Paul,
I have no contempt for the audience, the proof being I write music that is NOT divorced from the tradition, your assesment is misguided and based on assumption. My music is recongnisably tonal as well as sometimes more adventurous harmonically. In my more 'dissonant, toxic, stinking, poisonous' pieces, all the signposts an intelligent listener needs to follow the discourse are present too - not the attitude of a composer who dismisses an audience. I do not have a 'who cares if you listen attitude'. Perhaps you actually should listen to my Adagio for strings or the Partita Concordia before you actually say anymore....
If you're reading now, I assume at the very least that you heard an appeal to the listener whether you liked the music or not.
Mike,
Please do not confuse my carefully considered conclusions about atonality (traditional not narrow definition) and the avant-garde, based on many years of experiencing many such compositions, as an attack on you personally. I must have mentioned this several times, but the only individual I have singled out for criticism is Cage, and he deserves it.
A composer should, IMHO, be expected to discern why the Dvorak 9 is a better piece of music than the Dvorak 2 for example. This level of critical listening and the ability to understand artistic merit is vanishing, or possibly already vanished. It's all just a matter of personal opinion and personal taste, right? Wrong, it is not.
What made me think you have a prejudice (a judgement without a reasoned conclusion based on evidence and/or experience) is among other things this quote. "However, I do not think concert music or art music should be written with too much toadying to the audience otherwise it becomes too easy an entertainment the result of which might weaken its transcendental power and hinder creative freedom." Read that sentence to a stranger and ask them what they think about the author.
As far as your music is concerned, I listened to the first two pieces on the page you linked, and part of the 12 piano pieces. I did not have time to listen to all of them. If you are looking for feedback, or reaction, I would say that your pieces that I heard are thoughtful, intelligent and often attractive. These pieces are primarily tonal, and firmly rooted in western musical tradition. It is not a matter of all music being great or terrible. Hence my call for greater discernment. All Dvoark symphonies are not equally great. All recently written music is not equally terrible. The pieces on your link are far better than any of your three examples of great compositions this decade. I would much prefer to listen to your music rather than to anything I ever heard by Boulez. And he is supposed to be phenomenal, but he isn't.
Paul
Paul,
I think you worry too much about the audience. I concentrate on my own expression, if people like it, great if not, fine. A discerning stranger might reply....."good attitude to have as I want to hear his/her take, not a work watered down for consumption, I do not want condescension in my art, I want challenge". Of course the lucky composer may well find his/her musical stance tallies with what the populous wants and that is fine too. That audience member might say of my sentence....."Arrogant s**t, just give me something I don't need to work hard at to appreciate". It's the perrenial problem for todays' music of which our spat is a symptom. The music just has to be sincere, whatever the language as far as I can tell. I think Fahl makes a good point here.........
"Keep your mind and our tradition open for everything what might be worth to be remembered and I am sure nothing of real value will "demise" at all".
It's a little out of context here so sorry Fahl, but it seems relevant in our context too. The real value must surely start with the sincerity of the expression and intensity of the conviction, untramelled by external considerations. After that, time, familiarity and a bit of luck will decide.
Finally Paul, just to clear this argument up from my side. I have no real problem with your opinion, rather the language you use and that has always been my main beef. You know why by now. I can't stop you from using it, you have all the rights invested in the internet behind you and you are not prepared to temper it, so I'll leave the last word to you, be it polite, scathing or insensitive.
Mike.
www.mikehewer.com