Why Modern Music Is Misunderstood (5 Things You Weren’t Aware Of)

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Nahre Sol

Nahre Sol

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 000
@Bati_
@Bati_ Жыл бұрын
"The trouble with music appreciation in general is that people are taught to have too much respect for music; they should be taught to love it instead." - Igor Stravinsky (New York Times Magazine, 9/27/1964)
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Animals are dying for sure 👉 Dominion (2018)
@christopher-miles
@christopher-miles Жыл бұрын
@@VeganSemihCyprus33 i'm lovin' it.
@christopher-miles
@christopher-miles Жыл бұрын
sir. ronalad mac'Ka Domaldionzon iii.
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando Жыл бұрын
@@christopher-miles q. ur. self.
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando Жыл бұрын
🤮🤮
@Bati_
@Bati_ Жыл бұрын
“Music, I feel, must be emotional first and intellectual second.” - Maurice Ravel
@old_fritz
@old_fritz Жыл бұрын
T H I S
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Animals are dying for sure 👉 Dominion (2018)
@randomchannel-px6ho
@randomchannel-px6ho Жыл бұрын
Ravel was critized both for being too experimental and too old fashioned. Since he has found his way into the Canon it was perhaps simply just timeless. I also suggest looking up videos of his house. He was an interesting man who certainly embodied this advice.
@nilsfrederking62
@nilsfrederking62 Жыл бұрын
100% agree. Of course there is some intellect involved to get good music written, it is like other professions also a craft, especially when writing for orchestra. But my full conviction is that listening to music should be an enjoyable experience, which can of course range from relaxing, calming, activating to bringing sad and happy feelings in resonance.
@jpdj2715
@jpdj2715 Жыл бұрын
Excellent. And the quoting too. One Gershwin asked Ravel to teach composition or orchestration, or so. Ravel rejected. Continue to do your thing and do not try to become like me. Ravel did not think of himself to be really good and his now famous Bolero was a "practice piece for orchestra without music to be conducted by an iron conductor."
@NN-rn1oz
@NN-rn1oz Жыл бұрын
Classical music has been experimental for too long now. All the effort is in constantly creating new languages, to the point that we have forgotten that what matters most is not the language but the message. With many of the current composers I'm not sure there is even a message that is communicated anymore, other than "hey, listen to this, I have created yet another new language! Impressive, isn't it?"
@AlexSimedre
@AlexSimedre Жыл бұрын
Looks like post-modernism in music. Everybody has their own opinions, their own questions but no idea how to answer them or sort them out as good or bad.
@lionsmaine1238
@lionsmaine1238 Жыл бұрын
Well “what matters most” is entirely subjective and there are many composers who don’t write in highly experimental musical languages. When you don’t understand a piece of music, the benefit of the composers being alive is that you can ask them questions, start a dialogue, and be curious about why they chose to compose the piece the way they did.
@NN-rn1oz
@NN-rn1oz Жыл бұрын
@@lionsmaine1238 Yea I guess I should've said what matters most to me. And to a _massive_ number of people.
@philipbrown2225
@philipbrown2225 Жыл бұрын
yes, not unlike post modern and post post modern literature
@SteveAstronaut
@SteveAstronaut Жыл бұрын
When the aliens arrive we might be glad that we are used to hearing new languages.
@HD-su9sq
@HD-su9sq Жыл бұрын
As a simple consumer of (mostly) classical music, I would not be rushing to hear these concerts. However, my ears have been opened so many times over the years, that I’m glad that composers are still expressing in new ways. If I listen to these pieces, it will be when I’m streaming music into my home and feeling adventurous. Regardless, I give full credit to the musicians that can give these composers the voice to make a statement.
@andrews68
@andrews68 Жыл бұрын
I can listen to Chopin pieces 100 times and still want to and appreciate the 101st time. Contemporary classical music is interesting to listen to perhaps once or twice at most. Some are so painful to my ears I can hardly make it through the first time; or rather I’ll sit through it once just for the novelty of the experience perhaps.
@hoosas5998
@hoosas5998 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Whenever I’m at the symphony and they are trying a new modern piece I simply have to sit and bear through the treachery before I can listen to well… the actual music.
@cadriver2570
@cadriver2570 Жыл бұрын
I have a degree in it and I agree. There are interesting pieces but on the whole it is empty. I’ve been down the rabbit hole and back.
@comiclover99
@comiclover99 Жыл бұрын
Depends on the piece. Works by Caroline Shaw, Ted Hearne, Andrew Norman and Thomas Ades I could listen to again and again.
@Uhor
@Uhor Жыл бұрын
Try Thomas Ades and Hans Abrahamsen. They are very consonant. I can listen to them all day. I can also listen to Unsuk Chin on repeat but her music is too high pitched for some.
@lizziesmusicmaking
@lizziesmusicmaking Жыл бұрын
@@Uhor There are some modern composers out there who compose in older styles. I played one piece like that recently (Adagio for recorder quartet, by Matthias Maute), and it was really good. Because the composer wasn't trying to be avant garde - I think they simply wanted to make something beautiful, and they succeeded. I got the melody stuck in my head from practicing the soprano part. I wish we could have more of that, and less in the way of glorified noise with composers insisting that no one understands their brilliance. The greatness of music is not inversely proportional to the number of people who listen to and enjoy it.
@modularcuriosity
@modularcuriosity Жыл бұрын
It sounds like modern classical music is being redefined as "any music which uses classical instrumentation".
@Goriaas
@Goriaas Жыл бұрын
Brah that already happened like decades ago
@kristadzive
@kristadzive Жыл бұрын
And what is classical instrumentation supposed to be?
@karim0302
@karim0302 Жыл бұрын
I think it's something more along the lines of: "Any music that is supposed to be 'performed'" (whatever 'performed' may really mean). Most pop is mostly meant to be listened to on audio systems, while here it seems the music is meant to be performed in front of an audience.
@thomasallan8113
@thomasallan8113 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, this seems all to prevalent but what choice do they have? I see little interest in classical music outside of a narrow audience.
@OdaKa
@OdaKa Жыл бұрын
That kind of is what the music that is now defined as classical was when it was first created
@henrycadman5564
@henrycadman5564 Жыл бұрын
I think modern classical music is a lot like free jazz. Firstly, it teaches you to enjoy letting go of expectations. If you are waiting for the chorus or the hook, you will be disappointed. However, if you just sit in the present and allow the ocean of music to take you, you will learn to enjoy the ride! If you fight it, you will be frustrated. Secondly, it teaches you to find music everywhere!
@kneza96BG
@kneza96BG Жыл бұрын
With that logic I might as well listen to traffic outside than go to these concerts
@henrycadman5564
@henrycadman5564 Жыл бұрын
@CoolPigeon lol. You could also just not listen to it. If you like it, listen to it. If you don’t, dont. 🤷 no one’s forcing you lol
@castrelspirit
@castrelspirit Жыл бұрын
@@kneza96BG ...if you want there's music with that very concept : the "musique concrète" tradition
@slurpeexyza17
@slurpeexyza17 Жыл бұрын
Definitely a lot like free jazz. AKA pretentiously cringe
@bernabefernandeztouceda7315
@bernabefernandeztouceda7315 Жыл бұрын
@@slurpeexyza17 not all free jazz tho
@thomasmathews4592
@thomasmathews4592 Жыл бұрын
It does matter a little bit how you interpret 'dying'. The video makes a very good case for it not dying in the sense that there is a tonne of innovation still happening, there are a tonne of talented composers producing interesting new music, and maybe more people would be able to enjoy it if they learned to listen to it differently, because it does require a different sort of appreciation that lots of earlier classical music, and even more so vs modern non-classical music. And videos like these are amazing for helping the uneducated like me enjoy this music so thank you so much for making them. Another way of interpreting 'Is classical music dying?" though would be to suggest that the relevance of it is dying, because the bar to entry for listening to it just keeps rising and rising as composers hyper-specialise. Lots of the corpus of Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms etc includes music that the average person can immediately understand, enough to gain from listening to it, but also has enormous depth to it, is enormously expressive and deeply meaningful. In my mind the 'killer feature' of music as an art form as compared to visual arts, film, theatre, literature, so on, is its ability to directly reach into people and immediately invoke an emotional state, without that state necessarily being describable in words. The video compared modern classical music to an art gallery, and that feels apt, but it also means it is losing its core value in that sense. I am absolutely not saying that modern classical music doesn't evoke emotion, it does, or that abstract art is a bad thing, it isn't. Still, most people do not have postgrad level education in music theory, and most people do not have the necessary time to read up on everything they need to learn how to interpret works that are that abstract and derive meaning from it. So for most people modern classical music no longer has that power of immediately reaching into them an invoking complex emotions. And this suggests a bifurcation where increasingly you just have commercial pop and film scores that often evoke fairly basic emotions in boring ways, and highly innovative music that cannot be deciphered by the average person being produced for a fringe group of people whose whole lives are devoted entirely to music. It may seem like a 'natural evolution' and something that has happened for ages, but if you take it to its conclusion it means lots of artists with valuable things to say are going to be only saying it to other artists. I would argue that that is a waste of their artistic talent and highly detrimental to society at large. You would have to believe the average person's ability to understand highly abstract art has been evolving as fast as the complexity and abstraction of classical music over the past century, because if that isn't true, then the potential audience is necessarily shrinking. I am a huge cinema fan, and I think as an art form modern cinema often does much better at producing films that are entertaining enough for an average, engaged viewer, but also have huge depth and fascinating things to say if you analyse them a bit more and pay very close attention. And I think this comes from a lack of snobbery. There isn't the same sense that commercial success and impact on the average person is necessarily juxtaposed with technical quality, depth, and complex meaning. I hear a small number of classical musicians talk about 'objective quality' in a way that is not as common in other disciplines and who consider anything with mass appeal as being dirty, cheap and kitsch. And not having that perceived juxtaposition results in a (in my subjective opinion) much healthier landscape of works where some are purely abstract art for people with foreknowledge, some are just commercial entertainment, but there is plenty of stuff that is both. Inclusivity in art is often discussed in the sense of allowing people to enter the profession from different backgrounds, but it also matters that people from different backgrounds (those not raised by wealthy upper-middle-class families who took them to the opera and gave them music lessons) have music that they can understand, love, connect with, and thus have a path towards enjoying the very best of contemporary music output. You can't go from nothing, to listening to 4'33 and finding meaning in it, realistically. Perhaps I am being unnecessarily pessimistic, but it would be an incredible shame if an increasing proportion of new, innovative, exciting music was condemned to be only available to a tiny portion of elite, educated musicians making music for themselves, and it does feel like that is where it is going, as much as I do enjoy some of it.
@dogedoger2606
@dogedoger2606 Жыл бұрын
Well said
@ronald3836
@ronald3836 Жыл бұрын
The video convinced me that death has set in some time ago.
@aretiredsubberl7036
@aretiredsubberl7036 Жыл бұрын
I think "dying" is just a clickbait word used by youtubers. Really no point getting semantic about it, just interpret it as "decline", which is true.
@hoosas5998
@hoosas5998 Жыл бұрын
This dude wrote a whole thesis my gosh.
@ronald3836
@ronald3836 Жыл бұрын
@@hoosas5998 At least he added content.
@zandernoriega
@zandernoriega Жыл бұрын
Dunno. To me 99.9% avant-garde/whatever sounds like a bunch of people trying real hard to avoid criticism. Like they're trying to create a Safe Space in which any criticism of their work can be dismissed by saying "Oh, you just don't understand this brand new genre I've literally just created right now." And it's like, OK. Sure. With regards to "breaking rules," composers like Beethoven "broke" rules. But they did it by building on top of previous work. Like an athlete breaking a record. Running/jumping/etc. faster than it seemed humanly possible. Or like a rocket scientist making a rocket able to not only fly but now also land. THAT is "moving things forward" to me. Whereas this sound-design-with-classical-instruments-identifying-itself-as-music thing, on the other hand... I don't see how it's innovating anything. I KNOW how a piano is going to sound if you stab it with a chainsaw in a helicopter. It's neither surprising nor expanding my mind. It's just wasting my time.
@HR_Racc
@HR_Racc 6 ай бұрын
This is correct. This is not music, it’s child’s play being lifted up as something amazing. No wonder people flock to songs that have literally 3 chords. You either have something extremely boring but your able to listen to it or you have people trying hard to compensate for a lack of writing skill creating “music” that sounds like a broken chainsaw.
@alanrobertson9790
@alanrobertson9790 6 ай бұрын
Novelty and breaking rules are regarded as the ends in themselves rather than writing popular music which would take talent.
@tommyron
@tommyron 23 күн бұрын
I’m a little late to the party but I really enjoyed your response. Funny and right on the money.
@kevinmichaelsullivan2059
@kevinmichaelsullivan2059 Жыл бұрын
Normally I avoid these kinds of posts about classical music (or many others) dying. If they don't get any oxygen the fire burns out. However Nahre's posts are erudite and so well communicated so I took a chance. So. Glad. I did, This is a spot on discussion and guide on exploring any music that's new to a listener. Bravo Nahre!
@metashrew
@metashrew Жыл бұрын
Its only natural that it doesnt attract a lot of people. The average person likes to have a balance between familiarity and novelty, and this music really focusses on novelty. Its not music thats made to be played in the background at the store, or to sing along to, or to dance to, so you already lose a lot of people there. I do think its interesting, but its very nature doesnt make it something for everyone. edit: to be clear, i find this music "interesting" at most. I would never buy tickets for a concert like this, but if i accidentally stumbled across it i would give it a chance. the only thing it really has going for me is novelty, which can be inspiring if you want to write music yourself; it might give you ideas on how you could apply these crazy ideas in music that also appeals to a wider audience. Once that novelty wears off (which will be after a couple of listens at most) i'd have no real reason to listen to this music.
@nilsfrederking62
@nilsfrederking62 Жыл бұрын
It is for a very very small audience, I am quite confident that it is much less than 1% of people listening regularly to such music. Why should I listen to such, when I can spend my time enjoying the most beautiful pieces from Chopin or some Vivaldi baroque arias etc. which deeply touch me, while most of the contemporary music just goes on my nerves? There are exceptions of course.
@gstlb
@gstlb Жыл бұрын
@@nilsfrederking62 there’s a lot of beautiful music using traditional techniques being written now as well.
@MusiqueEtLectures
@MusiqueEtLectures Жыл бұрын
@@gstlb Indeed! Hence, there's no need for all this contemporary bullshit that pretends to be "music". 😂 Reminds me of the worst of the worst of what anyone can see in museums for contemporary art. 🤣
@nilsfrederking62
@nilsfrederking62 Жыл бұрын
@@gstlb I suppose you mostly talk of music for movies and games. Else there was the "minimal music" Steve Reich and others which used tonal harmonies.
@alexanderzippel8809
@alexanderzippel8809 Жыл бұрын
Well it depends. Old classical work still is high and kicking. Especially because dancing to them (Waltz, Quick Step, etc) still is popular (atleast in my experience, but then again Germany has a big history with classical music) This new classic music (abusing any and every instrument in the orchestra in the some interpretations) is probably turning into a small, very special group
@ProgRockKeys
@ProgRockKeys Жыл бұрын
In 1970 - high school theory class - we were exposed to 12 tone and other forms of modern classical music. We were assured that because the Rite of Spring was not welcomed at the time, everything we hear now, like John Cage abusing a piano, will sound like the Rite of Spring to people in the future. That’s a logical fallacy I learned to remember, after spending way too much time trying to like “difficult” music. I still fall into the trap of writing “clever” themes in 7/8, that nobody likes. For me, music that connects is better than music that doesn’t. Stravinsky said we still have some beautiful music to discover in the key of C major. Just as good classic rock music has moved to Nashville, I think the classical composers worth listening to - for me - have gone to the movies, and perhaps the video games.
@nilsfrederking62
@nilsfrederking62 Жыл бұрын
Same with me, I spent too much time to try to understand this music, now I do not care, I only listen to what delights me. But there is a certain aspect of training, to sensitize your ear, to follow what is happening in the music which also can be delightful. Sometimes I am so moved of how beautifully things are "crafted" when I have a look at them, it makes it even more pleasurable to listen to these. I nearly exclusively listen to tonal music.
@jared_bowden
@jared_bowden Жыл бұрын
In defense of 7/8, that's the time signature of "Money" and it made it on the Billboard 100 in '72, so people must of liked it then. I never even noticed it was in 7/8 until I overheard an interview with Roger Waters and he pointed it out.
@d3l_nev
@d3l_nev Жыл бұрын
I love your comment so much. Yes, there's still beauty to find in C major, in 4/4, in classical music. And I really like composers like John Williams, Koji Kondo, Joe Hisaishi, they understand music is meant to be beautiful.
@gabrielfynsk
@gabrielfynsk Жыл бұрын
A few thoughts: I think it is rather harsh and disingenuous to describe what John Cage did as 'abuse'. And in fact, I would say that in the contemporary world of music, Cage's preludes and etudes are seen with a similar eye to Stravinsky's Rite of Spring 50 years after its premiere; perhaps without the same level of popularity, but certainly with a similar distance or appreciation within and through history. While I don't believe that writing themes in 7/8 is "clever" considering its novelty is several centuries old now and has been demonstrated with incredible conviction and quality by countless composers, I do believe that attempting to write things that are "clever", or more specifically to be seen AS clever, is a path that will always lead to the unmusical. Listeners can always sniff an inauthentic piece - hence why Boulez's Répons is listened to with the highest regard and appreciation while certain Ferneyhough works are not - though not to discredit his work as an artist, some of which is my favorite. The quote regarding the "key of C major" was by Arnold Schoenberg, not Stravinsky.
@gabrielfynsk
@gabrielfynsk Жыл бұрын
@@d3l_nev beautiful? perhaps 'pretty' is the word you are looking for. All composers seek beauty, but not all seek prettiness. So many of the composers you may list as your favorite, such as Mozart, Beethoven, or Mahler, has plenty of music that did not seek to be pretty and yet are incredibly beautiful and have stood the test of time (take Mozart's dissonance quartet, Beethoven's Hammerklavier, or Mahler's 8 final movement)
@elbschwartz
@elbschwartz Жыл бұрын
What's missing from all this is that music is a form of communication. It's a conversation. And to have a conversation with someone, you have to be speaking the same language. If each of these composer's goals is to create their own new, idiosyncratic language, then WHO exactly are they conversing with? What's the point of it all? At least works like 4'33 serve (or once served) as a kind of intelligible commentary. Cage was radical but at the end of the day, he was still conversing with his audience.
@andsalomoni
@andsalomoni Жыл бұрын
We need a Piero Manzoni in music too.
@willemmusik2010
@willemmusik2010 Жыл бұрын
"The new kind of music seems to create not from the heart but from the head. Its composers think rather than feel. They have not the capacity to make their works exalt - they meditate, protest, analyze, reason, calculate and brood, but they do not exalt." - Sergei Rachmaninoff
@garrysmodsketches
@garrysmodsketches Жыл бұрын
Silly quote by Rachmaninoff here (a guy who shifted from composition to a career of a concert pianist btw). Composers always think about their music. Constantly. There are over 5 thousand pages of sketches that Beethoven left us. That is because he was always working and re-working ideas, and it is his thought process that allowed him to create his masterpieces. Brahms said that there is no creating without hard work, and that you need to come back to your music and rewrite it over and over again until is it a complete work of art. Making music purely through instinct or emotion is improvisation, not composition.
@time8871
@time8871 4 ай бұрын
"Music should humbly seek to please; within these limits great beauty may perhaps be found. Extreme complication is contrary to art. Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Debussy
@truecuckoo
@truecuckoo Жыл бұрын
I think in your own unique ways, you, and @twosetviolin have played a big part in my life in turning my attention back to classical music again. 🙏🏼
@_rstcm
@_rstcm Жыл бұрын
Aye let's gooooooo! Twoset gang!
@reyskywalker9409
@reyskywalker9409 Жыл бұрын
@@_rstcm aye let's gooooooooo twoset gang
@AntonStruzik
@AntonStruzik Жыл бұрын
The thing is, in almost every art form there is a notion of fluctuation between tension and stability, because it’s the essence of storytelling that our human emotions relate to. It’s hard to enjoy art that only has tension and never any release.
@jorge.iglesias
@jorge.iglesias Жыл бұрын
While I understand (and share, at some point), I think it’s necessary to point out two things. First, tension and release can be found in contemporary atonal music. Not only it has to with harmony (as in tonal music) there are other parameters (like dynamics, rhythm, timbre and texture) that can be managed in a way that creates tension and release). But I have to admit that the harmonic tension and release is so strong and important. The second thing I wanted to say is that there are plenty of examples of traditional music without harmonic tension/release. I’m thinking of Javanese gamelan music or Babongo music.
@lecomar7220
@lecomar7220 Жыл бұрын
​@@jorge.iglesias I do think though that in modern western classical music the lack of harmony and melody is particularly catastrophical because they are so instrumental to the tradition of that type of music. And also a certain way to handle tension and release in that harmonic and melodic sense is a fundamental trait of western classical music.
@andsalomoni
@andsalomoni Жыл бұрын
And an overall musically meaningful structure, starting from the very musical intervals.. If they discard all, and all that remains is the artificial 12 tone equal temperament plus a few INTELLECTUAL (not "musical") rules, then it is very difficult to get something that is "music".
@charly71
@charly71 Жыл бұрын
@jorge.iglesias has a very good point but to create tension and release one needs expectation which means you need references too build up these expectations wether they are deceived or fulfilled. Therefore the (seemingly) total absence of rules or knowledge of the underlying rules makes it impossible or very discouraging to follow and appreciate anything. Still trying to keep an open mind though :)
@nahnahnah1435
@nahnahnah1435 Жыл бұрын
insane generalisation
@ErikHare
@ErikHare Жыл бұрын
What I find most interesting in this space is the divergence between works for solo instruments and larger ensembles. Generally speaking I'm going to at least appreciate if not actually like any work for solo instrument because they tend to keep the elements of rhythm and melody intact. When we get into larger ensembles there is a lot of experimentation purely in harmony and color which may not always work. At least that's how I see it. I think they are two very different directions sometimes.
@bernabefernandeztouceda7315
@bernabefernandeztouceda7315 Жыл бұрын
That's what I feel about some Ferneyhough, Stockhausen or even Carter orchestral compositions. They feel like studies in noise and texture, pretty much a mess, while the chamber or piano pieces seems to follow a more dramatic, narrative approach.
@soundtreks
@soundtreks Жыл бұрын
I’m finding it difficult to connect to a lot of modern concert music. When I studied in the late 80s, we were still expected to produce material from the Boulezian ideology. It seemed like that academic style was eschewed for a return to tonal music in the late 90s but it appears that we’ve circled back to this quasi intellectualized concept art. The funny thing is that most new compositions I’ve heard that exploit this aren’t breaking any ground that Xenakis, Ligeti, Crumb, even as far back as Varese hadn’t already ventured into 60-80 years ago. I do however enjoy Unsuk Chin’s work. Then again, she studied under Ligeti so maybe there is something to that…
@gabrielfynsk
@gabrielfynsk Жыл бұрын
I’d very much agree with a lot of what you say - most notably your admiration of Chin! However, I would contest this sentiment with so much of the music of my colleagues and friends who follow their inspiration from Boulez, Xenakis, Scelsi, Crumb, etc. who have created music that is truly revolutionary and leaps and bounds forward than their influences’ works (which is hard to even fathom!) I would strongly recommend listening to the works of Yann Robin and Raphael Cendo as sources for these motions.
@Uhor
@Uhor Жыл бұрын
Spectralism is from the 80's and so are Feldman's most famous works.
@7James77
@7James77 Жыл бұрын
The names of those people you mentioned will never be remembered
@Uhor
@Uhor Жыл бұрын
@@7James77 we are all going to die and be forgotten, deal with that
@gabrielfynsk
@gabrielfynsk Жыл бұрын
@@7James77 I don’t think it’s possible that they could be forgotten. They are truly a part of the canon - studied and revered by many - and every major city are performing one of these composers every night. You must not get out much
@michaellofting4579
@michaellofting4579 Жыл бұрын
I started listening to a contemporary piece but stopped after a couple of minutes. Then I listened to an interview with the composer about the piece and what he was wanting to say. I then went back and listened to the whole piece with a new appreciation.
@Ithirahad
@Ithirahad Жыл бұрын
IMO this means the piece utterly failed. Any and all art is dependent on context, of course - but that's the broad context of the world you live in, not the artificial context of the artist. If the piece depends so heavily on the artist providing the specific context to bridge the gap between the broader life-context and the special requisite knowledge to appreciate the composition, then perhaps the interview should've been included as a prelude to the piece. :P
@alanrobertson9790
@alanrobertson9790 9 ай бұрын
Did you enjoy listening to the music or was your appreciation intellectual. Isn't that the test.
@peterwimmer1259
@peterwimmer1259 6 ай бұрын
@@Ithirahad It does not mean that the piece failed. We all have to develop into these new styles and we mostly are not prepared. No-one is born to understand the often tricky and difficult music of contemporary composers. It only means, the listener has developed.
@thinksocrates
@thinksocrates Жыл бұрын
I love her take on this. She really found an idea here that is worth sharing and not something most people get the chance to think deeply about.
@andredelacerdasantos4439
@andredelacerdasantos4439 Жыл бұрын
There's absolutely nothing deep about this 10 minutes KZbin video.
@dirkbogarde7796
@dirkbogarde7796 Жыл бұрын
There is nothing deep about any of this music or the people who make this noise. We are flattering stunning and brave imbeciles.
@thebrickton1947
@thebrickton1947 Жыл бұрын
I believe she's intentionally exposing the shysters, deceptively smart, and controversial for click$, as content creatures lean to mainstream tactics
@chrisrevel2801
@chrisrevel2801 Жыл бұрын
That approach to " modern " classical music is over 80 years old now , there is no point in calling it " avant garde " anymore
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
Over 80 years old, but the public still hasn't caught up, so it is avant-garde in the sense that it retains its power to shock.
@이상호-p3c
@이상호-p3c Жыл бұрын
@@dylanmcdermott1110 Public still don’t catch up because those sounds are instinctively unpleasant. Why do you think there is a constant vibration ratio between notes? Because there is a way that it should be.
@ronald3836
@ronald3836 Жыл бұрын
@@dylanmcdermott1110 Power to bore and disengage.
@defaulttmc
@defaulttmc Жыл бұрын
@@dylanmcdermott1110 "Caught up"? Please take your snobbery elsewhere. This is not music. It is not human. It is inhuman, cold, and meaningless. Most people aren't so masochistic to subject themselves to such torture.
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
@@ronald3836 Not everyone's bored 🙂
@13opacus
@13opacus Жыл бұрын
it's not that the music is dying, it's the term "classical" doesn't describe what is happening now.
@ronald3836
@ronald3836 Жыл бұрын
Then it has simply ceased to exist?
@aretiredsubberl7036
@aretiredsubberl7036 Жыл бұрын
@@ronald3836 classical essentially just old stuff which is essentially "dead" already, so it basically doesn't capture what's trending now.
@thebrickton1947
@thebrickton1947 Жыл бұрын
exactly, it would have to survive the rigors of time to be considered so
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
It depends on which definition you're using for "classical".
@thebrickton1947
@thebrickton1947 Жыл бұрын
@@dylanmcdermott1110 it will be returned to for its staying quality, quite unlike the horrid noises in this video, the smarter sapien likes patterns, a deaf composer knew this well.
@classicgameplay10
@classicgameplay10 Жыл бұрын
250 years ago there was no classical music, there was only music. Something that was never alive cant die.
@thebrickton1947
@thebrickton1947 Жыл бұрын
so, before you were born, you didn't exist, therefore you don't and won't, wow man
@boomshankah1123
@boomshankah1123 Жыл бұрын
My favorite part of every concert is when the orchestra tunes up.
@mouhiazeck
@mouhiazeck Жыл бұрын
Omg same
@AfonsoCM
@AfonsoCM Жыл бұрын
orquestra tuning has more order and meaning than scratching your instrument
@mouhiazeck
@mouhiazeck Жыл бұрын
@@AfonsoCM I'm not sure what you're trying to argue?
@Dodecatone
@Dodecatone Жыл бұрын
Varese wrote a contemporary piece that mimics the sound of a tuning orchestra
@aerohydra3849
@aerohydra3849 Жыл бұрын
Perhaps you like the beginning of Berg's Violin Sonata? 😉
@alanrie
@alanrie Жыл бұрын
Classical music isn't dead I t j u s t s m e l l s f u n n y
@Shevock
@Shevock Жыл бұрын
It wouldn't be around at all without universities propagating it.
@bc4315
@bc4315 Жыл бұрын
@@Shevock Not true. People love it. That's why it's still around.
@timdrumheller
@timdrumheller Жыл бұрын
So does Jazz... "Frank Zappa"
@ternerito
@ternerito Жыл бұрын
It's pining for the fjords
@Captain__Obvious
@Captain__Obvious Жыл бұрын
There's the rub. A working definition of something passing out of cultural relevancy is the point at which you see legitimate discussion around whether it's dead or not. Everything else is really just debating the precise semantics of "dead".
@davidskey
@davidskey Жыл бұрын
As always, the cream will likely rise to the top over time. There are plenty of forgotten composers throughout the history of the western classical tradition who were highly successful trend setters and standard bearers during their lives but are almost completely forgotten.
@gstlb
@gstlb Жыл бұрын
You have more confidence that the future listeners are superior to the present ones than I have. I think many amazing composers have been forgotten. For now.
@DrMarvel562
@DrMarvel562 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes, the cream stays down, in fact, the cream may not even exist, we might just be calling the topmost tea 'cream'
@EricGross
@EricGross Жыл бұрын
But is there an audience for this music? Personally I hear very very little that I find interesting in this very contemporary music or would ever want to listen to again and I do listen to some Webern and Berg.
@andredelacerdasantos4439
@andredelacerdasantos4439 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, this kind of music keeps me away from orchestras nowadays. I prefer to discover beautiful music on my own terms.
@positronalpha
@positronalpha Жыл бұрын
To be honest, a lot of what was in this video sounds amazing and definitely makes me hear more. Sofia Gubaidulina, Lisa Streich, Rebecca Saunders and Anna Thorvaldsdóttir in particular.
@bernabefernandeztouceda7315
@bernabefernandeztouceda7315 Жыл бұрын
@@andredelacerdasantos4439 I don't listen to woman composers, thank you
@AnAverageItalian
@AnAverageItalian Жыл бұрын
​@@bernabefernandeztouceda7315 bruh what the hell 💀
@robertrust
@robertrust Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this diplomatic video. I often find new music challenging as a composer, since my sensibilities tend towards broadly tonal music, and I’ve found it difficult to fit in with new music scenes because of this.
@gabrielfynsk
@gabrielfynsk Жыл бұрын
This is an INCREDIBLE video. I am sad I couldn't be there at Elbphilharmonie this year but was delighted to see this video pop up on my screen with so many of my favorite musicians featured! You are doing so much justice to a community that, though it may not truly be the case, often feels as though it IS a futility or a dying project that we invest our lives into. I hope that as a result of this video that all who enjoy music, both musicians and non-musicians, have a greater sense of openness to the openness of contemporary music.
@DylanMatthewTurner
@DylanMatthewTurner Жыл бұрын
On the consumer side of things, if I had to guess, I'd say more people probably listened to orchestral music in the past year than at any other point in history. Pick a well-known historical composer like Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, etc, and I guarantee more people listened to their music last year than in their lifetimes due to distribution. It may not be the MOST listened to music, but it is still far from dead consumption-wise. It's not the only thing feeding creativity, but if there's consumption, there will be creation.
@MaxiGoethling
@MaxiGoethling Жыл бұрын
I don't really understand the appeal of trying to emulate what sound design is in digital music, in classical music.
@j.carlson4639
@j.carlson4639 6 ай бұрын
Have you ever listened to Human Story 3 by James Ferraro? It's sort of related to what your saying. In that it seeks to make classical acoustic instruments sound like their digital counterparts. I think it's really beautiful stuff, but of course, maybe it would sound boring to someone else.
@laurenth7187
@laurenth7187 Жыл бұрын
“Art lives from constraints and dies from freedom.” Da Vinci
@PeaceNinja007
@PeaceNinja007 Жыл бұрын
Simple yet very true quote ..
@alanrobertson9790
@alanrobertson9790 9 ай бұрын
I think in the best mix you get 95% constraint and 5% freedom. 100% constraint still works whilst 100% freedom is just a mess.
@Dogsnark
@Dogsnark Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this short exploration of new music. It’s thought provoking, but I still wonder what is being accomplished in these new forms. Traditional tonal music was, and remains, popular. The great works of the classical tradition will almost certainly be performed and appreciated as long as human society exists. But I wonder if that will ever be true for most of what we call new music. Could it be that the human brain is wired in such a way that tonality will always be what becomes immortal? I don’t know, but I’m open to trying to appreciate other approaches to musical expression.
@Bvic3
@Bvic3 Жыл бұрын
New music should just be called Entartete Kunst. Death cultists who built hideous architecture, sculpture, paintings are doing the same horror with music unsurprisingly. All civilisations built great art. Except XXth century West that only made universally revulsing art.
@andsalomoni
@andsalomoni Жыл бұрын
Humans are "wired" to listen to music with a tonal centre and a series of relationships between the notes that are NOT arbitrary. Modality or tonality, it is not important, but there must be a well built structure, both in the notes and the music made with them.
@ryofurue7132
@ryofurue7132 Жыл бұрын
One of his public lectures, Leonard Bernstein took up a 12-tone phrase from a piano piece of Schoenberg and demonstrated how it sounds tonal even though it uses all the 12 tones. More than that, he seemed to want to demonstrate how beautiful Schoenberg's music is. To me, Schoenberg's music is very romantic. Look at how ecstatic Glenn Gould is when he is playing Schoenberg. People have been fooled by Schoenberg's words advocating the equal use of the 12 tones. Despite his theorizing, his purpose was to create beautiful music. To answer your question, the human brain is wired to SEEK tonality in sound sequences, I think. Schoenberg's, Bernstein's, and the listeners' brains did seek tonality. But, that doesn't mean that music has to include an "objective" tonality to be good. Tonality is subjective.
@andsalomoni
@andsalomoni Жыл бұрын
@@ryofurue7132 If I remember well, in Schoenberg's harmony manual "Harmonielehre", he mentions that in some Bach's work there is a 12-tone sequence in a perfectly tonal composition.
@ryofurue7132
@ryofurue7132 Жыл бұрын
@@andsalomoni In a perfectly tonal composition, there are sections where a lot of notes that don't belong to the key appear, making the tonality ambiguous. It's possible that a short section includes all the 12 tones while still being "more or less" tonal. I think we usually call this "chromaticism" and Bach's compositions often includes such sections. Bernstein's explanation is in the opposite direction. Schoenberg's 12-tone compositions don't appear to include any tonal center, it sounds perfectly atonal, but if you listen very very carefully, you start to hear tonality . . .
@johngalik6609
@johngalik6609 Жыл бұрын
Despite the number of people praising Nahre's video and engaging with it meaningfully, there seems to also be a large group here to simply bash "contemporary-classical" music and saying essentially, "don't bother with this stuff because it doesn't make sense and it's not supposed to." This attitude misses one of the most central points of Nahre's video: contemporary-classical music can not be generalized in any way. There is a ton of music being created and so easily distributed across the world, and of any style you can imagine. Nahre herself is a composer and her style seems to very effectively incoperate elements of the "familiar" as one commenter said modern music lacks. Post-minimalist composers certainly blend the idea of familiarity and novelty. Another point of the video is that, nothing can possibly be avant-garde, nothing can be shocking, we already did that in the 20th-century, but people are still hating on music 100 years old. Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Shostakovich, and Poulenc were all alive at the same time in the first half of the 20th century. This is incredible proof that everything after the romantic period became personal to each composer. There is no style that is modern, no style that is unified, not one that is academic, not one that wins all competitions, not one that gets commissioned. Until we learn to recognize composers for having individual stylistic approaches to music making, a productive conversation about contemporary classical music can not be had. Anyways, TLDR: please stop generalizing all composers these days as one group that you can throw stones at and say ruins your Baroque listening on Sunday afternoons.
@7James77
@7James77 Жыл бұрын
You're literally generalizing it by calling it contemporary-classical. It's not classical, it's not even music. It's shit. Zero of these "composers" ZERO will ever have their name mentioned 100 years from now. None of them. Their "music" will never exist past their deaths. They will be remembered for what their sound is. Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
@lmichaelgreenjr
@lmichaelgreenjr Жыл бұрын
I think your argument here is flawed at the fundamental level. "Until we learn to recognize composers for having individual stylistic approaches to music making, a productive conversation about contemporary classical music can not be had." I'd argue that all the composers in this video ARE CONFORMING to this performance-art-esque ostentatious subgenre of composition. It seems more radical now to compose with triads than something that sounds like cleaning your piano strings with sandpaper. I think it's an echo chamber of self validation while the outside world laughs, brushes it off, and turns on spotify to Phillip Glass or Tchaikovsky.
@johngalik6609
@johngalik6609 Жыл бұрын
@@lmichaelgreenjr But you are ignoring the individual approaches of the composers in this video. The results of their music might be similarly avant garde, but they didn't get their by the same method nor does it seem to me that any of them could write one another's pieces. This video is also only including pieces chosen for a European festival, which are known in the classical music world as being the places for the most intensely modernist works. You can find so many other styles elsewhere in the world and in other scenes besides festival pieces. In my personal experience, about as many people use triads as don't in the 21st-century classical music scene. You also mention Glass as someone the public chooses over anyone else which seems strange, as it suggests to me that minimalism is already a thing of the past, when minimalism as a technique is more modern than many of the techniques composers from this video use. John Adams grew away from the minimalist tradition in his later years, but his early pieces are quite strictly minimalist and he is still inspired by the style and he is arguably the leading living composer in the world, certainly America. You are saying my argument doesn't exist, that there is only one style of modern music, but I assure you I didn't just say it because it sounds good and it's a total myth. I believe it and most of the living composers I listen to can easily prove their differences from one another.
@AnAverageItalian
@AnAverageItalian Жыл бұрын
​@@johngalik6609exactly, avant-garde ain't a monolyth at all. Finnissy is so much different from Boulez, who's so different from Ligeti, who's so different from Xenakis, who's so different from Sorabji, who's so different from David Lang, etc. If you can't tell the difference, that's sincerely a you problem
@HR_Racc
@HR_Racc 6 ай бұрын
If there is no rules, no standard, nothing to keep things organized then it’s not music. It’s sound. This stuff sounds bad, and this is the reason why this music genre is laughed at by most sensibel people.
@DSteinman
@DSteinman Жыл бұрын
There is plenty of "the emperor has no clothes" music going on in the new music world and it deserves its utter irrelevance. Eric Whitacre is a great example of a living composer who balances elements of the approachable and the innovative
@watson498
@watson498 Жыл бұрын
Caroline Shaw as well, a lot of her stuff is very tonal but she sprinkles in very innovative and interesting techniques and colors that make it really new and fresh
@DSteinman
@DSteinman Жыл бұрын
@@watson498 yeah! You gotta have at least a foot in familiar territory
@vaughanhughes8238
@vaughanhughes8238 Жыл бұрын
Wholeheartedly agree. I’m a violinist and next week will be working with one of the composers interviewed for this video. I find it hard to believe that anyone really wants to hear the performance.
@andrewfortmusic
@andrewfortmusic Жыл бұрын
I agree, as much as it pains me. The thought of entering the world of classical composers when my time at university is finished is incredibly daunting---because of how "old-fashioned" and "tonal" my music is (I write in a hybrid Impressionist-Jazz-Baroque-film style), I fear that I will be rejected by my contemporaries. How do I confront that?
@DSteinman
@DSteinman Жыл бұрын
@@andrewfortmusic homie, be accountable to audiences not eggheaded academics hooting and hollering over orchestras like twats. Impressionist/baroque jazz sounds great to me, you've got your foot in 3 already time-tested familiar genres there
@comiclover99
@comiclover99 Жыл бұрын
This comment section is a sad sight. A bunch of classical music fans so closed off to whole new worlds of sound. The question no one is asking in the middle of this is "why?" Why dont you like this music? Its an important question. The obvious answer is "it doesn't sound good" or "it's too intellectual and not emotional" or "it favours aggression over any other emotion". Well, could the same not be said about the music of The Velvet Underground, Joy Division, and basically all Acid and Jungle music of the 90s? Why do we enjoy that? Well, many reasons but one is that it had a way of entering our collective consciousness. The Rite of Spring influenced generations of film composers and was even used in Fantasia which many of us watched as kids. Not the same for Schoenberg or Berg or Webern or Boulez or Stockhausen or countless others. By the mid-to-late 20th century, classical music was clearly an economic dead end. More popular genres took over. So our collective consciousness didnt learn to accommodate later works of classical music. This is not the fault of composers going too far or a problem of the music being too wild. It is a culture which left classical music behind, for better or for worse.
@alkanista
@alkanista Жыл бұрын
I've been on both sides - first not liking a lot of music after 1900, and then learning to like it. Actually, liking isn't the right word - it doesn't even matter if I like it. What matters is if the composer has integrity, and is composing what they think is worthwhile. It's up to me, the listener, to allow the music to teach me how to listen to it. Of course, that can be true of older composers from the common practice era, too. I did NOT get Bruckner right away on first hearing, for example, but had to learn how to listen to his music. That teaching of the listener is a problem - there are simply too many composers with individual styles and languages for me to give them all a fair hearing, and to learn how to approach what they are doing. I think many of the comments reflect a complete lack of understanding of the role of learning to hear, on the part of the listener. It is essential.
@garrysmodsketches
@garrysmodsketches Жыл бұрын
You see people not liking this music, and you immediately assume they are close-minded, closed off to new sounds. What an annoying attitude you have. What's really happening is this: people take a listen to this music, and then they accurately point out that this music is of low quality.
@comiclover99
@comiclover99 Жыл бұрын
@@garrysmodsketches I didnt assume. I read some of the top comments. One claims "classical music has been experimental for two long". Another implies that new music is not "emotional". I address both of those critiques directly in my comment. I didn't 'assume' close-mindedness, I paraphrased actual comments. EDIT: Although my comment does assume that the people in the comments DO like bands like The Velvet Underground and Joy Division as well as Acid and Jungle. If they just listen to Chopin and Beethoven then I guess it doesn't work as well. However, my accusation of close-mindedness would work even better lol
@latheofheaven1017
@latheofheaven1017 Жыл бұрын
The trouble with the quest for originality in art is that sooner or later you get to where the only thing left to do is produce increasingly bizarre work. Douglas Adams joked in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy about an entire civilisation that crumbled under the weight of fashion. 'Every year the shoes were either much too large, or much too small, and occasionally even joined together at the heels'. I think new classical music has got to the 'joined together at the heels' stage.
@simonrodriguez4685
@simonrodriguez4685 Жыл бұрын
Do you know enough examples to call for such a narrow judgement? A line can be drawn at any point in history, why put up with the romantics, if we could stick with Bach and Vivaldi, they composed enough music for us to keep our concert halls full until the end of times (for humans)? What’s the point of bothering with all of those composers who came after with their huuuuuuuge egos? e. g. Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms, Wagner, Mahler, Bruckner... How does that proposition sound? Just s as absurd as yours, truly...
@malstainkey
@malstainkey Жыл бұрын
I tend to agree. And free jazz has already explored bizarre sounds. I feel many of these pieces needed more saxophones 😀
@auricia201
@auricia201 Жыл бұрын
That's a good point, and sometimes it gets hard to identify what is bizarre just for the sake of being bizarre and calling for attention, or what is honestly people exploring something interesting that ends up having a certain appeal, because we are very good at rationalizing and "giving excuses". I'm sure John cage had a great explanation for why his piece was awesome, but in the end, it's still just silence, which is great, but I prefer to enjoy it at home, on my own, for free 🤷🏻‍♀️
@andredelacerdasantos4439
@andredelacerdasantos4439 Жыл бұрын
Many pieces are very disrespecful to audiences. Imagine sitting in the audience listening to people's coughs for 5 minutes and paying half a day's worth of work.
@latheofheaven1017
@latheofheaven1017 Жыл бұрын
@@auricia201 I agree Auricia. I want to think that it's a genuine exploration, but to me, much of it comes across as bizarre for the sake of it. I've just listened to a live performance of Yes' song 'Awaken' by Jon Anderson with the Todmobile Orchestra, and was left in tears of joy, as I often am by that recording. Not classical, certainly not modern classical, but I'm struck by my profound emotional reaction to it, as opposed to just being baffled and sometimes completely turned off by modern classical music. In the end, we all have different tastes and maybe if a piece for fried artichokes in a vacuum pleases people, then it's fine. I just don't think it will save the genre from being increasingly ignored.
@PabloGambaccini
@PabloGambaccini Жыл бұрын
The problem of our culture in general are the extremes. In accademia, in school we only look to the past, we only learn to repeat. So then the new art thinks it's only roll is going against this doing everything new. There should be a bamance between past, present and future, between learning and creating, a conversation instead of a constant autistic monolog.
@denovaire
@denovaire Жыл бұрын
Important to understand that most pieces are not "experimental" but built upon tradition. The rigid modern music scene also would not allow true experimentation. Just because you are not familiar with the sound it does not mean it is experimental! An experiment is made to explore new outcomes and deal with uncertainty. In most pieces being played in modern music context in Middle Europe, the outcomes are totally predictable and certain.
@Majoofi
@Majoofi Жыл бұрын
5% ground breaking innovation. 95% catastrophe.
@TheTeeProd
@TheTeeProd Жыл бұрын
@TW GER not even 1. All i see is wannabees
@augustolori
@augustolori Жыл бұрын
Thank you for providing this insight. I understand the feeling that you allude to in the title. It's easy to have that feeling if we don't know one basic truth: we cannot observe the creation of classical music. In that moment, it is called contemporary music. The same applies to social events we experience - they will only be considered historical by future generations. The music we produce and consume today can only be considered 'classical' in the future, once it has been analyzed and contextualized as part of the historical development of music. At present, it is simply contemporary music that is part of the ongoing development of the art form. Essentially, it is created by experimenting with new sounds, and you can enjoy it only if you are part of the experiment or understand it!
@FerdiSchwarz
@FerdiSchwarz Жыл бұрын
I just want to go on stage - one of the big concert halls - and take a dump. I've even got a title for the work: "Taking a dump", but I fear the world's still not really ready for it. I'll keep trying though. Maybe start with some smaller venues and work my way up to the top.
@HR_Racc
@HR_Racc 6 ай бұрын
Yes, it’s the public that’s not ready nor caught up with your masterpiece!!
@HR_Racc
@HR_Racc 6 ай бұрын
1:38. That’s the issue. I honestly think that good music doesn’t need to shock people. We don’t need something crazy, but rather music that is enjoyable and that grabs people’s attention not by being so outlandish and horrible sounding but rather from amazing orchestration and theme writing.
@fwendnl
@fwendnl 5 ай бұрын
There are no rules in the arts, but there are consequences. One of those consequences could be that you'll have to go through life without much of an audience.
@lepidoptera9337
@lepidoptera9337 2 ай бұрын
No, actually, that's a hard rule: if nobody wants to listen to you, then you are not a great artist. ;-)
@dionbaillargeon4899
@dionbaillargeon4899 Жыл бұрын
9:10 "I don't believe people were whistling the tunes of Don Giovanni in the streets of Prague the day after the premiere". Well, they probably did. Don Giovanni was a thunderous triumph in Prague. Just look at the review on the Prague Post Newspaper on November 3, 1787: "On Monday [October] 29th, the Italian opera company gave the ardently awaited opera by Maestro Mozart, Don Giovanni. Connoisseurs and musicians say that Prague has never yet heard the like. Herr Mozart conducted in person: when he entered the orchestra pit, he was received with three-fold cheers, which again happened when he left it. Everybody, on the stage and in the orchestra, strained every nerve to thank Mozart by rewarding him with a good performance. The unusually large attendance testified to unanimous approbation.” I don't have anything against experimentation. I actually love it. It's just that I think "new" is terribly overrated. Freedom can also enslave us and keep anything from accumulating, and very good and original things can come from trying to express something in an already known common language.
@andsalomoni
@andsalomoni Жыл бұрын
It should be enough to understand the laws of musical sound, to avoid the terrible lack of meaning and mandatory disturbance in this "experimental" stuff. In Indian classical music, they know these laws, and have been making music for some 5000 years without discontinuities, and are far from exhausting it.
@SchlimmShadySmash
@SchlimmShadySmash Жыл бұрын
i think its sad classical musicians think they need to go to weird atonal "shock-value" elements to make something original and of quality. theres still so much to study in brasilian music, blues, jazz harmony, new electronic music, that you can try to reinvent genres by combinations that are viable. it seems pretentious to ignore these disciplines and go to weird shocking places.. i just dont relate to it at all.
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
You're overgeneralizing. I've also yet to hear of a single great composer who did anything for just shock value.
@ValentineOficial
@ValentineOficial Жыл бұрын
From most of the videos I've watched discussing modern classical music, it seems like there's an obsession with timbre and texture... while everything else falls to the side. Although there are some interesting sounds that come out of that experimentation, it often feels unjustified, as if there was no message trying to be conveyed other than "oooh that's a cool sound ain't it" Granted, I don't know much about classical music (let alone modern pieces) so I might be totally wrong.
@pymath5771
@pymath5771 Жыл бұрын
You are right, this stuff is pretty much random noise, accompanied by some fake-intellectuals saying their typical fake-intellectual lines, like "you wouldn't understand it" (there is nothing to understand).
@tenonakin9237
@tenonakin9237 Жыл бұрын
Modern classical is a postmodern disease. Those people are destroying what's left of classical western culture. Big money powers are behind this disgusting movement. Read Who paid the Piper by Saunders.
@prototypeinheritance515
@prototypeinheritance515 Жыл бұрын
I would recommend you go to a concert hall yourself, the experience of such a piece is much different in person. Espescially when paired together with a more established piece, the contrast between modern sounds and the more conventional ones is really great imho
@ValentineOficial
@ValentineOficial Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I guess I should try it out sometime.
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
Personally I find timbre, harmony, texture and rhythm more interesting than melody.
@carlosmartinezrosales1579
@carlosmartinezrosales1579 Жыл бұрын
I love the way you live and explain music, without any prejudge and with your mind open. Keep doing what you are doing, please.
@jamesabber7891
@jamesabber7891 Жыл бұрын
The John Cage composition from 1952 of 4 minutes and 33 seconds of silence really shows how ridiculous copyright has become: Many years later Mike Batt did another composition called "A One Minute Silence", and even though he credited John Cage he was sued for copyright infringement by the copyright holders of this now deceased composer. Fortunately this case was settled out of court in 2002, most likely because it was impossible for the estate of John Cage to state which part of his 4:33 composition the new 1:00 composition was infringing on. Was it the first minute or the last minute, or something in between? Can we even copyright silence? Frank Zappa later made a cover of the John Cage piece, but he was not sued because he paid the royalties demanded. But is it fair that we have to pay royalties for being silent, just to avoid being sued? I love to see how people experiment how to make better music. Not everything turns out to be good in the long term, but sometimes the experiments turn out to be excellent. Currently I see a lot more experimentation in classical music than I do in popular music.
@SergiuszWrotek8
@SergiuszWrotek8 4 ай бұрын
Yes. Today popular music is very conservative, indeed.
@cyberprimate
@cyberprimate Жыл бұрын
"Not much has really changed". Don Giovanni was a failure in Prague but a success a few months later in Vienna. And Mozart was a very popular musician in his lifetime. Things HAVE changed. For the record this festival is just a portion of what modern classical music is. Composers like Julian Anderson, Bacri, Holloway, Chin, Connesson, Muhly, Meltzer, Bates, Adès, Escaich, Hersant, Monk, Pärt, Beffa, Shaw, Lang, Tanguy and… (many others that have one foot solidly anchored in some past tradition) would NOT get invited there. In the 60's this kind of festival wouldn't have considered living composers such as Britten, Harrison, Khachaturian, Mompou or Dutilleux. This radical modernity is legit and sometimes exciting but it's just what it is, not the whole thing.
@aerohydra3849
@aerohydra3849 Жыл бұрын
I do think that's something that people miss when it comes to talking about "oh, such and such composition was also derided in its time, we are just repeating history". I really don't think that's true. Rite of Spring may have incited a riot during the ballet premiere but when the orchestral music was released standalone a bit later the work was called genius by almost everyone. Not to mention other Stravinsky Ballets like Petrushka and Firebird which were composed around the same time were extremely popular as well. I think people tend to "play up" the amount of drama and discord composers sowed, but in reality a lot of that drama is over exaggerated. Even the 12 tone serialists like Schoenberg and Berg I feel like are the polar opposite of modern avant-garde music- 12 tone was all about subtlety, embracing form and structure instead of resorting to shock tactics and bombasticism.
@cyberprimate
@cyberprimate Жыл бұрын
@@aerohydra3849 Berg especially.
@willcorff
@willcorff Жыл бұрын
I think the best music that will come from all of this will take the old structures of yesterday's music, and utilize the new chaos and groundbreaking sounds of today to make something even more beautiful. But who knows? The real question is, if music is a mirror of history, what does this music say about us today?
@chong2389
@chong2389 Жыл бұрын
“Beauty in music is too often confused with something that lets the ear lie back in an easy chair. Many sounds that we are used to do not bother us, and for that reason we are inclined to call them beautiful. Frequently-possibly almost invariably-analytical and impersonal test will show that when a new or unfamiliar work is accepted as beautiful on its first hearing, its fundamental quality is one that tends to put the mind to sleep.” -Charles Ives
@nilsfrederking62
@nilsfrederking62 Жыл бұрын
Classical music (Renaissance to late Romantic) is based on acoustic properties and our anatomy and perception of sound. While there is a certain variance, there is clearly an aesthetic aspect to harmonic sounds and the interaction of these. This interaction of pitches is quite fascinating in a sense very simple and extremely complex at the same time. Everybody who tried to write something of similar quality like a Chopin Nocturne will understand what I mean. The balance between harmonic and dissonant is crucial.
@prototypeinheritance515
@prototypeinheritance515 Жыл бұрын
​@@nilsfrederking62 You know even wagner delayed the resolution as much as possible. this is just the natural evolution of music
@이상호-p3c
@이상호-p3c Жыл бұрын
@@prototypeinheritance515 yet it was in the boundary of tonal music. Until the Schönberg it was fine. Although he composed atonal musics, he yet maintained the structures so we could hear and follow what he composed. But contemporary music, we can’t even catch up the progress. It’s like just hearing an irritating combination of noise. You guys will say it’s just perfect depiction of natural sounds, but in fact, natural sounds are based on the constant ratio between notes and the constant vibration ratio of those notes.
@nilsfrederking62
@nilsfrederking62 Жыл бұрын
@@prototypeinheritance515 It is all a question of dosis. And Wagner used consonant tonal chords, that is exactly what I spoke of. He also is very much in the tradition of tension between consonance and dissonance.
@andredelacerdasantos4439
@andredelacerdasantos4439 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure there were tons of people asleep during Beethoven's 9th symphony premier. They must have been shocked when the rest of the audience burst into applause in the middle of the movements.
@williamcutter3346
@williamcutter3346 Жыл бұрын
Respectfully....there have NEVER been RULES in music...only norms. People forget that when familiar composers like Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms...etc...were writing music....THEY were being experimental (i.e. Mozart - "Dissonant Quartet"; Beethoven, Late string quartets...to name a few...) and audiences were not always thrilled with the result. The problem today is most audience members are not frequent concert-goers as was the case in the 17-18th centuries). Have a LOT more to say on this topic...but I'll save it for another time.
@ye_zus
@ye_zus Жыл бұрын
While I agree with the point about Mozart's Don Giovanni not being whistled immediately after the performance, the issue is Don Giovanni CAN be whistled, it has a tune, a strong melody, whereas much modern classical is more focused on texture and new sound qualities etc. There is less focus on melody, which (along with rhythm) is the one thing people can take home. As good as an "experience" listening can be, to truly cement songs in popular consciousness the music needs to live in people's memories. Unfortunately the more complex and textural the music, the less it can be recalled. This major difference is probably due to the intended audience. Don Giovanni was the popular album of its time. Modern classical is written for a learned audience familiar with the classical canon, not a lay person simply wanting entertainment. As long as modern classical is written as part of classical music discourse and not to entertain lay people, its influence will remain squarely within its current bounds as an avant-garde legacy.
@antoniorpereira
@antoniorpereira Жыл бұрын
It seems to me that it goes beyond music. It's like we live in an atonal society, an aperspectival society, with no home nor direction. We have no message to convey, no beauty to evoke, nothinh sacred to devote our lives and our music to. Just a bunch of people trying to invent new problems so they can come up with new solutions and be seen as heroes. We need to keep it simple, we need to go to get to our tonic, we need to return home.
@geoffstrowger9759
@geoffstrowger9759 Жыл бұрын
To me there's an economic issue. I spend a lot of effort getting to and from a concert and the cost of tickets is at the edge of my budget. I am NOT going to attend a concert where for half the time my aural sensibilities are assaulted by what is often times a cacophony. The result is that I fall back on recordings and and performers become less supported. I am certain I am not alone in this situation.
@HR_Racc
@HR_Racc 6 ай бұрын
When people finally get over this crap they will be forced to play actual music again.
@henryopitz3254
@henryopitz3254 Жыл бұрын
Contemporary "classical" music WILL lead to the death of classical music. People are simply afraid to say the truth; Most contemporary "classical" music is awfully bad.
@acr08807
@acr08807 Жыл бұрын
Why does everyone call music that almost nobody enjoys "intimidating?" "Unappealing" is the appropriate word.
@garrysmodsketches
@garrysmodsketches Жыл бұрын
"You think the pizza that I made tastes terrible? Well you are just intimidated by it, you close-minded philistine."
@ericaspitzfaden4280
@ericaspitzfaden4280 11 ай бұрын
I’m a fan of new music and appreciate you covering it.
@alexlewis5365
@alexlewis5365 Жыл бұрын
I've tried pretty hard to listen to modern classical music and will continue to give it a chance to make friends with my ears. But it's just not what I'm interested in. I guess what I do love about it though, is that there is so much variety to classical music. That's always a good thing.
@chrisrevel2801
@chrisrevel2801 Жыл бұрын
Except that in this " modern " classical field there are more gate keepers than anywhere else ... There isn't that much variety , it follows the lineage of " composers " like boulez who made a fortune being funded by tax payers money in France and Germany . Their " music " has never been popular ( for good reasons ) and is even widely mocked by most people .
@Horatio_on_the_Beat
@Horatio_on_the_Beat Жыл бұрын
@@chrisrevel2801 Should tax payer’s money support music this type of music?
@chrisrevel2801
@chrisrevel2801 Жыл бұрын
@@Horatio_on_the_Beat Tax payers money shouldn't be used to make someone like pierre boulez rich , he is basically a meme to most people ( who pay taxes ) . It is always the same thing , public funds rarely go to unknown talented creator and without that system it would be harder to get the highly unpopular wrongly named " avant garde " stuff .
@dabeamer42
@dabeamer42 Жыл бұрын
Hey Nahre -- one more point that I think gets left out of talks like this. Performing music is almost always more interesting and fulfilling than just listening. Back in college, I was in a group called "New Vocal Arts Ensemble", where we did some way-out stuff...in the mid-1970's. I found that I didn't really like listening to most of the stuff we performed, but *performing* it -- that was always interesting.
@matthewszymanski7037
@matthewszymanski7037 Жыл бұрын
Good observation. I've also noticed that I love playing classical music, but it's not my go-to for listening. Probably because I mostly listen to music in the car or other settings with background noise, and it's hard to focus on it or pick out all the details. I usually listen in depth to classical pieces I'm trying to learn or that I'll be experiencing in an upcoming concert.
@PeaceNinja007
@PeaceNinja007 Жыл бұрын
@@matthewszymanski7037 That makes sense. Idk anyone who'd listen to classical music on their way to the beach to have a good time with friends lol .. But there may be some that do, who knows lol
@danwiesdamageinc
@danwiesdamageinc Жыл бұрын
In 1971, Frank Zappa had The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at his disposal for the soundtrack of 200 Motels. Many people were appalled at what The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra participate in. Compared to some of the more modern compositions, 200 Motels is downright traditional.
@thebrickton1947
@thebrickton1947 Жыл бұрын
Zappa spoke of the snobbery of the orchestra, much like the inherent snobbery of these present day entitled avant-gardists
@JonathanAcierto
@JonathanAcierto Жыл бұрын
This brings me back to my music study days in college at Purdue University where our professor (G. Bradley Bodine) would play us his contemporary pieces and they just blew my mind. He also talked about festivals like there where hearing a triad was a rare thing. Thanks for the video!
@Opuskrokus
@Opuskrokus Жыл бұрын
Composers are killing classical music by writing stuff nobody wants to listen to. Here in Sweden composers get works commissioned from state funded orchestras to be played one time and never again. That's just artificial life support. Other art forms generally left the experimentation after the 60s and went back to (slightly altered) consonance. Classical music never did. That's why people aren't consuming classical music anymore, as the are say literature. You DO need references. There's no way you can understand and enjoy something if it all is new and strange to you.
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
Sure you can.
@jjgeoffphhcinkkllee
@jjgeoffphhcinkkllee Жыл бұрын
I mean, I write for the most part as though I am living in Germany or Austria-Hungary circa 1900. I have nothing to do with the contemporary "scene".
@lecomar7220
@lecomar7220 Жыл бұрын
The interest in that type of music seems to be miniscule (I would have loved some data on that) and it can only be realised due to major subsidies from government as it seems to me. Additionally this seems to be especially true for european contemporary music and less so for american. I would've wished for a more critical view on that aspect.
@ronald3836
@ronald3836 Жыл бұрын
Glad to see I'm not the only one concluding that this is government subsidies at work.
@lecomar7220
@lecomar7220 Жыл бұрын
​@@ronald3836 right back at you! I think it is also important to notice, that subsidies for culture are not generally wrong and bad completely (although should always be scrutinized) but the imbalance here between relevance and financing from government is just mind boggling and frankly wrong.
@chantingt
@chantingt Жыл бұрын
The difference between instrumental and choral music, being text, allows choral music to continually change into a new unique form without abandoning pallatable harmonic structure. I highly recommend talking with choral conductors and composers about these differences...the voice as an instrument, i have found, can display an ocean of heart like no wind or string or other instrument can
@KS-rh3qq
@KS-rh3qq Жыл бұрын
Thank you Nahre. It is one of the best videos made about classical music and us today. For me, classical music is/was always the treasure of musical creations that resisted contemporary taste. I think it takes more than the combination of instruments and players trained in a certain method playing in a technically perfect building to bridge the time. The fact that people of today and people of other centuries enjoy the same creation makes it classical even if that music isn't on the same complex level as it is today. That doesn't mean experimental won't be classical, but it's up to the next generations to discover the classical value of the experiments we do. ( It's not about definitions. We all are able to read books or use a dictionary).
@DavidMiller-bp7et
@DavidMiller-bp7et Жыл бұрын
Good video. Exploration of important topic. Remember that "at one time, all music was new." If it speaks something to you, it's good. Let's remain open and flexible, not closed and pre-judging. Excellent treatment of the context. Everything in the universe is dynamic, constantly moving and changing. Why is music different?
@SergiuszWrotek8
@SergiuszWrotek8 4 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@Jose-gq9bt
@Jose-gq9bt Жыл бұрын
Have you ever thought about making videos interviewing living contemporary composers?
@hobermaas4166
@hobermaas4166 Жыл бұрын
It feels like classical instrumentation is trying to follow what electronic music is doing. Lots of textural instrumentation, without the public actually being there to crave it or even understanding it.
@d3l_nev
@d3l_nev Жыл бұрын
I think people don't crave noise you meant
@Jay-el9iz
@Jay-el9iz Жыл бұрын
The problem with contemporary classical music ie experimentation is that it's fun to play but not fun to listen to. I swear to God, most of the time I can only feel confusion, anxiety, directionlessness, and not in a positive, enriching or heart-wrenching way but just in an... uncomfortable way.
@aidandavis7657
@aidandavis7657 Жыл бұрын
the public shouldn't have to understand it. and imo they don't really need to, or rather there isn't anything of worth to be understood, just stupid intellectual arguments. music shouldn't be some intellectual exercise pushed by the academic elite.
@BrandonPhilips
@BrandonPhilips Жыл бұрын
At least with most off beat experimental electronic music only one person’s time is used to make it. So much of this classical experimental stuff is unlistenable AND uses up multiple instrumentalists effort.
@aidandavis7657
@aidandavis7657 Жыл бұрын
@@BrandonPhilips so damn true, hit the nail right on the head, even worse that they seem to have convinced themselves that that is a worthy use of their time and effort. they have talent, but they waste it making that???
@theniii
@theniii Жыл бұрын
Big difference, classical music used to be popular, and most people enjoyed it. Same thing doesn't apply here, not even close.
@zootook3422
@zootook3422 Жыл бұрын
I get so inspired and full of hope watching this. The major difference between "classical" music shown here and most other modern produced music - is that so many people are contributing with their emotions in a single performance. It's so powerful. There are wonderful music everywhere but there is an untapped stream of listening experience within contemporary classic music. And, oh, I so much want to visit Hamburg Elbphilhamonie!
@simonrodriguez4685
@simonrodriguez4685 Жыл бұрын
This is the best comment section I’ve seen in a while! Thank you Nahre for opening such interesting conversations.
@dylanmcdermott1110
@dylanmcdermott1110 Жыл бұрын
I wish the conservations were better; it's mostly people getting pissed off at each other. That's a reflection of the commenters, not the creator.
@Spockee616
@Spockee616 10 ай бұрын
Right, no rules. But completely freedom means chaos.
@DanielKurganov
@DanielKurganov Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the interesting video and your great channel in general. In my opinion, it’s dying (or dead, depending on your vantage point), because no one will ever put [most of] this on their Spotify playlist to enjoy except maybe some small slice of other contemporary composers, period, the end. I’m confused why no conversations about contemporary music/with composers ever tries to contend with that fact.
@RaymondDoerr
@RaymondDoerr Жыл бұрын
You are right about this
@SO-ym3zs
@SO-ym3zs Жыл бұрын
People have been sounding the death knell of classical music for decades. (Norman Lebrecht made a career out of it.) It's nothing to worry about. It's still around, still being created, performed, recorded, and loved. And with classical music's uniquely strong--indeed, almost all-consuming and defining--obsession with its past and its canon, it's normal that there will be friction and misunderstanding (or antipathy) when it comes to current experimental classical music. And if someone comes to classical music via Mozart or Tchaikovsky and finds joy in those styles and sound-worlds, it's no surprise--and no problem--if they don't get (or want to get) a contemporary avant-garde piece.
@kathychenyinggao4519
@kathychenyinggao4519 Жыл бұрын
Anyone who has seen the 3:30AM line at Carnegie Hall just get a rush ticket to hear Yuja Wang's Rachmaninoff Marathon, you know that classical music is nor dying, it is very much alive and thriving.
@SelectCircle
@SelectCircle Жыл бұрын
There's a fraud. What they want to see is her prancing around in lingerie without any underwear. Talent-wise - she's a little better than your best local piano teacher.
@ulugozkan9502
@ulugozkan9502 Жыл бұрын
For playing yes but new compositions are really very bad, anti musical, cold, theoretical and remarkably less interesting than jazz and even some pop rock.
@sea-ferring
@sea-ferring Жыл бұрын
Thank you! You don't have to love new and experimental music nor do you have to enjoy it. But you should appreciate that it's there and that people are willing to push artistic boundaries. Like you so beautifully said, "...there's a limit to what we can understand about our current times while we are living through it..." - so much of what we consider in western art music as normative was completely experimental and not widely accepted when it was composed. Time moves on and the mainstream adapts - I hear music playing in the supermarket today that was underground and avant-garde in the 1980s.
@SergiuszWrotek8
@SergiuszWrotek8 4 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@harmonicamick908
@harmonicamick908 8 ай бұрын
I respectfully disagree with almost every word I just heard. The reason that so much modern music (avant-garde, or call it what you will) is so difficult (actually, unpleasant) is precisely because it has abandoned so many of the rules that allow an ordinary, non-specialist person to understand and enjoy what they are listening to. One of the contributors said that what I have just outlined allows composers to explore new ways of expressing themselves. While that may be true, it is problematic for at least two reasons. 1) The Abolition of so many tried and tested conventions has made a great deal of music (which is organised sound) indistinguishable from noise (which is not). See 'Voice Leading: The Science Behind A Musical Art' by David Huron for a detailed and fascinating discussion of the difference. 2) Each and every piece that I, for example, have ever written and am currently writing uses functional tonal harmony, and yet each and every one of them is a new way of expressing myself: none of my pieces have ever been written by anyone else, or me, before. They are (despite their Neopolitan chords and viio7/V's and what have you) completely original. To tear the language apart would like be what doing I have in this sentence, simply sake for of it. In any case, if someone were to hear one of my pieces in, say, 200 years' time would it matter to them whether it had been written in 2024, 1924 or 1724? I think not. That is something which is completely missed by 'modern' composers: they, almost to the last man and woman, seem to be obsessed with the 'now'. That, in my view, takes precedence over their music, or, more specifically, its place in the canon. The difference between their music and, say, Strivinsky's Rite or Messian's Turangalilia is that the latter two understood that tension and release (be it harmonic, textural or some other aspect of the music) is dependent on the familiar in order for those two aspects of the music to have any meaningful effect. It is the most basic lesson that you learn when writing second species counterpoint, albeit on a much grander scale: you can't have the light without the dark. So much of modern music just sounds like the latter.
@LittleBigDebbie
@LittleBigDebbie Жыл бұрын
This is one of your best videos yet. Im pumped to listen to every song featured here. Is there any playlist from this festival available on yt? Thanks, nahre!
@bobooten
@bobooten Жыл бұрын
"All the good music has already been written by people with wigs and stuff." Frank Zappa
@thebrickton1947
@thebrickton1947 Жыл бұрын
He was a clever guy
@tmo8320
@tmo8320 Жыл бұрын
Four years ago, you did a video reimagining classic video game music. In light of this video taking about the state of classical music, I would love to see you cover the “rediscovery” of classical / orchestral music through video games and films. Concerts like The Final Fantasy Orchestra or Video Games Live sell out to global audiences who have found joy in seeing epic game scores performed live and accompanied by flashy and fun visuals. We’ve been to several such concerts here in the DC area (Myerhoff Symphony Hall and Strathmore Arts Center). I wish more people knew about this. I’ve always appreciated classical music and video game scores have revitalized my love of live performance. Even my wife enjoys the game score concerts and she does NOT play any video games 😂
@armucoartworks1732
@armucoartworks1732 Жыл бұрын
I hope younger people are viewing this video. I'm an old vintage man playing and listening all genre of music. I think there a big problem how music is explained. All we hearing , seeing, smelling, feeling is interpretation in our brain. Knowledge of human brain last 2 decade shows us how it is really working. "Our brain is not a recorder" , it is just interpretation and combination of feelings. For me sound design and music is like painting or cooking. Putting things together and looking how does it feeling. 14ms is average time for sound wave to reach the brain. Being open minded nothing else matter. If you love or hate music or sound is more what other are saying than what you are feeling.
@Anthonyprinciotti
@Anthonyprinciotti Жыл бұрын
Since we humans are pattern-seeking mammals, the chances of survival for an art that consciously eschews perceivable context would appear to be slim. Stravinsky explored this issue in "The Poetics of Music": “I have no use for a theoretic freedom. Let me have something finite, definite - matter that can lend itself to my operation only insofar as it is commensurate with my possibilities. And such matter presents itself to me together with limitations. I must in turn impose mine upon it. So here we are, whether we like it or not, in the realm of necessity. And yet which of us has ever heard talk of art as other than a realm of freedom? This sort of heresy is uniformly widespread because it is imagined that art is outside the bounds of ordinary activity. Well, in art as in everything else, one can build only upon a resisting foundation: whatever constantly gives way to pressure, constantly renders movement impossible."
@ottokarvonschnallenburg2572
@ottokarvonschnallenburg2572 Жыл бұрын
So, I could play "al dente" in my first violin lesson 40 years ago😁
@hippo71124
@hippo71124 Жыл бұрын
Me looking at my old cello… but that al denté also reminds me so much of electric guitar’s (particularly rock type) pick scratching. Music is such an interesting and ever evolving ‘thing’!
@stevejohnson1685
@stevejohnson1685 Жыл бұрын
I've been a choral performer in the LA Phil's Green Umbrella concerts, and have seen audiences embrace or utterly reject "bleeding edge" music. "Survivor bias" will determine, in a century, what people think of classical music in the early 21st century; the rest will be left for 22nd century musicologists to mull over. Thanks for featuring Eric Whitacre near the end - love his stuff! You may also enjoy music by Jasper Randall as performed by Los Robles Master Chorale: kzbin.info?search_query=lrmasterchorale+randall
@Олег89-ю5й
@Олег89-ю5й Жыл бұрын
Nahre, you are the best!!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise with us. To me personally modern classical music is Joe Hisaishi. Modern experimental avant-garde stuff is very painful for me to listen to. I love music that makes me experience beautiful feelings and emotions deep inside my heart and soul. And modern crazy, wild and extreme avant-garde stuff doesn't do that for me. The feelings and emotions it makes me experience are not pleasant and beautiful, but opposite to that. But Hisaishi's music brings tears to my eyes, melts my heart and touches my so so deeply. Thank you for your deep and professional insight. I admire you and your channel.
@tedl7538
@tedl7538 10 ай бұрын
Yes, Joe's music has always been an essential, defining element of Miyazaki's oeuvre for sure! 🎵🎶🎵
@Rik77
@Rik77 Жыл бұрын
An issue is that this new music is inaccessible. What I mean is the music is extremely expensive for an orchestra to buy or perform. In Beethovens time, orchestras all over Europe were buying music more easily and performing the latest works. Its too expensive to do that today which stops people hearing the music live. Until composers and publishers stop charging hundreds of dollars to perform this music, it remains unknown and locked behind closed doors. Thats why most orchestras focus on older music as it is much less financially risky to perform.
@patlilburn5251
@patlilburn5251 Жыл бұрын
Lots to think about…loved the point about “new doesn’t equal classical” along with the point a commenter made that many composers were famous in their day but forgotten now. Only time can make clear what new form will become classic. It feels like the music conversation is highly analogous to the art one: there has to be evolution but the work has to be somehow accessible…but not too accessible…
@Vasioth
@Vasioth Жыл бұрын
Working in a classical concert venue I can tell you right now that the contemporary classical composers obsessed with atonal music and showcasing it does not go down well with most audiences. Many stay at the bar or turn up to the 2nd half to hear Beethoven or Dvorak or Brahms or whatever is playing and I can't blame them. In music universities many courses give 1 year to tonal music and then focus on atonal music. Most students can't compose a simple piece in ternary form, or are incapable of motivic development, or the skill sets saught after in the film and games industry (creating tonal music that colours scenes and environments in film, tv and video games). Classical music suffers from the same very narrow repertoire of tonal music, and then suffers from incredibly bad atonal music that only a musicologist who sees the world through a lense of total deconstruction could enjoy. People will chat about Chopin, Ravel and Debussy for years to come, I honestly struggle to name contemporary composers that don't write semi-tonal music (David Bruce springs to mind as one of the few I like).
@KevinLeroyGrant
@KevinLeroyGrant Жыл бұрын
As a new composer, I write stuff that sounds cool to me. For me, I think making music that is pleasing and interesting is one of my biggest goals. While there's a lot of merit in the avant-garde style pieces, I kind of don't find writing in that sort of way being appealing. But the cool thing about those experimental pieces is that while a lot of it may not land, some of the techniques can be used for future music in different contexts. Contemporary musical techniques are can have really cool effects and the way that they are used is what can make one new composition different from your favorite one to an average one.
@donross5352
@donross5352 Жыл бұрын
All of these examples sound exactly like Berio and Boulez sounded like 50 years ago. These supposedly « fresh new and challenging sounds « represent an orthodoxy more rigid and conformist than mid nineteenth century painting. And, no, having a computer program trigger a delay or attaching political text to it doesn’t make it a dramatic ongoing evolution. And, hey, I’m a huge fan of Takemitsu and Messiaen, but it’s a looong way from new.
@Pablo-gl9dj
@Pablo-gl9dj 6 ай бұрын
Quite often I need one second of music to say "that's Bach" or "that's Beethoven. With modern music I need one second of sound to say "that's awful "
@lepidoptera9337
@lepidoptera9337 2 ай бұрын
You already needed that in Mozart's time. Salieri has been made fun of for good reason.
@ModusVivendiMedia
@ModusVivendiMedia Жыл бұрын
Tonality and rhythm in music isn't something arbitrary, it's based in science and perception (as everyone who has studied intervals at even the most rudimentary level knows). Even most non-western forms of music which don't use our western tonal system still mostly SOUND quite consonant most of the time by centering around similar intervals, or at least fluctuating around a single note, note area, or scale (ie, a pentatonic scale, or some mode). Even if tonality has been stretched with increasing use of dissonance, or is sometimes modified with microtonality, the dissonance doesn't really mean much (aside from just sounding generally unpleasant, which I see as a sound effect, not a musical meaning) unless it is in contrast to consonance. Rhythmically, too, regularity of pulse is standard around the world. Sometimes rhythms can be complex or uneven, but there is still a recognizable pattern. Even if the pattern shifts and leaves us off balance from time to time, we wouldn't be able to feel off balance if we hadn't started off feeling balanced in the first place (and the being off balance from time to time is part of what makes that music interesting). In the field of signal processing, when trying to identify "signal" from "noise", the "signal" needs to have regularity and pattern (ie, repetition, like a waveform or a code), or else it becomes indistinguishable from noise, and can't be identified by a computer. (This is one reason random number generators are so important for cryptography: a pseudo-random number sequence with even a slight bit of repetition or statistically-identifiable pattern makes codes far easier to crack.) On a more macro level, so, too, with sounds that we hear in order for us to recognize them as "music" instead of just "noise" or "confusion" or "irritation" or "boredom" or "randomness" or "someone messing around without any meaning" (I used to do that on the piano sometimes when I was young, and my kids do that today, and it is TOTALLY UNIMPRESSIVE when a "professional" composer wastes my time with more of the same). If they are consistently atonal and have no recognizable rhythmic pattern, our brains tend to identify them as "noise" or "random notes" rather than "signal" or "music". (When people have said that rock music sounded like noise, it was mainly because of the extreme distortion of the amplified instruments, which IS noise compared to the original clear sound of the instruments or voices, and perhaps some sloppy drumming or other playing, particularly in forms like punk, or else some of the random noodling around in between pieces, and not due to a lack of regular rhythm or recognizable harmony in the compositions themselves. Rock music compositions generally have simple consonant melodies and harmonies and strictly repetitive 4/4 patterns as a rule, so musically could not easily be considered to be noise.) To me, increasingly throughout the 20th century, academic "classical" music strayed from being music and into the realm of sound experiments. I have nothing against experiments, but found it quite disappointing that it took so long for most composers to learn much useful from the results, because they kept flailing away at it for decade after decade, and still are. I strongly disagree that a lot of modern and contemporary music will EVER catch on, because it is contrary to how physics and our biology and psychology work. I think the claim that people weren't whistling tunes of the popular classical and romantic composers after the first heard them is pretty ignorant (and wishful thinking?), because that is EXACTLY what most people do (and have always done) after first hearing such music. There have occasionally been complaints from critics about premieres of certain works by now-great composers being inscrutable noise in some way, but 1) those composers were already very popular in their time, so people had to have already really liked their music (or nobody would have heard or been writing about the premiere in the first place), 2) there's a good chance the performances at some of those premieres were TERRIBLE by modern standards (think of your local elementary school orchestra, and how they can make great music sound awful), and 3) critics will be critics and hyperbolize for any number of reasons. I agree that many modern and contemporary pieces may present interesting soundscapes and sound effects, but I am not sure I consider them all to be valuable MUSIC just because they consist of SOUND. Do people consider the sound effects of a movie to be "music", or only the score part of the movie's sound? If people want to simulate ice cracking in a semi-realistic way, great, it''s an interesting SOUND EFFECT, and I suppose surprising when created by orchestral instruments instead of being directly recorded from actual cracking ice with a microphone (or created with some other "foley" effect, or synthesized), but for me that may have crossed over from being "music" to being "sound effects created by musical instruments. What makes it music? (Just the fact that they were created with "musical instruments"?) What distinguishes it from a sound effect? All of this is borne out by what is popular, and 99.99% of the music that people around the world (and even fans of classical music) actually choose to spend their time listening to, or humming, is generally consonant in harmony and repetitive in rhythm (with some surprise and contrast thrown in to make it interesting). Composers can experiment all they want, but not everyone will agree that it is music (or music worth listening to), and audiences don't have to ever like it or even listen to it just because someone wrote it (or got a grant to write it).
@Fuliginosus
@Fuliginosus Жыл бұрын
I think the modern so-called classical music will soon be forgotten, and the real classical music that lives on will be popular music like that of Benny Goodman, the Beatles or John Williams--music from earlier eras that people continue to love.
@Duskelion
@Duskelion Жыл бұрын
Yes John williams famous contributor of new ideas to the classical world hahahaha You do have a point regarding beatles. The contributions to music and recording they were at the forefront will be remembered
@HumanTouchArt
@HumanTouchArt Жыл бұрын
i wouldnt say its dying .. its probably just evolving i think lately there was a rise in popularity with all the movie scores and modern composoers like hans zimmer and john powell etc who are bringing old styled music mixed with modern sounds to the table ....
@lightyagami1058
@lightyagami1058 Жыл бұрын
Those aren't classical composers.
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando Жыл бұрын
@@lightyagami1058 No and Yes.
@OdaKa
@OdaKa Жыл бұрын
@@lightyagami1058 their music can become classical if classical folks decide to perform those scores, maybe?
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Animals are dying for sure 👉 Dominion (2018)
@lightyagami1058
@lightyagami1058 Жыл бұрын
@@OdaKa Can't say for certain since I'm not aspiring towards film composition. But it feels more like a quote of some sort though feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
@darkbloomvivian1087
@darkbloomvivian1087 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video!! It helped me as an outsider appreciate the medium much more
@samuelchan699
@samuelchan699 Жыл бұрын
I never thought classical music is dying. Howard Shore, John Williams, Hans Zimmer, and other contemporary composers should be part of the discussion of 'modern' classical music. Before movies there was opera... the popular form of entertainment has just changed over the centuries.
@bobsteiner9209
@bobsteiner9209 Жыл бұрын
No rules? If I were to write a book and follow no rules (e.g., if I wrote "yhrk" for "tree"), nobody could make sense of what I wrote. There would be no communication. That's how I feel about much new music. Traditional music is language--or a variety of languages that can evolve over time. All music must make some kind of sense. It communicates and touches the heart only if it incorporates rules. All the rest is noise.
@SelectCircle
@SelectCircle Жыл бұрын
Okay - now take a deep breath. Relax. ... Feel ready now to appreciate what doesn't make sense when you're tense?
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