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  • [:'(] unfortunately that's so true. I think everybody who is already working out there has had his own good big portion of "poison to swallow" with music business... collaborators (composers like us, managers, agents etc..) may be on top of the list. But nowaydays you can find "poison to swallow" in any fields not just music.

    ... anyway I always try to keep a positive attitude.
    Swanyce [:D]

  • Fred,

    I don't need Hunter S. Thompson's trendy negativism.

    I am talking about people who have real ideas - like Beethoven and Schumann.

  • William,

    I visited your website, I love your music, so passionate! I like all of your mp3s, Elegy is my favourite. It moved me and it's not easy for me to find music that can touch me this way nowadays. Your music talks to the soul. I wish you all the best of success, you really deserve it. [:)]

    Btw, you have a lot of beautiful quotes on your site about music.
    Schuman and Beethoven are the best, I agree with them.

    Swanyce [:D]

  • I've been reading some of the comments in this thread with great interest. It is good to know that there are so many different approaches to music making.

    I think that one of the reasons that I work best to a deadline is that being a performer, the excitement of the pospective performance seems to spur me into action. The funny thing is that I don't write by improvising. When I do, I find that I have already limited myself to what my hands can easily do; not always a good thing. Many past masters were also excellent at improvising, but still had to spend a huge amount of time thinking about their music away from the keyboard to hammer the composition into shape (I'm thinking of Beethoven here, as many people have quoted him).

    The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc. All I can do is try to produce the best that I can and hope that someone enjoys the experience of listening to it.

  • "The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc."

    I believe that when something is truly inspired, not just because you think it is inspired, other people generally recognize that for it causes deeper emotions. But there is also envy and competition out there, especially from people in the same field (other composers, musicians, etc..) that may talk just to say something against you, with the purpose of "praising" themselves by humiliating you or your work. Your "music mates" can become your enemies number one: they can steal ideas, works, etc...
    Anyway don't let anyone deride your music, if they do, just take only constructive advices. I think all composers and all creative people in the music field should receive respect towards their works, no matter how banal, unispired they may sound.
    How many composers have been derided during their lives... take J. S. Bach for example, who was considered a mediocre. Or take Giuseppe Verdi, who was rejected twice at the Milan Conservatory and was never allowed to attend!! Only after his death they named the Conservatory after his name (what a shame).
    And the list could go on and on...

    I personally think Inspiration refers to whatever the Spirit suggests when you create. You let the Spirit "run free" without schemes. You try to listen and follow such a "suggestion" at your best. No matter what people say. You must believe in what you are doing. This is about creation. If you are a conductor, obviously your job is based on schemes but you may be "inspired" in the way you conduct (choosing the right rests - speed - etc -you add your personal "touch" even if the composition is not yours). The same with musicians....
    This is my own vision, I just wanted to share it with you. [[;)]]

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    @Swanyce said:


    I believe that when something is truly inspired, not just because you think it is inspired, other people generally recognize that for it causes deeper emotions. But there is also envy and competition out there, especially from people in the same field (other composers, musicians, etc..) that may talk just to say something against you, with the purpose of "praising" themselves by humiliating you or your work. Your "music mates" can become your enemies number one: they can steal ideas, works, etc...
    Anyway don't let anyone deride your music, if they do, just take only constructive advices. I think all composers and all creative people in the music field should receive respect towards their works, no matter how banal, unispired they may sound.


    Thanks for that; I'm trying to write something for a broadcast planned for a few weeks time at the moment. The orchestra is booked, schedules printed, so I'm hoping that todays offerings will have some sort of inspirational input [:)]

    DG

  • Have a good, "inspired" work [[;)]]
    Wish you the best.

    Swanyce [:D]

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    @William said:

    Fred,

    I don't need Hunter S. Thompson's trendy negativism.

    I am talking about people who have real ideas - like Beethoven and Schumann.


    Simply meant as a moment of levity, my friend.

    But, must we engage in this sort of 'hand slapping'? It's the reason I post here so seldom.

    Fred Story

  • Swanyce,

    Thanks a lot for those kind comments. Your website is great, a very elegant design. Though I haven't been able to download any music yet because of my Jurassic Era modem.

    Also, I agree with your response to DG writing: "The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc." This does happen, but usually if you are really inspired (which means nothing more than being excited about an idea) it WON'T be trite and banal. The best way to come up with things that are good, is to do things you can get excited about. I don't think DG or anyone shold worry about whether what they do "measures up" to some supposed standard. In a sense, the attitude of a child drawing pictures with crayons is the perfect way for an artist to behave: he is doing it not because he thinks he is an "Artist" but just because it is FUN. When that same child grows up he will stop doing pictures, because adults have taught him that he is not an"Artist." But why? There are some artists who had little technical skill, like Joseph Cornell, or Ives Tanguy, but who had a desperate urge to create. And so they found a style of their own, and changed the course of art history.

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    @Swanyce said:

    I believe that when something is truly inspired, not just because you think it is inspired, other people generally recognize that for it causes deeper emotions.


    I wouldn´t be so sure. First, who decides if something is really inspired? The one with the deeper emotion? Pah. I don´t buy that.
    One and the same music can make the one smile and the other puke, it´s out of your hand. There´s nothing 'objective' in music. The response depends totally and absolutely on the listener, not on you as a composer.
    Inspiritation is a nice overestimated feeling of joy on onesself, nothing more. Stravinsky talks of an emotional disturbance. Ok.
    The root of artistic creativity lies in curiousity and appetite, not in emotional disturbances. You get nowhere with that.

    Puh, had to say that. Always when things get to neo-romantic I feel the urge to talk back. There are good reasons that this era ended 100 years ago. And I´m totally happy about that.

    Having said all that, welcome, Swanyce, on board of this little forum. It´s great to have more females here. (And of course thanks for your kind words on my site.)

    Fred Story, as usual I appreciate your posts. Please post more! And I agree totally that defending and changing ones work against clients sharpens ones own work. There are points which indeed can´t be discussed anymore but one should try to extend this line as far as possible.

    Ok, let´s finish this little rant,
    bests,
    - Mathis

  • Ok, I didn´t totally get the meaning of the quoted sentence. So I add something: I understand that a inspired masterpiece is recognized through a multitude of deeply emotionalized human beings. Right?
    Did you ever think about other cultures? (To make things black an white.) Do you really think you understand the "inspiration" of a gamelan player? (I doubt that he even thinks in terms of "inspiration"). And he yours? Do you believe an Eskimo will understand your inspiration? I sincerely doubt that.
    And I doubt that your neighbour will fully understand your inspiration like you´ve experienced it. And then there are all people in between.
    Mind you: "Inspiration" is an invention of the romantics, as is the whole "art" attitude. Art was invented very late, maybe in music with late Beethoven. There´s absolutely no reason to be convinced there still exists "art" in music nowadays. This was a temporary nice thing. It ended with the 70´s when art still ment something essential. Since then there´s something else, but still I don´t know what.

    For me Edgar Varèse was a truly inspired composer (if I´m ever forced to use this word). I don´t think he made many people feel deep emotions.

    I hope to have started a really controverse discussion!

  • Wow, Mathis, you're feeling good, aren't you?


    While we agree on many things, and you have some very intelligent responses here and I love hearing this kind of discussion, I must say that I agree with Swanyce who said that GENERALLY people recognize inspiration. Not always (due to cultural differences, etc.) Also, I love romanticism, and do not think it ever died, and think that you are wrong on the concept of inspiration. (Don't get mad and no longer agree to the links, o.k.?) Because it is a real thing.

    "Inspiration is a nice overestimated feeling of joy on onesself, nothing more. Stravinsky talks of an emotional disturbance . Ok.
    The root of artistic creativity lies in curiousity and appetite, not in emotional disturbances. You get nowhere with that."

    Though I agree to some extent if you are really refering to silly cliches about inspiration, you really should pay no attention to Stravinsky's verbal statements. He is one of the most obnoxious, negative and dried up old prunes who ever lived. But he was a tremendous composer. People should only listen to his music, NOT his statements becuase they are bullshit motivated by very narrow personal concerns and biases and frustrations (like his STUPID statement about film music - it is "wallpaper." Guess why he made that pronouncement? Because he was rejected as a film composer.)

    "The root of artistic creativity lies in curiousity and appetite, not in emotional disturbances"

    Wow - that is a great statement by you, Mathis - I absolutely agree with that - but a stupid one by Stravinsky. Again - never listen to a composer. (So why are you listening to me? I don't know. O.K. - we shouldn't listen to each other. Never mind.)

    Sorry for that digression. You know why he wrote "Emotional disturbances?" BECAUSE HE WAS F***ING CONTRADICTING EVERYTHING HE DID IN HIS LIFE!!!!

    Igor Stravinski created the single greatest emotional disturbance in the HISTORY OF MUSIC!!!

    The "Rite" caused riots and violence! People were hitting each other on the head in time to the music because of it. It was the essence of "Emotional disturbance." But Stravinski couldn't handle that and turned to "neo-classicism" and his music went down the toilet. The most boring piece of crap ever written in modern music is "History of a Soldier." I DEFY anyone beisdes a clarinet player to listen to that piece of shit and stay awake.

    "The Firebird" and "Le Sacre" are two fo the greatest works of pure, unadulterated, ferocious ROMANTICISM


    Real inspiration is simply emotional commitment to the most emotionally powerful form of art - music (aside from cinema). I agree that Varese is a great composer, but he contradicts you Mathis in that all of his music was very emotionally created (believe it or not). He was a pure, unadulterated ROMANTIC. In fact he hated neo-classicism.

    The true nature of romanticism is not the fluff and frills and prettiness that the Victorians made it into and people today believe it is - it is death and sex and the raw power of nature and madness that anti-mainstream weirdos like Byron, Coleridge, Shelley and Keats created - hippies, beatnicks and punks before there were hippies, beatnicks and punks.

  • Well, that was bold!!! (...I like it!)

    I personally do think art music still exists -- in fact, I think there's a great deal of it, from many different walks of life. Now, please understand that I'm not being naive. I realize you are using that word in a very specific way. As I understand it, art music exists when the music enters into a self-referential dialogue with its own history and means. Western art music is music which makes reference to other music, structures itself according to, or in reaction to, previous structures, and constructs new meanings based on the inherited meanings. All of which, of course, is regulated by certain cultural forces of the time.

    This is a _very_ small nutshell, so please expand!

    Now, why do I say there's actually _more_ art music today? Well, because I truly believe that a great many of today's composers see very clearly that the era of radical, technical/theoretical innovation has passed (except perhaps in the area of electro-acoustic work - but let's limit the discussion to western instrumental music, for now). In seeing this, and likely reacting to it, they also see that everything they write has a history that extends, most likely, far beyond their individual lives. Since there are 'no new ideas', it becomes necessary to discover the link between the ideas you have and the larger theoretical movements that have come up during the relatively short history of the form. I clearly understand, for example, the connections between myself and Mahler, Berlioz, Prokofiev, Stravinsky... and more recently Lutoslawski, some Tippet, Gubaidulina, Sorensen, Saariaho, and Rihm, the last four of whom are alive, hopefully well, and still having a strong influence on my musical thought (if not so directly my music) today. And even though others may not hear these connections, they are there nevertheless, informing my musical decisions on a daily basis. Thus I do, in a very real sense, write music about music for the sake of music. And any listener with a fair degree of familiarity with this history, will be placed in the centre of that dialogue, where s/he can follow along, react, and make evaluations as s/he sees fit. This is, I think, what makes it "art" -- gulp! [and so the flood gates open!]

    [to be continued, I'm sure...]

    But it is for the same reasons that I feel there is very little art in contemporary film music. Simply put, there are too many composers whose relationship to this history is not a dialogue, but simply a form of paraphrasing (like the Vaughan Williams mentioned elsewhere). When new music simply apes a previous form, without giving anything to it, then the form itself begins to decay... Now, it could be argued that since film music has a particular "function" (like pre-art music written for court dances and the like), that it is really not intended to be "art" at all. That is a totally valid argument, which only points out further that perhaps I'm not particularly interested in film music... perhaps....

    ouch!

    J.

  • I'm calming down a little now...

    JBM - that is a fascinating and extremely knowledgeable post. I'm afraid I can't offer much discussion because I agree so completely with you!

    As opposed to Mathis [8o|]

    Sorry - I'm calming down now....

    Actually Mathis and I get along just WONDERFULLY when we're not trying to rip each other's guts out over Romanticism vs. Modernism. (Also I'm trying to get him to write something about my Hyper-romantic symphony. Uh-oh. Why in God's name did I ever do that?)

    But JBM, you are absolutely right about film music in the light of what you said concerning the essentially deconstructionistic, textually aware nature of modern music. The one thing I think in regard to this is that music, since it is an emotional medium ([8o|] Mathis!) can "lapse" into forms that are no longer intellectually current but still are emotionally. In other words, the great mistake that the early 20th century modernists made (though they created many great new forms) is in thinking that simply because you have intellectually "progressed" to a new level, does not mean that everything is exhausted "emotionally" in that same area. As Schoenberg said, (I'm paraphrasing) "There is much good music remaining to be written in the key of c major."

    This is not simply reassurance for backward composers. It is a crucial fact that must be understood by people who assume that because music can do anything including pure white noise today ALL MUSIC must be white noise. That is idiotic, and yet not far from what arrogant jerks like Pierre Boulez say - a mediocre, pure "Emperor's New Clothes" composer and god-awful condutcor who completely alienated the New York Philharmonic in his so-called "tenure" there and said "Beethoven and Mozart and not worth listening to." Pathetic, and yet characteristic of many b.s. modernists who make this assumption - that intellectual knowledge is the same as music.

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    @jbm said:


    But it is for the same reasons that I feel there is very little art in contemporary film music. Simply put, there are too many composers whose relationship to this history is not a dialogue, but simply a form of paraphrasing (like the Vaughan Williams mentioned elsewhere). When new music simply apes a previous form, without giving anything to it, then the form itself begins to decay... Now, it could be argued that since film music has a particular "function" (like pre-art music written for court dances and the like), that it is really not intended to be "art" at all. That is a totally valid argument, which only points out further that perhaps I'm not particularly interested in film music... perhaps....

    ouch!

    J.


    I would agree with your statements that a huge amount of film music is paraphrasing, however, the fact that you are talking about "Western instrumental music" ignores an awful lot of music that is used for film. I think that "pure" instumental music is rapidly becoming marginal in its influence on todays composers, bearing in mind that the so called "classical" genre is already a tiny minority. There is a fashion in the UK at the moment for "classical cross-over" albums. This is supposed to be bringing classical music to the masses in a palatable form, but I am, as yet, unconvinced. I think that one of the sad things about many modern trends in music is that we are moving towards a situation where a live performance situation is not possible, either due to cost or just from the fact that the music is not playable by real humans, be it for technical reasons or beacause of the use of electronic (virtual) instruments.

    DG

  • Mathis,

    Thanks for welcoming me [:D].

    I must say I disagree with you. And after all, as William kindly repeated, I said "people GENERALLY recognize" when a work is inspired because it causes deeper emotions. But once again, I said "GENERALLY" not EVERYBODY. I agree to some extent about the fact that culture may influence our approach to music but not always necessarily.
    Though I admire and respect Stravinskij's genius and experimentations in music, I disagree with part of his vision and approach. Plus he generates such a great contradiction (probably as a provocation) in what he affirms that he even reminds me of Haegel the philosopher [*-)] . :!
    I personally think, and this is my own vision, that if you consider music as a form of art and expression of a universal language (not just a sequence of nice notes or "emotional disturbance") you can get the subtle connection among different kinds of music. Yes, maybe if you hear the Masai playing their own native music you may not appreciate that but if you listen (not hear) you can get the message. Masai don't play music according to schemes of musical "aesthetism", they play because it's a way to express themselves, because it's fun. That's the perfect example of free "inspired" work. Just like William said, and I love this example, the attitude of a child drawing pictures with crayons is the perfect way for an artist to behave: he is doing it not because he thinks he is an " Artist " but just because it is FUN.

    I agree with what you said "The root of artistic creativity lies in curiousity and appetite, not in emotional disturbances". And I would add that when you create by following inspiration, you definitely feel more "invited" to experiment new things for you are running free and out of any pre-elaborated scheme. In a certain way, inspiration (which I always consider as a sudden revelation), feeds and arouses your appetite for creation/experimentation and makes you more curious about other music dimensions.

    But setting the discussion apart, this is just my personal opinion and point of view. Though I disagree in some parts, I hope I haven't offended you for I totally respect your own considerations and the considerations of everybody else.
    It's a forum after all. [:)]

  • William,
    [i]"the great mistake that the early 20th century modernists made (though they created many great new forms) is in thinking that simply because you have intellectually "progressed" to a new level, does not mean that everything is exhausted "emotionally" in that same area. As Schoenberg said, (I'm paraphrasing) "There is much good music remaining to be written in the key of c major." [/i]I pefectly agree with you [:D] . Plus, it is a pity to hear how people consider Romanticism a simply "pathethic", old fashioned period. Too bad really. There is a lot to learn from that "old fashioned" period. Being a harpist myself, the most beautiful and expressive music repertoire for harp was conceived during the Romantic age. I think music was felt at its highest extent. Besides, a part from the Romanticism, I believe there are a lot of things to learn from the past (as well as from the present) and I would be very careful when I define something as "old fashioned" anyway.

  • JBM, I consider your post as a manifesto [[[:D]]] [[[:D]]] [[[:D]]] . You said everything I wanted to say, sorry I can't find anything to add!![8-)]

    Swanyce

  • DG,

    you made a really, really interesting consideration and you are definitely
    right in a certain way. Yes, we are going towards electronic music that cannot be played live easily. Your statement touches me directly for, with
    exception to orchestral and instrumental compositions, I am also a
    singer songwriter that uses the Multivocals technique. Such a technique let's you record your voice as an instrument by creating multiple layers (you may record your voice even 500 times and up) to generate choirs. I must say the effect is quite interesting and since it is just your voice and not a real choir, provides a sound that is unique and original. I do the same with instruments to create unique sound combinations. This is ok for my albums but it's not ok when I have to set up a live performance. I would need a hundred keyboards, 10 harps and 500 clones of myself to reproduce what I have recorded in a live stage, just to say the least. [[[:|]]] [[[:|]]]
    And a lot of people ask me, why don't you play live? You can imagine how I feel when I have to answer.
    Enya, just to make an example, has got the same problem but people still wonder why she doesn't play live.

    But even though there is a bad side of the progress in electronic music, there is also the good side of invention and new creativity. That's how I see it. [8-)]

  • Ok, guys, I LOVE IT! That´s exactly the kind of discussion I wanted.
    And I love contradictions, I mean contradictions are after all what makes us humans. We´re a little joke by Mr. God. He sits in his boring sky and can´t stop laughing out loud watching us.
    But, well, that´s a different story...

    I feel we should get a bit more clear what romanticism is. Generally I recognize this misconception of emotional music = romantic music. But this is only partly true and too simple. As always it´s about a very specific and strong attitude. So what makes a romantic artist?
    - The urge of expressing his inner world. For that reason he plunges into himself (or herself) and finds there the music.
    - The found music should be of total individuality, of course, since they believed in total individuality of human beings. So if there wasn´t anything new in a piece it wasn´t individual and therefore completely worthless in the true romantic sense.
    - Music and art should allow the listener to leave his daily and earthly worries and allow him to enter a better higher world, which at the same time is the really real world. The ordinary world is just wrong and needs to be overcome.
    (Feel free to correct and expand these points.)

    Sooo, here my personal comments and critics to these points:
    - Modernism is in fact the exaggerated form of romanticism. Schönberg was a truly romantic composer since he was just looking for possibilities to express his highly deranged inner world. All in Schönberg is about his personality, his self-expression. The romantics introduced the very wrong need to introduce new material (like new harmony or new forms) to make it a valuable piece of art. Thank god that´s over. But still this totally wrong requirement influenced art for almost another hundred years. It started in the late 1980s or beginning 90s when people slowly stopped asking for "NEW" and still there´s no total freedom to not care about it. In my opinion modernism is very nostalgic, since in fact it just is a longing to the romanticists.
    - The urge to express hisself is just mindblocking. Do whatever you want, it will be shaped by your personality anyway.
    - I love this real world. It is full of beauty and love. If there´s a responsibility of todays artists then it is showing the beauty of our current world. Never ever was society so much living outside this real world. We live in soap operas, fight wars with joy sticks, don´t recognize love since we expect love like we´ve learned it in the movies. That´s a totally different situation than the romanticists had. When Schumann composed his little children pieces hundreds of neighbour children around him died. The real world was brutal and unfair. There was a real reason to desire a better world.

    So, was the "Sacre" a romantic piece of music? Not at all. None of these three points hold true for this piece of art. Still it is triggering very strong emotions, but that´s not romanticism. Same with Varése. Baroque music is also totally emotional but not in the romantic sense.
    I´m not against emotions in music. But this "touching the soul" thing is conceited and naiv. There´s absolutely no determined influence you as a composer can have on the listeners feelings and you shouldn´t. Leave that to the dictators.

    I completely agree though with the playing child. After all it is about playing music and the true magic in music is that it can simulate emotions. They´re not true nor deep, true feelings can´t be switched so fast. But we can make a game with them and that´s the fantastic thing. Music can make us feel ourselves through triggering emotions. And the music I admire most doesn´t trigger the nostalgic feelings, it gives me a feeling of now, of hearing and feeling life in the second of now. Is that art? I´m not sure. Probably yes.