you've ever watched some of the movies that haven't survived in the collective memory: hoo boy.
Herrman himself was of course the best film composer of all time, and probably remains as such. And he himself thought most of the music in films was garbage (if you really want me to cite that, I can, but I'll have to dig it up).
Actually I think the best film composer of all time was Stanley Kubrick, haha. In the second that it took him to fire Alex North, he wrote the greatest film score of all time.
As you probably know by now (via your PS), I do realize the Beethoven/Theme issue was semantic.
I apologize for using the "L" word. I just wanted to make the distinction that the Ross book is clearly not academic, but apparently that got lost in the way, and it seemed like I was using it at William. (and let's be honest here, I was talking down to William: I was angry at him for talking with so much confidence and such a dismissive attitude about things that he didn't have the knowledge to accurately talk about). I come from, I guess you could say, Angrier forums, where we really get on people's cases for not knowing their shit. But I shouldn't have resorted to my pseudo ad hominem, so I apologize for that.
As for whether tonality is the norm... well, I'm still in school, and I can say with a great deal of confidence that it is the norm here in Academia on the west coast of the US (again, with the exception of electronic music programs, which are still clinging with rigor mortis to the 1950s and 60s). Unless of course you're talking about tonality in the traditional common practice sense, in which case it definitely isn't (although again, this is why I recommended Rochberg to you - he made a dramatic shift towards common practice tonality late in life - so did, to a lesser and more ambiguous extent, Penderecki, who now writes like Bruckner).
In other words, there has been a wide realization in both "western music literature" or "contemporary classical" or whatever word you want to use, that atonality was fiercely alienating to basically everyone who wasn't in the club. Of course there was always a resistant school of tonality throughout the 20th century, but in the 60s, 70s and 80s it started to really really pick up steam. By the 90s and 00s, Academia had caught on, with a few notable exceptions (I made sure to mention that stodgy old place Columbia).
Now, you'll have to forgive my America-centrism, because I'm a lot less familiar with the narrative in Europe. Of course we still have the iron stronghold of the new complexity, but those guys are just so oooolld. They're like dinosaurs now. I saw one of those guys give a lecture and man, he totally knows he's fighting a losing battle. And if you want a great example of a very respected living European composer, now very old and in Academia, and who is very tonal, look for Louis Andriessen, specifically the piece De Staat, if you haven't heard it. I'm gonna feel silly if you're like, Dutch or something, but forgive me cause I have no idea where you're from or what you already know.
Atonality is alive, it's true. But it no longer has the force or the entrenchment in Academia that it did through the 80s. Times have changed.
If you're in Europe, I'm sorry things are a little bit bleaker there - in America we've had the benefit of minimalism and downtown music to light a few tonal fires. But perhaps more significantly we had the benefit of the Harry Partch -> Ben Johnston trajectory, where basically people became sincerely interested in exploring new ways to achieve fresh tonality through expanded Just intonation. If you haven't heard Ben Johnston's Amazing Grace quartet I really really recommend it, it had a huge impact on me. Expanded just intonation basically makes tonality feel fresh in a way that I imagine dodacephony felt to those early modernists. I can't find a youtube link for the Johnston quartet, but you can hear a preview of it on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Crossings-Ascent-String-Quartet-Amazing/dp/B001U8ALIC/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1288731887&sr=1-1
In terms of context, Johnston, like Pendercki and Rochberg, realized that the "rip it up and start again" ethos of the modernists had run it's course, and it was time to once again try to advance music in a more natural and less alienating way. I imagine that's why he chose such an accessible hymn to base his quartet around.
I'm not sure why this view of Cage-as-nihilist is as apparently pervasive as it is. Maybe I shouldn't have been as hard on William for parroting it.
Is it because he said "I have nothing to say and I'm saying it."? I know that's a very famous quote, but even that isn't nihilistic. After all, you can't just focus on the "nothing to say" - he's [i]saying[/i] it. He [i]cares[/i]. He not only cares, he cares a lot. He basically cares with a religious fervor. Hence the "scary purity" of Cage.
4'33" is kind of dubiously famous, but even that piece, which feels like it's about negation, is actually about the opposite.
Ok, here is the Wikipedia (I know, I know) view of Nihilism: Nihilism (pronounced /ˈnaɪ.əlɪzəm/ or /ˈniː.əlɪzəm/; from the Latin nihil, nothing) is the philosophical doctrine suggesting the negation of one or more meaningful aspects of life.
Cage's philosophy was more about the positiveness of empty space, if that makes sense. It goes quite a bit deeper, and I'm probably distorting with my simplification, but hopefully you can see how those two things differ.
Do you think Feldman would have been such great friends with Cage, and have learned so much from him, if Cage was simply a nihilist? I don't think Morty would have put up with that shit.
Maybe I'll bust out that Taruskin article and try to get some quotes for you all. Did you listen to the excerpts from Sonatas and Interludes for Prepared Piano that I posted on the previous page? I'll post them again, because seeing those performed completely changed my opinion on Cage. Maybe you've heard the piece before.
<- not from the same piece, but great nonetheless. John Cage being tonal! (well, "modal" strictly speaking)