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.
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.