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Yup. Nice post Diapason. Why more people don't appreciate Classical music could be a lengthy discussion for sure, and many of the points you bring up are very valid, and as others have as well.For example, I'm a Classical music lover. Have been for a long time. I don't enjoy all Classical though. And I can understand why not everyone would. I have the same disdain for Opera, that some others have for the entire Classical genre. I can't handle it at all. It's intolerable to me. But not to an Opera lover, to them it's sublime.So I can surely understand others who feels the same about different things than I do. Because of my Classical training, I couldn't handle Jazz at all. The dissonance, and obscuring of tonalities, was to much for my ear to bear. My ear was to rigidly tempered to Diatonic melody. When my listening tastes expanded into more modern forms of Classical, where they became much more adventurous with modulation and chromatics, and so forth, my ear became more relaxed and flexible. This has enabled me to enjoy a whole segment of what constitues Jazz. Not all Jazz. But quite a bit. The real "out there" Jazz is too much for me though.Cheers
In my opinion, pop/rock is to music as pop-up-books are to literature. You may enjoy it (and I regularly do myself) but it's hardly great art. Si
Perhaps OT perhaps not. When he was 20, J.S. Bach was accused of going into the wine cellar during sermons and making music with a "stranger maid" in the church. I have been searching for that music among his cantatas, fugues, concertos and oratorios. Most believe it was his eventual first wife, who was his second cousin.
I don't think this particular "study" proves anything. I found the article uninteresting and overblown in the extreme, actually, and the general hand-wringing that goes with it does nothing to further the cause of classical music. The message from this is that to be truly "cultured" you have to be willing to miss your morning train, arrive late for work, and basically step outside of the routine that ensures your life runs smoothly every day. Yep, that should go a long way towards alienating the masses! The real world just doesn't work that way...Having said that, I also despair of the short shrift given to classical (I hate that expression!) music. In my opinion, pop/rock is to music as pop-up-books are to literature. You may enjoy it (and I regularly do myself) but it's hardly great art. Whether you want to listen to art or not is entirely your prerogative, but most people who learn about music, or who study an instrument seriously, end up admiring classical more than any other genre. Note I didn't say liking it more, that varies.
In a similar vein, I don't have the time or inclination to read Shakespeare. The difference is, while at school I learned a little about Shakespeare, we studied some plays and sonnets, and I have a passing understanding why those in the know consider such things to be of high quality. Unfortunately, music is not afforded the same luxury, so most people have never studied Bach's Goldberg Variations, and have no real understanding of why others admire it. Charges of elitism follow naturally, because it's just not something that everybody learns. Historically, only those from higher income brackets could afford an education that included such things. As much as I'd love to see music study become an integral part of the school curriculum it's not going to happen anytime soon.
There are still plenty of people flying the flag for serious music, and it will always be with us. I just wish that the "Average Joe" had a little more respect for the art and expertise involved, whether they understand it or not, and that people weren't quite so quick to label such music as old-fashioned or boring. This, however, cuts both ways and I think a modicum of respect for the musical tastes of others is a good idea across the board.
Dissonance is a relative term. The perfect fourth interval was considered dissonant before about 700 AD if I remember my music history. Jazz through Bebop is based on the song form and most of the improv is based on the chord changes of that song form. The dissonance you may initially hear in more modal jazz is "chords on top of chords" so to speak. The chord progressions are typically much simpler than bebop and the music allows more experimentation in this area. They are harmonically related, but more involved than your strict tertial harmonies. Or think of it this way, Imagine
perhaps this has already been mentioned, but if those "great composers" had access to the electric guitar, synthesizers and all our modern technology, do you really think they'd still have produced the same body of work? I think not...