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Why do I like contemporary classical music but not "classical" classical music? I don't get it. I dig orchestral or chamber-like or solo piano music by contemporary composers, but anything before Ravel, Debussy and Satie bores me to death. I find anything from earlier than 1900 totally corny and cheesy and void of any emotional content or any ability to tell me a story, even the greatest geniuses such as Mozart, Schubert, Beethoven, Wagner, Chopin... I KNOW their music is wonderful, but I just don't find anything interesting in it when I listen to it. On the other hand give me a symphony by Takemitsu or a solo piano album by John Zorn or Ryuichi Sakamoto or Harold Budd, or a piece by Steve Reich or Philip Glass or Gavin Bryars, and I'll be totally crazy about it! So it's not like some people who only dig popular music that I don't like the form of classical music in itself, or I wouldn't like contemporary composers either. It's just that when I listen to pre-1900 stuff it just sounds like a ridiculous cartoon soundtrack to me, and I don't understand why. What y'all think? A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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You mentioned a "ridiculous cartoon soundtrack," which may be the key. Perhaps classic classical music is too ubiquitous? It permeates a lot of pop culture, but mostly through movies, television, cartoons, commercials, spoofs, music classes, etc. Maybe it's a feeling that you've "heard it all before" because, in a lot of cases, you have? "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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I've wondered if it could be that, u may be correct, I may have associated it with too many cartoons, films soundtracks and ads and it may have taken away all of its emotional/intellectual content for me. On the other hand I'm not 100% sure cuz my folks used to listen to a lot of classical when I was a kid so I was more exposed to it at home than through pop culture recycling. My folks even took me to the opera a few times. And NO it's not a reaction against parental authority because they were also into jazz and so am I. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I'm the same. | |
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I guess u meant "pompous", that's also an adjective I'd have used. So it's not just me A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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have been bombarded by contemporary musical expressions, i.e., the advent of jazz, for example. So, when you listen to Mozart, you're not hearing anything "new." It is when classical composers started incorporating chromaticism, jazz theory and creating new musical expressions (12 tone, modes, etc), like Debussy, Ravel, and others did, you start to hear "new" music. My answer to you is to expand your classical music palette. Rimsky-Korsakov, and definitely give Beethoven's last string quartets, especially the Grosse Fuge a shot - trust me, modern musicians and scholars still marvel at its musical sophistication and I promise you will not understand it at first! | |
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Im convinced that BACH is pretty much the great great great great great grandfather of metal!! | |
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Wow, there's such a thing?????!!! | |
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I'm gonna check it all out, thanks A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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You probably love Carl orff too :) Have you tried franz lizst? | |
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^I know the name but not sure if I've ever heard the music. I'll check it out too, thanks A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I hate the term classical music, since it is applied to basically any music which is played by an orchestra. It also makes no distinction between truly classic composers like Bach, Beethoven, and Mozart, and more contemporary composers like Leonard Bernstein, John Williams, or Daniel Barenboim, or soloists like Yo Yo Ma. I would much rather people refer to any music that requires an orchestra as orchestral music and leave the term classical strictly to the classic composers of yore. :typing: | |
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These are the names of the different styles of "classical music".
Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, & 20 century
The only reason why all music is defined as "classical music" is because of that nasty piece of work named, Ludwig van Beethoven. Ludwig was successful in high-jacking and defining all periods /style from his period of time. Yep, the Classical Period. It's a pet peeve of mine when people speak of these periods as if they are one.
I'm a lover of Baroque with a little Romantic thrown in. I love Leonard Bernstein interpretations of the masters, brilliant. Yet, his own composition's aren't up to snuff. The composure I like from the 20 century are...
Gabriel Faure' Harry Partch Henri Pousseur Giacomo Puccini Sergei Racmaninoff
After the earlier part of the 20th century... the works that followed (with some exceptions, for example Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue / Porky & Bess ) are blah to me.
[Edited 11/17/13 21:38pm] | |
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