Posted on 11/30/2010 1:33:53 PM PST by mojito
A full century after Arnold Schoenberg and his students Alban Berg and Anton Webern unleashed their harsh chords on the world, modern classical music remains an unattractive proposition for many concertgoers. Last season at the New York Philharmonic, several dozen people walked out of a performance of Berg's Three Pieces for Orchestra; about the same number exited Carnegie Hall before the Vienna Philharmonic struck up Schoenberg's Variations for Orchestra.
The mildest 20th-century fare can cause audible gnashing of teeth. Benjamin Britten's Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings is a more or less fully tonal score, yet in 2009 at Lincoln Centre, it failed to please a gentleman sitting behind me. When someone let out a "Bravo!" elsewhere in the hall, he growled: "I bet that was a plant." I resisted the temptation to swat him with my pocket score.
(Excerpt) Read more at guardian.co.uk ...
Now that is funny right there... ;-)
All modern “classical” music can be divided into two schools:
1. The “bugs crawling under my skin” school.
2. The “silverware, pots and pans being thrown on the kitchen floor” school.
Unfortunately, since most symphonies and orchestras now feel compelled to force people to listen to it as part of their concerts, most of them are going under financially. People are not going to pay good money to listen to cr*p.
I’ll see ‘em all and raise you a Shania Twain and a Martina McBride.
OK, it isn’t just the music.
IIRC, many composers that today we call classical maestros of the past were rejected at their time—at least at first. Some of their work were considered ‘too folksy’ or ‘too light’. Usually, the criticism came from the musical elites at the time. Time may change, but some situations keep repeating themselves: the ‘guardians’ feel the ‘newcomers’ sell out too much to the mass’ tastes. As time passes, some of these ‘newcomers’ pieces would be accepted as ‘classic’ and the composers become the guardians themselves.
Which composers are you talking about?
An interviewer asked Spike Jones the secret of his success. His answer: "We are too corny for sophisticted people, and too sophisticated for corny people."
Yes, there are Spike Jones versions of the Nutcracker Suite and Carmen.
Didn't he play at the South Park Elementary Christmas show?
Modern “crap” classical music is exactly in line with this:
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/smithsonian-christmas-season-exhibit-fea
I could just see Dan Ackroyd's "Leonard Pinth-Garnell" doing that with "Bad Symphony".
I don’t think the piece is interesting at all. It is a compilation of excuses for a mistake, which is what most of what passes for modern “art” is. The excuses have been trotted out before. What no one wants to admit is that, in general, the modern music that he discusses is an attempt to substitute a theory for musical genius. Modern visual “art” is “art” for fools.
>>>You say that like it is a BAD thing.<<<
DING DING DING we have a winner for Post-of-the-Day!!!
Don't be so insulting - cats in a wood chipper sound immeasurably better than modern classical music ;-)
I must admit, I do dig Steve Reich’s Electric Counterpoint, because it features Pat Metheny on Guitar, the “Slow” part is a beautiful piece of music.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sX4jqylYDU&feature=fvw
The composers that would have made classical music in the past are going to Hollywood and scoring movies. That is where you find the equivilent music now. The people making “classical” music now are posers.
Along those lines, I do love some ‘modern’ composers, and am confident that people can still create beautiful symphonic music if they are motivated to.
>>Along those lines, I do love some modern composers, and am confident that people can still create beautiful symphonic music if they are motivated to.<<
On a bit of a side note, it is one of the reasons my favorite “rock” band was Genesis. I literally saw it as “classical music meets rock music”. Some of those chord progressions and instrumentation (keyboard of course) that Tony Banks came up with were very evocative of the classics.
I agree, and I am also a Genesis fan.
ML/NJ
I toss into the mix some of the later Mahler works as well as Holst’s “Planets.” John Cage is not even human. Nothing pleases more than a Hayden string quartet. sd
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