@The Minstrel said:
Wow. I hadn't quited realized that composing film music in the style of Hans Zimmer where morally comparable to working as an assassin or exploiting third world countries, and that the current musical trends would lead to the utter annihilation of our civilization. This thread has been a real wake-up call.
There could potentially be a great composer inside The Minstrel; he summarized everything in two lines! What he says with irony though, I say with conviction, with one modification: I don't believe a professional assassin poses such a threat to our civilization, save for him getting a contract to "off" the next Mozart. If I could "press a button", I'd rather he continued his pitiful profession than all the Zimmerites put together (not Zimmer).
@Goran Now, as far as the more elevated discussion regarding talent is concerned, I brought up the example of the 16 year-olds, not to say that they represent the pinnacle of the art of musical composition, and I agree that the 30 year-old Mozart and Chopin are better than their 16 year-old counterparts (I'm not sure about Mendelssohn if I stretch that to 18 years of age). I also agree that those teenagers were "better" than the 30 year-old Beethoven, however he overtook them a couple of years later. I thought all this went without saying... I made that example to demonstrate that when the 'Gift' has hit early, it has resulted in some unbelievable musical works that rank with the very best any century has to offer, before those kids had enough time to "work hard", to "cultivate musical sensibilities" (to the same extent a 30 year-old has had), or to amass enough experience which potentially can result in the writing of a masterpiece.
Be that as it may, - and if I may expand the age limit of those youngsters to 17-8, then I'd give up Les Troyens, the complete catalogue of Bruckner and Taneev (and certainly the minor Draeseke and his Tragic - for me he sits somewhere between Gliere and Schmidt) with tears of joy, if I could have Chopin's op.10 for my own. And if I can stretch the youths' ages up to say 23-5, then some of Mozart's, Chopin's, Prokofiev's, Mendelssohn's, Schubert's, Rossini's, Strauss', and Scriabin's offerings up to that point - and forgetting for the moment the eras before and after them - eclipse most other music excepting their own of a later date, and that of the great masters. I am saying this not to initiate a draw of comparisons, but to emphasize that if great composition was the result of talent combined with hard work and the "cultivation of musical sensibilities" on an equal basis, those early works would not have been as brilliant, as perfect as they were. Also, I never said that the gift is something that has to appear early in life or never at all (if Janacek had died before he turned 60 we probably would not know of him today). I also never said that talent alone can create great art. It does require the will, the application and discipline, the "cultivation of musical sensibilities", and the element of luck, in order for it to be allowed to shine through, to be expressed.
However, I am saying that the genetic 'Gift' is by far the most important element, along with something to which I neglected to refer last time, and which is the 'Innate Musical Personality'. These two make the difference between what is accomplished/good/well-crafted music, and what is Great music. Those qualities by far outweigh 'hard work' and the rest, without replacing them (I can't be any clearer than this). So I disagree that the incalculable difference of quality and substance in Ravel's work compared to his classmates can be attributed to them "not possessing the same amount of self-criticism, cultivated the same musical sensibilities, or worked on those as well on his technical proficiency with the same rigour and consistency". The first goes straight out the window when we consider the example of Mussorgsky vs. Balakirev and Rimsky, the second follows when we remember that back then there were no CDs or the Internet, everybody went to each other's house and the same concerts, studied the same scores with the same teachers, and constantly compared notes and showed one another their works, so everybody was aware of everyone else and what they were doing at all times. Finally the third follows the same route when we compare hard working French composers of the time with the almost hobbyist (but gifted...) Poulenc, Italian rigorous and consistent composers with the lazy Rossini, or their Russian, also non-existent, counterparts with the self-proclaimed "inert" Scriabin. And there are numerous other examples... Whatever little differences between Ravel and his classmates in terms of musical experience or work ethic are not enough to account for the vast artistic disparities between their work and the master's.
Also, how many decades of instruction in harmony, counterpoint, and orchestration does one require before he can write Barber's Adagio? It looks like an empty manuscript where a 10 year-old drew some semi-breves and minims here and there. But what music!...I'll also take that any day over Tallis' Spem in Alium (be that the great work that it is).
Now I consider some things self evident, but just in case: I'm not saying that hard work etc. won't improve everybody's skills, or won't allow whatever gift anyone possesses to shine to its potential. With the exception of one's gift and innate musical personality - and you will note I'm saying innate, not merely musical personality which is heavily influenced by period, geography etc. I mean that almost ineffable musical signature that identifies the composer in a piece we hear for the first time (the greater the innate personality the faster this happens) - everything else one can endeavour to acquire and improve to the best of his ability during the course of his life. However, you can't buy those two qualities; you either possess them or you don't (you are a composer or you are not). And all composers possess them to different degrees. I don't talk much about luck and circumstance for two reasons: a) Luck is something outside ourselves and what we control (I'm referring to war, accidents, bad health, etc.), and b) Circumstance is something on which we can have some control (access to money, making the right connections/decisions), but it is something that also lies outside of strictly musical discipline, even if I agree that it can in reality prove to be a more determining factor in terms of survival.
Also, it is a convention for me to say for example "I admire Bruckner because of his 5th and 9th". That doesn't mean I admire Bruckner the man (please...) It is to the work that I am referring. In that respect, I don't care whether he slaved for a decade over a measure, or he wrote both symphonies while reading the morning paper in the toilet in two sessions. I don't care whether he worked hard or not because I'm not admiring him. I am admiring the work for its qualities, per se; not the discipline that went before it (that's a different kind of admiration which I also extend).
As far as the plague being as rare as a masterpiece, don't forget that the former wasn't always rare, the latter always has been, but just in case you're thinking of introducing deformities or other repellant curiosities and ideas, I hereby qualify what I meant, by saying that talent is also admired because of its rarity; if everyone possessed it, it wouldn't be worth bothering with. I could have turned around and say I don't sit there and admire the 'hard work' of a specialist fixing a sewer, but I knew what you meant...
@everybody Insofar as money and art are concerned, let's not forget that before Romanticism - whether it hit with Beethoven, before, or after in music - composers were hardly preoccupied with posterity and the masterpiece for a number of reasons: They were contracted employees for the most part, required to produce a lot of music on frequent demand. No matter how gifted one is, one can't produce landmarks on every page or opus (no one has!) when there's no time for reflection, contemplation, revision. And why should there be? Works were rarely if at all performed a second time (except opera), there were no recordings, and most of all, no mentality that the composer is a higher form of being, bringing us universal insight and Truth; that came later. It was professional pride into one's work and healthy competition that allowed the gifted composers to stand out and above the rest.
Coming to today, not everyone has inherited money or is otherwise employed, allowing him to take their time over every semiquaver, or uncompromisingly reject any musical requirement by a commissioner or a director; not everyone is prepared to live in conditions comparable to former Soviet squalor, particularly if those conditions are not shared by most everyone else in his community. If that weren't enough, all the members of the musical pantheon (with very few exceptions) proved that one can compose intentionally mediocre works on demand (for specific amateur musicians for one example), and the greatest works of music ever offered humanity at the same time. So if you can live from composition when people accept your mediocre music while you're also concentrating in doing your best as often as you can, I have no problem. It is not up to me or anyone else to say "how much is enough". Personally, if I could get paid €2,000,000 per contract I'd take it.
So the question for me is not "how much is the money"; it's "how important is the money" and "what do I have to do/write to get it"... For example, I would not consciously compromise the art and the standards by becoming the conduit through which mutants that never belonged in the industry are finally allowed access, effectively debunking it...