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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 04:25 |
Kestrel wrote:
I was working on a blog post related to this subject a few weeks ago but postponed finishing it because I wanted a little more information from a friend. What it was was a comparison between a friend and I and how that reflects our taste in music. the gist of it was that since I have lots of free time, I can take the time to lsiten to an album and reflect on it and read about it. She, on the other hand, is a very busy person who I think views music as something to get her moving, singing and dancing to give her a break from all the work. She doesn't have the time to listen to "heavy stuff" like Supper's Ready or a Plague of Lighthouse Keepers and the like. Of course, this doesn't explain everything, but I believe it's a significant factor. |
That is an interesting idea, you should go ahead and write it!
I wonder whether it's a case, though, of having time, or making time? I know plenty of people who are impatient with music. They don't actually like the idea of sitting down for half an hour or more to listen to a whole album, and would probably prefer to use their time some other way (whereas I like - or maybe even need! - to do that almost every day!). I guess that old chestnut of introversion v extroversion could come into play, too. I often feel I need time on my own at the end of the day, and find solitude and music together very therapeutic. There are plenty of people who would find that boring or that the time dragged, and would feel better having a lively face to face conversation or something like that. If it is a case of the practicalities of having enough time, then yes, I have lots of free time. In my job I have an office to myself and can listen to any music I fancy while I work (previous jobs I've had were either in open plan offices, involved audio typing (i.e. wearing a headset to hear recorded dictation) or required too much concentration to have music on at the same time... now I have a job that barely requires a right hemisphere, so I can work and listen at the same time!! ) [Come to think of it, I have no idea which parts of the brain are required for enjoying music, but you get what I mean... ] I wonder also about what kind of feelings different people want from music. Some people feel a great benefit from hearing dark, heavy, mournful music, whereas that would make others feel psychically uncomfortable. If your 'feeling preference' is wanting to feel energised, cheerful, bouncy, etc., then I guess some grandiose conceptual work is probably not for you... And similarly, if you want to feel a million and one complex thoughts and emotions spiralling through your mind like a dictionary in a tornado, well... cheery chart music may not fit the bill...
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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1065
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 05:18 |
Certif1ed wrote:
There are just too many excellent thoughts floating around in this thread, and I must admit, I feel I need to re-read the main post in order to get a bit more out of it - it's kinda like a piece of music you need to hear a few times before you properly "get" it
Hehe, too convoluted by half, that's me! And here comes my long and unwieldy response...
So I'll dive in by picking on the first post that jumps out with something I want to respond to;
Dean wrote:
Another excellent blogette Miss M.
I don't believe you can educate people to appreciate music beyond a certain level – the ‘height’ of this barrier varies from person to person, but is intrinsic and immovable. In other words, people are born with a natural potential and through learning can achieve that potential, but cannot reach beyond it.
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I do not believe this to be true.
I think that we all have an infinite capacity for everything, it's just that some take longer than others.
I'm a big fan of "Jonathan Livingston Seagull".
I think most of us have a larger capacity for *things in general* than we realise, or want to realise. There is an annoying 'culture of mediocrity' at work here - people denying or hiding their abilities in order not to stand out... I think that could well mask many people's skills in this area, and of course others.
I love this famous quote by Marianne Williamson (except for the God parts... I'd change those bits for 'humanity', maybe...).
I don't think everyone has limitless potential, though. Some people are better than others at some things.
Dean wrote:
Of course, this ability is not one-dimensional or simply defined; it is complex and has many facets, which is why some can listen to repetitive drone and detect the subtleties while some can listen to technical-flash and admire the virtuosity and some can do both while others can manage neither. So even if you learn how to listen, the ability to do it was always there, to quote Doris Lessing: “That is what learning is. You suddenly understand something you've understood all your life, but in a new way.”
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That's a good quote - I often feel like that when I listen to, write or play music, read a book, attend an interesting lecture, play with my 4 year-old child... er... anything, really. Not always, just often.
I suppose that would explain my reactions above.
<pseuderie> You've just reminded me of the importance of language in all of this. Human beings exist in a kind of word soup. Our world is filtered through words: things, ideas, states, situations, all get transformed from the tangible to the intangible - from their real-world state to an in-mind 'meaning with sounds attached'. How do we prove we understand something? By explaining it 'in our own words'. You might be well aware, in a non-verbal way, of some concept or other, but until you hear/read/speak it in words, it's not really... what's the word I'm looking for... defined? Packaged, in a recognisable form, separate from everything else? Something like that! </pseuderie> (I think too much!!! )
Dean wrote:
In the personality test thread it is evident that a significant majority of us are in the IN-- category (Introvert & Intuitive) - the key there is not the Introversion, which I think is possibly more indicative of the type of people who frequent forums, but the Intuitiveness that says we instinctively ‘get’ abstraction, so unconsciously relate what we are listening to above it’s entertainment value; so some have that innate ability to hear something dissonant and arrhythmic and associate it in context and therefore not dismiss it as unmusical while others can carry a melody from one section of a multi-part epic into another and recognise the variances (again often at a subconscious level) as being more than just simple repetition.
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After many years of study, I'm not sure what's conscious and what's subconscious - and it really doesn't matter. I think that when you learn consciously, you absorb unconsiously, so learning selectively is important - you need to focus on what you're interested in, and if what you're interested in includes highly dissonant music, then it becomes easier to appreciate. If you only like a "good tune", then you probably won't like Schoenberg or Stockhausen.
When I first encountered those latter composers, I felt a brick wall of resistance go up - how could anyone consider THAT music? I didn't think I could ever like a piece like "Pierrot Lunaire".
Having studied it, I now feel like I can appreciate it better - and can certainly distinguish between pieces I like and dislike in music that is extremely dissonant - my wife asks how on earth I can even tell the difference between some of the pieces, as it all sounds like noise to her - and that's the key really. I've learned how to appreciate it not because I like it, but because it interests me.
...and as a result, I've come to really like some of it. This again strays near to the idea that 'you have to want to like it', with some things. Maybe with all things... There has to be some reason for you to devote your time, energy and interest to decoding something, exploring something; especially if it's a bit weird or complicated. I wonder what on earth I'd be listening to if music didn't come with 'other stuff'... because sometimes, it's the 'other stuff' that piques your curiosity, gives you the inclination to be more patient with the music than you might be otherwise (well, that's how it is for me sometimes, anyway!).
I think you've hit the nail on the head, too, re. distinguishing between the pieces you like and dislike (that happen to be fairly avant garde and dissonant!). And... when you can have some kind of judgement about whether something is 'good' or not (i.e. it succeeds in what the composer was aiming for, is a good example of its genre, features good musicianship/interpretation, or whatever), with that being quite separate from whether you personally like it - well, that's a pretty high level of listening skill. For a lot of people, it's 'good' if they like it, and 'bad' if they don't.
I could now start blithering on about subjectivity and objectivity, but I don't feel up to it right now!!
Dean wrote:
(Of course if this IN-- personality trait was a generalised prerequisite to liking Progressive Rock then only 11% of the population stands any chance of ever liking it ).
I cannot class myself as a musician as such I freely admit to not being a musician; I am inept at playing any musical instrument and my singing skills are negligible; I have no formal musical education and everything I now know I learnt as I went along. So I do not possess the ability to analyse music to the nth degree like some of the people here can. Yet I do make music, something a started doing very late in life after many years of being a listener, (whether this music has value to ears other than mine is not something I can judge or comment on), so from my own point of view I’d say that any ability to create music stems from the innate ability to listen to it rather than the other way around.
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http://www.livescience.com/strangenews/080627-carrying-tune.htmlWell, almost all! This stuff is just too fascinating. One thing I've always found weird is how, when a bunch of people sings in a group ('Happy Birthday' or something like that), often it starts off in one key and ends up in quite another... there's this weird, diffident thing going on as if everyone wants someone else to be in charge of keeping the group in tune... It's probably a confidence thing. In this country people are a bit shy about singing, I think. In some cultures, people sing all the time... It's easier to be in tune and sound good if you care a bit less about embarrassing yourself, and just let go and do it. Unless you're one of those people who doesn't realise they're out of tune, I guess...
I'd suspect that we're all similarly capable of analysis and composition - we all do musical analysis whenever we hear a piece, even if it's "I like this", or "The singer sounds lousy", or "This sounds like Rap to me, not Rock".
Analysis gets really groovy when you start getting into why you hold those opinions, but frequently begins with an opinion. Real analysis begins with a question.
Formal musical education is great, if that's what you want, and there's no doubt in my mind that it significantly enhances musical appreciation. I can't prove that of course, and to anyone that doesn't share the same education as me, it's hard to demonstrate exactly what I get out of it that they don't, or how it could be in any way "more" or enhanced - but, as a performer and composer from a very early age (I started playing at 4 and writing at 6), I certainly know that there are more things I enjoy and notice in music than most - which is jolly nice for me
I absolutely agree with all these points - except possibly the 'musical education' one. My musical education almost completely destroyed my confidence around music. It almost put me off wanting to listen to anything non-straightforward. It made me feel like I was a rubbish listener, a rubbish composer, and a rubbish human being. But happily (well, I think so...) the 'real me' resurfaced once I got away from that kind of atmosphere. A good teacher can open the whole world to you, a bad teacher... let's not even go there.
Anyway, I firmly believe that anyone can be a composer (although I hate that word, it sounds too formal. I call myself a tuneslinger! ). Almost all children make up songs when they are very small, but unfortunately, most of them get told to shut up. Not me, I got listened to and encouraged by my parents, and I haven't shut up yet. I like to think of 'makin' up stuff' as being very much akin to imaginative play. Unfortunately, a lot of people avoid that sort of thing once they are grown up. They are missing out.
Dean wrote:
(to put things into perspective, I'm currently listening to a Enya tribute album ) |
...until now, I always considered you a man of taste... I'm going to say it again. Chacun à son goût! |
Edited by song_of_copper - July 22 2008 at 05:21
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micky
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 02 2005
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Points: 46833
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 06:09 |
song_of_copper wrote:
So, with that preamble concluded, here's the main question of the post:
Is your super-epyck-fantastique music-listening ability an innate gift, or a skill you have learned?
I don't mean your *ability to enjoy music* in a general sense - of course that is hardwired into almost all human beings - here I'm talking about the conscious application of ears and brain to the business of deciphering something that cannot necessarily be appreciated as 'aural wallpaper'. (Forget music as background - to my mind that is like preferring chewing gum to proper food...)
Going back to those broad categories, I think many people see listening as a passive experience, and perhaps that is just what many people are used to. For many, music is just there to ameliorate silence, rather like a nice shade of paintwork enlivens your living room wall... But there is a huge difference between the almost subliminal awareness of a nice colour and the curiosity and engagement you might feel if you looked at an interesting painting. In order to wring more than the obvious visual pleasure out of the experience of looking at a painting, we need to use responses of a higher order than just recognising colours and straightforwardly figurative shapes, and it's just the same with music.
So that's the area I'm interested in with this post. Now for a rephrasing of the actual question: have you always felt able to turn your consciousness towards an onslaught of music (reasonably complex music, at that) and discern things in it, or is this something you have learned how to do?
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interesting... would be lying if I said I have ever put any thought into it myself. I am not a life-long progger.. don't swear on the book of prog.. that is reserved for my passion for traditional American music. It is only one of many types of music I love. I just love the people here so I got a campsite here. I have always been a bit of pinball ... I don't turn my consciousness towards music. .or specific types of music. My consciousness turns me... which I guess is the answer to your question. I am a sensory person.. not an intellectual one. Complex.. simple... means nothing to me. Only how the music hits me right here *points to heart*. That is why I have to love prog as a genre ... the diversity of moods, rhythms, sounds... everything. That can speak to me regardless of what kind of mood I am in. Not sure if I missed the point of your question or not.. but I tried... having first cup of coffee and cigarette for the day. So my mind isn't up to speed yet. Nice blog by the way.
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1065
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 12:12 |
micky wrote:
interesting... would be lying if I said I have ever put any thought into it myself. I am not a life-long progger.. don't swear on the book of prog.. that is reserved for my passion for traditional American music. It is only one of many types of music I love. I just love the people here so I got a campsite here.
I have always been a bit of pinball ... I don't turn my consciousness towards music. .or specific types of music. My consciousness turns me... which I guess is the answer to your question. I am a sensory person.. not an intellectual one. Complex.. simple... means nothing to me. Only how the music hits me right here *points to heart*. That is why I have to love prog as a genre ... the diversity of moods, rhythms, sounds... everything. That can speak to me regardless of what kind of mood I am in.
Not sure if I missed the point of your question or not.. but I tried... having first cup of coffee and cigarette for the day. So my mind isn't up to speed yet.
Nice blog by the way.
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Thanks Micky! Your points are all excellent. The most important thing, of course, is whether you like what you're hearing or not, and nobody needs a musicological textbook to decide that! But it seems to me like you have a very open ear. Some people have a very narrow view of what constitutes music, and find it hard to 'get' anything that doesn't fall neatly within the parameters of what they're used to. The fact that you're able to appreciate a wide variety of different styles, without thinking too hard about it, probably just goes to show that you're a naturally gifted listener! My trouble is that, having had a natural, sensory response to something (for really, I don't sit there *thinking* whilst music is playing, and I can't stand music that seems 'too intellectual', it has to feel human...), I start wanting to know why I'm responding that way. Then I turn up here and ask a lot of damn fool questions.
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 04 2005
Location: Malaria
Status: Offline
Points: 89372
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 12:53 |
song_of_copper wrote:
Kestrel wrote:
I was working on a blog post related to this subject a few weeks ago but postponed finishing it because I wanted a little more information from a friend. What it was was a comparison between a friend and I and how that reflects our taste in music. the gist of it was that since I have lots of free time, I can take the time to lsiten to an album and reflect on it and read about it. She, on the other hand, is a very busy person who I think views music as something to get her moving, singing and dancing to give her a break from all the work. She doesn't have the time to listen to "heavy stuff" like Supper's Ready or a Plague of Lighthouse Keepers and the like. Of course, this doesn't explain everything, but I believe it's a significant factor. |
That is an interesting idea, you should go ahead and write it!
I wonder whether it's a case, though, of having time, or making time? I know plenty of people who are impatient with music. They don't actually like the idea of sitting down for half an hour or more to listen to a whole album, and would probably prefer to use their time some other way (whereas I like - or maybe even need! - to do that almost every day!). I guess that old chestnut of introversion v extroversion could come into play, too. I often feel I need time on my own at the end of the day, and find solitude and music together very therapeutic. There are plenty of people who would find that boring or that the time dragged, and would feel better having a lively face to face conversation or something like that. If it is a case of the practicalities of having enough time, then yes, I have lots of free time. In my job I have an office to myself and can listen to any music I fancy while I work (previous jobs I've had were either in open plan offices, involved audio typing (i.e. wearing a headset to hear recorded dictation) or required too much concentration to have music on at the same time... now I have a job that barely requires a right hemisphere, so I can work and listen at the same time!! ) [Come to think of it, I have no idea which parts of the brain are required for enjoying music, but you get what I mean... ]
I wonder also about what kind of feelings different people want from music. Some people feel a great benefit from hearing dark, heavy, mournful music, whereas that would make others feel psychically uncomfortable. If your 'feeling preference' is wanting to feel energised, cheerful, bouncy, etc., then I guess some grandiose conceptual work is probably not for you... And similarly, if you want to feel a million and one complex thoughts and emotions spiralling through your mind like a dictionary in a tornado, well... cheery chart music may not fit the bill...
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M., I will get back to you with your reply to my previous post but firstly, I shall comment on the above. This is very interesting... I can be impatient with music. Not to the same degree as not wanting time to listen to a whole album. I never (or rarely) stop an album halfway through, I always play every single note (even if the album has a track I do not particularly care fore). However, I always feel guilty listening to music. When I listen to most music, I try to listen to it without interruptions and whilst I'm not doing anything else. This is why I get guilty, because I am one of those people who feels guilty being idle (although I am idle more often than I appreciate) and music (and television) do not feel constructive to me. i can therefore only really listen to a few albums a night (usually before I go to bed, when I'm tired). I wish I could listen to music and be able to read, or work at the same time but I find the music takes over in the end. A few classical pieces seem to work but even those take over and I start tapping my fingers and nodding my head, when I'm supposed to be doing something a little bit more constuctive. As for the other point... this is also an interesting one. The other day I was in a great mood, I was feeling bouncy and for some odd reason, I wanted to play darker music. Not to get my mood back down but just because I knew I could listen to it and it wouldn't affect me all that much. Of course though, I can listen to darker music in almost any mood but it helps if you're happy when you do listen to it. Bouncy music often annoys me to be honest. It depends on just how uplifting it is. Pop music generally annoys me and makes me upset. I will say more later, when I'm not being disturbed.
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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1065
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 17:51 |
James wrote:
M., I will get back to you with your reply to my previous post but firstly, I shall comment on the above.
Haha, I shall await that with interest...
This is very interesting... I can be impatient with music. Not to the same degree as not wanting time to listen to a whole album. I never (or rarely) stop an album halfway through, I always play every single note (even if the album has a track I do not particularly care fore). However, I always feel guilty listening to music. When I listen to most music, I try to listen to it without interruptions and whilst I'm not doing anything else. This is why I get guilty, because I am one of those people who feels guilty being idle (although I am idle more often than I appreciate) and music (and television) do not feel constructive to me. i can therefore only really listen to a few albums a night (usually before I go to bed, when I'm tired). I wish I could listen to music and be able to read, or work at the same time but I find the music takes over in the end. A few classical pieces seem to work but even those take over and I start tapping my fingers and nodding my head, when I'm supposed to be doing something a little bit more constuctive.
Goodness me, music not constructive...? Heavens, man, what are you doing here?!
Well, idling isn't such a crime. It can lead to interesting thoughts, if nothing else!
I know what you mean about music taking over and preventing you doing anything else. My job (and occasionally, mindless chores) is the only thing I can do whilst listening to music. But that's because my job IS a mindless chore, most of the time...
I think a lot of people nowadays crave MULTIFARIOUS INPUT. I do, sometimes. In the morning, I eat breakfast, read and listen to the radio (not music radio, though) at the same time... It can feel a bit... odd... concentrating on one thing at a time!
As for the other point... this is also an interesting one. The other day I was in a great mood, I was feeling bouncy and for some odd reason, I wanted to play darker music. Not to get my mood back down but just because I knew I could listen to it and it wouldn't affect me all that much. Of course though, I can listen to darker music in almost any mood but it helps if you're happy when you do listen to it. Bouncy music often annoys me to be honest. It depends on just how uplifting it is. Pop music generally annoys me and makes me upset.
Hmm, that's a good point. Cheerful music can be pretty annoying if it doesn't match your mood. And dark music needn't necessarily be humourless, which might come across more clearly if you weren't feeling overly sombre.
I will say more later, when I'm not being disturbed.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 19:37 |
song_of_copper wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
There are just too many excellent thoughts floating around in this thread, and I must admit, I feel I need to re-read the main post in order to get a bit more out of it - it's kinda like a piece of music you need to hear a few times before you properly "get" it
Hehe, too convoluted by half, that's me! And here comes my long and unwieldy response...
So I'll dive in by picking on the first post that jumps out with something I want to respond to;
Dean wrote:
Another excellent blogette Miss M.
I don't believe you can educate people to appreciate music beyond a certain level – the ‘height’ of this barrier varies from person to person, but is intrinsic and immovable. In other words, people are born with a natural potential and through learning can achieve that potential, but cannot reach beyond it.
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I do not believe this to be true.
I think that we all have an infinite capacity for everything, it's just that some take longer than others.
I'm a big fan of "Jonathan Livingston Seagull".
I think most of us have a larger capacity for *things in general* than we realise, or want to realise. There is an annoying 'culture of mediocrity' at work here - people denying or hiding their abilities in order not to stand out... I think that could well mask many people's skills in this area, and of course others.
I love this famous quote by Marianne Williamson (except for the God parts... I'd change those bits for 'humanity', maybe...).
I don't think everyone has limitless potential, though. Some people are better than others at some things.
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I learn something new on a regular basis and take great pleasure from that in itself, but alas there are subjects where I hit a mental wall and no amount of study will ever achieve understanding. However, however much I believe that there is a limit to learning, it is never going to stop me from trying to prove that notion wrong.
I think this is the difference between the Good and the Great - for example most guitarists I've met are good, some are great, but only a few can achieve exceptional greatness - I don't think that just anyone can be a "Hendrix" purely by learning/practice.
song_of_copper wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Dean wrote:
Of course, this ability is not one-dimensional or simply defined; it is complex and has many facets, which is why some can listen to repetitive drone and detect the subtleties while some can listen to technical-flash and admire the virtuosity and some can do both while others can manage neither. So even if you learn how to listen, the ability to do it was always there, to quote Doris Lessing: “That is what learning is. You suddenly understand something you've understood all your life, but in a new way.”
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That's a good quote - I often feel like that when I listen to, write or play music, read a book, attend an interesting lecture, play with my 4 year-old child... er... anything, really. Not always, just often.
I suppose that would explain my reactions above.
<pseuderie> You've just reminded me of the importance of language in all of this. Human beings exist in a kind of word soup. Our world is filtered through words: things, ideas, states, situations, all get transformed from the tangible to the intangible - from their real-world state to an in-mind 'meaning with sounds attached'. How do we prove we understand something? By explaining it 'in our own words'. You might be well aware, in a non-verbal way, of some concept or other, but until you hear/read/speak it in words, it's not really... what's the word I'm looking for... defined? Packaged, in a recognisable form, separate from everything else? Something like that! </pseuderie> (I think too much!!! )
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Interesting idea, as an engineer I generally prove my understanding of a concept by aplication rather than re-wording - if I can use it then I've probably understood it, even if I cannot explain it.
song_of_copper wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Dean wrote:
In the personality test thread it is evident that a significant majority of us are in the IN-- category (Introvert & Intuitive) - the key there is not the Introversion, which I think is possibly more indicative of the type of people who frequent forums, but the Intuitiveness that says we instinctively ‘get’ abstraction, so unconsciously relate what we are listening to above it’s entertainment value; so some have that innate ability to hear something dissonant and arrhythmic and associate it in context and therefore not dismiss it as unmusical while others can carry a melody from one section of a multi-part epic into another and recognise the variances (again often at a subconscious level) as being more than just simple repetition.
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After many years of study, I'm not sure what's conscious and what's subconscious - and it really doesn't matter. I think that when you learn consciously, you absorb unconsiously, so learning selectively is important - you need to focus on what you're interested in, and if what you're interested in includes highly dissonant music, then it becomes easier to appreciate. If you only like a "good tune", then you probably won't like Schoenberg or Stockhausen.
When I first encountered those latter composers, I felt a brick wall of resistance go up - how could anyone consider THAT music? I didn't think I could ever like a piece like "Pierrot Lunaire".
Having studied it, I now feel like I can appreciate it better - and can certainly distinguish between pieces I like and dislike in music that is extremely dissonant - my wife asks how on earth I can even tell the difference between some of the pieces, as it all sounds like noise to her - and that's the key really. I've learned how to appreciate it not because I like it, but because it interests me.
...and as a result, I've come to really like some of it. This again strays near to the idea that 'you have to want to like it', with some things. Maybe with all things... There has to be some reason for you to devote your time, energy and interest to decoding something, exploring something; especially if it's a bit weird or complicated. I wonder what on earth I'd be listening to if music didn't come with 'other stuff'... because sometimes, it's the 'other stuff' that piques your curiosity, gives you the inclination to be more patient with the music than you might be otherwise (well, that's how it is for me sometimes, anyway!).
I think you've hit the nail on the head, too, re. distinguishing between the pieces you like and dislike (that happen to be fairly avant garde and dissonant!). And... when you can have some kind of judgement about whether something is 'good' or not (i.e. it succeeds in what the composer was aiming for, is a good example of its genre, features good musicianship/interpretation, or whatever), with that being quite separate from whether you personally like it - well, that's a pretty high level of listening skill. For a lot of people, it's 'good' if they like it, and 'bad' if they don't.
I could now start blithering on about subjectivity and objectivity, but I don't feel up to it right now!!
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Isn't this curiocity or quest for musical knowledge an innate ability in itself? Not everyone wants to explore Advant Garde music, not everyone cares enought about music to want to know what makes it music, what drove the composer to create those dissonant sounds (*meh* not all abstract music is dissonant). There must be something in the make-up of some people that makes abstract music accessible to them (even if they don't actually like it) that is not present in others.
song_of_copper wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Dean wrote:
(Of course if this IN-- personality trait was a generalised prerequisite to liking Progressive Rock then only 11% of the population stands any chance of ever liking it ).
I cannot class myself as a musician as such I freely admit to not being a musician; I am inept at playing any musical instrument and my singing skills are negligible; I have no formal musical education and everything I now know I learnt as I went along. So I do not possess the ability to analyse music to the nth degree like some of the people here can. Yet I do make music, something a started doing very late in life after many years of being a listener, (whether this music has value to ears other than mine is not something I can judge or comment on), so from my own point of view I’d say that any ability to create music stems from the innate ability to listen to it rather than the other way around.
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http://www.livescience.com/strangenews/080627-carrying-tune.htmlWell, almost all! This stuff is just too fascinating. One thing I've always found weird is how, when a bunch of people sings in a group ('Happy Birthday' or something like that), often it starts off in one key and ends up in quite another... there's this weird, diffident thing going on as if everyone wants someone else to be in charge of keeping the group in tune... It's probably a confidence thing. In this country people are a bit shy about singing, I think. In some cultures, people sing all the time... It's easier to be in tune and sound good if you care a bit less about embarrassing yourself, and just let go and do it. Unless you're one of those people who doesn't realise they're out of tune, I guess...
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A friend of mine's father is the director of the local youth choir and he contends that anyone can be taught to sing... if that were true then we wouldn't need auto-tune. But as that article points out: "While some tone-challenged people may benefit from training, Dalla Bella doubts that they can all learn to carry a tune".
song_of_copper wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
I'd suspect that we're all similarly capable of analysis and composition - we all do musical analysis whenever we hear a piece, even if it's "I like this", or "The singer sounds lousy", or "This sounds like Rap to me, not Rock".
Analysis gets really groovy when you start getting into why you hold those opinions, but frequently begins with an opinion. Real analysis begins with a question.
Formal musical education is great, if that's what you want, and there's no doubt in my mind that it significantly enhances musical appreciation. I can't prove that of course, and to anyone that doesn't share the same education as me, it's hard to demonstrate exactly what I get out of it that they don't, or how it could be in any way "more" or enhanced - but, as a performer and composer from a very early age (I started playing at 4 and writing at 6), I certainly know that there are more things I enjoy and notice in music than most - which is jolly nice for me
I absolutely agree with all these points - except possibly the 'musical education' one. My musical education almost completely destroyed my confidence around music. It almost put me off wanting to listen to anything non-straightforward. It made me feel like I was a rubbish listener, a rubbish composer, and a rubbish human being. But happily (well, I think so...) the 'real me' resurfaced once I got away from that kind of atmosphere. A good teacher can open the whole world to you, a bad teacher... let's not even go there.
Anyway, I firmly believe that anyone can be a composer (although I hate that word, it sounds too formal. I call myself a tuneslinger! ). Almost all children make up songs when they are very small, but unfortunately, most of them get told to shut up. Not me, I got listened to and encouraged by my parents, and I haven't shut up yet. I like to think of 'makin' up stuff' as being very much akin to imaginative play. Unfortunately, a lot of people avoid that sort of thing once they are grown up. They are missing out.
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I also believe that anyone can compose music - producing a basic melody is too stupidly simple for it to be otherwise - but elevating that to the level of a symphony is something else.
I use to be wary of the "composer" tag too, but now it doesn't bother me... the music I create is composed, it has structure and form, ergo, I compose. (I use to call my compositions "constructions" because that is essentially the process I use, but that sounded even more pretentious )
song_of_copper wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Dean wrote:
(to put things into perspective, I'm currently listening to a Enya tribute album ) |
...until now, I always considered you a man of taste... I'm going to say it again. Chacun à son goût! |
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tsk! listening to someone singing in a made-up language, whatever next.
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What?
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
Status: Offline
Points: 25210
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Posted: July 23 2008 at 23:19 |
Excellent blog Melissa and especially not bad for a sleep deprived soul to have written something this good. "Is your super-epyck-fantastique music-listening ability an innate gift, or a skill you have learned?" I guess , like Rob, for me it was probably a bit of both. At first (as a young child up until my mid teens reallyI really couldn't understand and appreciate any complex music really, but nor could I stand listening to whatever was deemed chart topping stuff. As James noted, a lot of musicians don't even like prog, and I know many people who are in fact quite skilled on their instrument that don't like prog, or will appreciate the band if it has a connection to what they Excellent blog Melissa and especially not bad for a sleep deprived soul to have written something this good. "Is your super-epyck-fantastique music-listening ability an innate gift, or a skill you have learned?" I guess , like Rob, for me it was probably a bit of both. At first (as a young child up until my mid teens reallyI really couldn't understand and appreciate any complex music really, but nor could I stand listening to whatever was deemed chart topping stuff. As James noted, a lot of musicians don't even like prog, and I know many people who are in fact quite skilled on their instrument that don't like prog, or will appreciate the band if it has a connection to what they listen to normally, by what I mean say for eg. a metalcore listener might like Protest The Hero which is a Tech/Extreme Prog metal band listed in the archives, but those people might only like it because of the hardcore/metalcore asthetic and have no appreciation for the progressive side. 1. I am indeed a musician. I am completely self taught though, although I don't think that makes me any less than someone with formal training. I can sight read to a small degree, I can compose small neo-baroque/classical style pieces for electric guitar, have a very good understanding and have spent much time studying the relationship between scales/modes/arpeggios/chords (I know a lot of classically trained musicians who are several grades into their theory that don't know as much about me on the subject), can even negotiate jazz chord progressions, can transcribe entire songs by ear and have pretty good relative pitch ability. I'm currently aiming to become a virtuoso electric guitarists in the next few years and hopefully become a full time music teacher too. I was brought up on blues, so I really like soulful guitar solos but I am still getting accustomed to the style of jazz fusion guitarists, like Allan Holdsworth. He's all about speed and tapping, mostly and it just feels a lot less soulful to me^That was obviously a quote from James. What is "soulful" "Emotive" etc etc is obviously completely subjective. I too listened to a lot of blues back in the day and even now that listening experience has influenced my guitar playing, but I'll be honest in that a lot of a blues solos are just, dull and unexciting for me. Allan Holdsworth is indeed, a noted Jazz Fusion virtuoso guitarists and a hero of mine, with his astounding legato technique (sorry James, Holdsworth didn't actually use much tapping throughout his career at allWinkTongue) and smooth, flowing soloing style. An no, he isn't all about speed, as their is a lot of slow melodies in his playing too, but due to chromatic passing tones sometimes these melodic lines don't sound overly melodic to musically untrained ears. James's knowledge of musical concepts, theory, level of aural ability etc is obviously not up to par with mine and as I've noted before a lot of non musicians can find this virtuoso type playing cold and sterlie, while to some musicians (such as myself) it's incredibly compelling and emotive to listen to. To my ears, Allan Holdsworth's solos are incredibly moving and to me the astounding technique he possesses is merely just a tool for self expression and isn't about speed for speeds sake. And indeed, for me this was part of the "learn to listen" (learning music theory, learning to play guitar) process for me 2. I like a lot of different prog styles/genres, from the quirky Canterbury style of Soft Machine, crushing heavy Tech/Extreme Prog metal bands, Symphonic, Avante Garde Prog (James ,I've been to busy lately to get some RIO stuff, I promise I'll get some alright, Mother is home, so I'll see about some UZ stuff, so don't blast me!Tongue) Post Rock/Metal/Math Rock/Experimental Metal etc etc. As a musician, I can appreciate music from extremely melodic, to music which is atonal/dissonant (Considering I enjoy Arnold Schoenberg's 12 tone serialism works, I think can handle a little..... okay a lot of atonality/dissonance), but I guess lately I've been listening to a lot of stuff which is really a balance between the two, just depends on how I feel or whatever the week is like really. 2b. Am I a rebel? I guess throughout the years I've been told my taste in music sucks, that I should play a different style on guitar, but I stuck to my own guns and it was well worth it in the end, since it's helped me to come closer to finding out who I am, although now I share a common taste with some friends who are into heavier prog styles, although that's a minority of my friend's really (I think that answered itConfused, wasn't 3. I like both complex and simple music , but the beauty in prog is, the seemingly simple stuff is still more complex than some might believe, so I guess I meant more the "simple but yet somewhat complex" music rather than just straight out as simple like a pop song or something like that. I like Post Rock/Metal, so nope, ambient stuff doesn't bore me at all, in response to I can't remember who it was that said ambient stuff bored them somewhat. I'll probably add more to this discussion later when I can think up some more stuff
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darkshade
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: November 19 2005
Location: New Jersey
Status: Offline
Points: 10964
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Posted: July 24 2008 at 23:48 |
OMG OMG i have so much to say and add to this discussion, but i need a little time to gather my thoughts. i will say this though
i can like a song with no odd times, no key changes, no crazy instrumental section or anything really complex AS LONG as the song is good, and has lasting appeal. These are not necessary things to have in order to have a good, interesting song, (i do like and prefer them) but not necessary.
I'll add more later, probably in a few hours...
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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1065
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Posted: July 25 2008 at 06:25 |
HughesJB4 wrote:
Excellent blog Melissa and especially not bad for a sleep deprived soul to have written something this good. "Is your super-epyck-fantastique music-listening ability an innate gift, or a skill you have learned?"
I guess , like Rob, for me it was probably a bit of both. At first (as a young child up until my mid teens reallyI really couldn't understand and appreciate any complex music really, but nor could I stand listening to whatever was deemed chart topping stuff. As James noted, a lot of musicians don't even like prog, and I know many people who are in fact quite skilled on their instrument that don't like prog, or will appreciate the band if it has a connection to what they listen to normally, by what I mean say for eg. a metalcore listener might like Protest The Hero which is a Tech/Extreme Prog metal band listed in the archives, but those people might only like it because of the hardcore/metalcore asthetic and have no appreciation for the progressive side.
Yes, personal taste is a big factor. I didn’t intend for this to be about prog alone – more like any music that’s reasonably sophisticated compared to generic chart fodder. That could include… well, almost anything! I’m sure you are right about what elements people prefer to concentrate on in music – the bits that seem familiar or make a link of some sort with what they already know. At least, at first. It’s interesting coming across all these very mixed subgenres – a bit of this, a bit of that, a bit of the other… I wonder how possible it is to unpick all of that and decide which is the metalcore component and which is the progressive component (probably easier for someone with good music theory knowledge… I’m completely hopeless at that stuff!). Or is it a case of ‘progressive structure’ dressed up in metalcore timbres…
1. I am indeed a musician. I am completely self taught though, although I don't think that makes me any less than someone with formal training.
Well, I’d say that’s pretty amazing, being able to teach yourself those things. Most of us can’t even teach ourselves to tie our own shoelaces.
I can sight read to a small degree, I can compose small neo-baroque/classical style pieces for electric guitar, have a very good understanding and have spent much time studying the relationship between scales/modes/arpeggios/chords (I know a lot of classically trained musicians who are several grades into their theory that don't know as much about me on the subject), can even negotiate jazz chord progressions, can transcribe entire songs by ear and have pretty good relative pitch ability. I'm currently aiming to become a virtuoso electric guitarists in the next few years and hopefully become a full time music teacher too.
Neo-baroque/classical style pieces for electric guitar… that sounds very cool. Personally, I’m useless at the technical side of music, and have absolutely zero natural aptitude for it (other than having a pretty good ear, but then I’m a singer… that’s kind of compulsory!). So… I’m well impressed! Good for you! And it’s great that you want to be a music teacher, as well as a virtuoso. Far too many people have the desire to be lauded for their talent, without thinking that it might be good also to help other people discover their particular talent.
I was brought up on blues, so I really like soulful guitar solos but I am still getting accustomed to the style of jazz fusion guitarists, like Allan Holdsworth. He's all about speed and tapping, mostly and it just feels a lot less soulful to me
^That was obviously a quote from James. What is "soulful" "Emotive" etc etc is obviously completely subjective. I too listened to a lot of blues back in the day and even now that listening experience has influenced my guitar playing, but I'll be honest in that a lot of a blues solos are just, dull and unexciting for me.
I suppose some people really are just sticking to the basic pattern with that stuff, which probably would be pretty dull to someone who knows a lot about guitar playing, and music generally.
Allan Holdsworth is indeed, a noted Jazz Fusion virtuoso guitarists and a hero of mine, with his astounding legato technique (sorry James, Holdsworth didn't actually use much tapping throughout his career at allWinkTongue) and smooth, flowing soloing style. An no, he isn't all about speed, as their is a lot of slow melodies in his playing too, but due to chromatic passing tones sometimes these melodic lines don't sound overly melodic to musically untrained ears. James's knowledge of musical concepts, theory, level of aural ability etc is obviously not up to par with mine and as I've noted before a lot of non musicians can find this virtuoso type playing cold and sterlie, while to some musicians (such as myself) it's incredibly compelling and emotive to listen to.
This is exactly what I’m getting at. To a lot of people, that kind of thing might sound like an onslaught of musical data that their brain has no idea what to do with. But someone with either enough knowledge or enough innate understanding of these things can hear all kinds of nuances that the average listener might miss.
To my ears, Allan Holdsworth's solos are incredibly moving and to me the astounding technique he possesses is merely just a tool for self expression and isn't about speed for speeds sake. And indeed, for me this was part of the "learn to listen" (learning music theory, learning to play guitar) process for me
Whether or not someone starts out with the skill to understand this sort of thing, I think maybe the curiosity to go out and learn about it is the thing that’s hardwired. No-one can make you learn anything – even if you’re not teaching yourself, you have to give admittance to the information that’s being handed to you. And of course all the theory is meaningless until you hear it in action.
2. I like a lot of different prog styles/genres, from the quirky Canterbury style of Soft Machine, crushing heavy Tech/Extreme Prog metal bands, Symphonic, Avante Garde Prog (James ,I've been to busy lately to get some RIO stuff, I promise I'll get some alright, Mother is home, so I'll see about some UZ stuff, so don't blast me!Tongue) Post Rock/Metal/Math Rock/Experimental Metal etc etc. As a musician, I can appreciate music from extremely melodic, to music which is atonal/dissonant (Considering I enjoy Arnold Schoenberg's 12 tone serialism works, I think can handle a little..... okay a lot of atonality/dissonance), but I guess lately I've been listening to a lot of stuff which is really a balance between the two, just depends on how I feel or whatever the week is like really.
I think it was ill-advised exposure to Schoenberg that did for me when I was 17 and had a music teacher who liked to show off (every week, he’d force me to hear something even more brutal and unfamiliar!). I’m still yet to explore all those serious modern composers. You have my admiration.
2b. Am I a rebel? I guess throughout the years I've been told my taste in music sucks, that I should play a different style on guitar, but I stuck to my own guns and it was well worth it in the end, since it's helped me to come closer to finding out who I am, although now I share a common taste with some friends who are into heavier prog styles, although that's a minority of my friend's really (I think that answered itConfused, wasn't
Anyone who tells you that you should sound like anyone other than yourself is… well… wrong. That’s all. You seem to have very wide and varied tastes, so there can’t be many people with whom you have no taste in common at all.
3. I like both complex and simple music , but the beauty in prog is, the seemingly simple stuff is still more complex than some might believe, so I guess I meant more the "simple but yet somewhat complex" music rather than just straight out as simple like a pop song or something like that.
“Simple yet somewhat complex” – this is what I’ve been trying to put my finger on with the music I like best. I don’t know whether it’s just because a really good composer/musician can make something that’s fairly complex sound very elegant and uncluttered (and in that way, seem simple – or ‘simply presented’, perhaps), or whether it’s one of those things where the elements that are left out, or implied, become as significant as the elements that are emphasised, or whether it’s simply that I am dumb and don’t understand music theory… but yeah. ‘Simple and complicated at the same time’ is a good description of some of my favourite music. If you can think of a better way to say that… let me know!
I like Post Rock/Metal, so nope, ambient stuff doesn't bore me at all, in response to I can't remember who it was that said ambient stuff bored them somewhat. I'll probably add more to this discussion later when I can think up some more stuff
Thanks for your input, and I’m sorry for the delayed response to it…
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Alucard
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 10 2004
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 3888
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Posted: July 25 2008 at 06:49 |
just a short one on "in and outs" :
one of my worst memories was seeing Kubrick's 'Space Odysee' utterly stoned (I had already seen the film dry) and also the beginning of the film was kind of groovy, when the monolith scene started, I began to see the decorum, the actors disguised as apes and I just couldn't switch back to let's say normal, emotional reception and was kind of bound by the 'technical' side of the film, which spoiled my pleasure extremely, also I learned quite a bit about making movies....fortunately that never happened to me with music....I normally receive both informations as a mixed package and unless I analyze sheetmusic I would never be thrilled only by the pure technical side if it doesn't touch me on a gut level...
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Tadpoles keep screaming in my ear
"Hey there! Rotter's Club!
Explain the meaning of this song and share it"
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
Status: Offline
Points: 25210
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Posted: July 25 2008 at 06:59 |
)
song_of_copper wrote:
HughesJB4 wrote:
Excellent blog Melissa and especially not bad for a sleep deprived soul to have written something this good. "Is your super-epyck-fantastique music-listening ability an innate gift, or a skill you have learned?"
I guess , like Rob, for me it was probably a bit of both. At first (as a young child up until my mid teens reallyI really couldn't understand and appreciate any complex music really, but nor could I stand listening to whatever was deemed chart topping stuff. As James noted, a lot of musicians don't even like prog, and I know many people who are in fact quite skilled on their instrument that don't like prog, or will appreciate the band if it has a connection to what they listen to normally, by what I mean say for eg. a metalcore listener might like Protest The Hero which is a Tech/Extreme Prog metal band listed in the archives, but those people might only like it because of the hardcore/metalcore aesthetic and have no appreciation for the progressive side.
Yes, personal taste is a big factor. I didn’t intend for this to be about prog alone – more like any music that’s reasonably sophisticated compared to generic chart fodder. That could include… well, almost anything! I’m sure you are right about what elements people prefer to concentrate on in music – the bits that seem familiar or make a link of some sort with what they already know. At least, at first. It’s interesting coming across all these very mixed subgenres – a bit of this, a bit of that, a bit of the other… I wonder how possible it is to unpick all of that and decide which is the metalcore component and which is the progressive component (probably easier for someone with good music theory knowledge… I’m completely hopeless at that stuff!). Or is it a case of ‘progressive structure’ dressed up in metalcore timbres…
Pretty much agreed there.
1. I am indeed a musician. I am completely self taught though, although I don't think that makes me any less than someone with formal training.
Well, I’d say that’s pretty amazing, being able to teach yourself those things. Most of us can’t even teach ourselves to tie our own shoelaces.
Well, I mainly watched a lot of just videos of virtuoso guitarists, and after a short while it occurred to me how those guys eventually got to their level of technique, so in 2005, I completely re learnt how to play guitar and focused on a lot of just scale exercises etc, until my fret hand technique became correct, more in line with classical guitar fretting hand technique I guess.
I can sight read to a small degree, I can compose small neo-baroque/classical style pieces for electric guitar, have a very good understanding and have spent much time studying the relationship between scales/modes/arpeggios/chords (I know a lot of classically trained musicians who are several grades into their theory that don't know as much about me on the subject), can even negotiate jazz chord progressions, can transcribe entire songs by ear and have pretty good relative pitch ability. I'm currently aiming to become a virtuoso electric guitarists in the next few years and hopefully become a full time music teacher too.
Neo-baroque/classical style pieces for electric guitar… that sounds very cool. Personally, I’m useless at the technical side of music, and have absolutely zero natural aptitude for it (other than having a pretty good ear, but then I’m a singer… that’s kind of compulsory!). So… I’m well impressed! Good for you! And it’s great that you want to be a music teacher, as well as a virtuoso. Far too many people have the desire to be lauded for their talent, without thinking that it might be good also to help other people discover their particular talent.
Well, I guess for where I want to go with my playing, learning the guitar linguo and theory is very much necessary. I have given free guitar lessons in the past, with good results actually, I've had a friend who went from playing simple metal tunes, just simply rhythm guitar, and now has good technical command of the instrument and has a reasonable understanding of theory, and can now think in actual notes rather than his previous "this fret position".
I was brought up on blues, so I really like soulful guitar solos but I am still getting accustomed to the style of jazz fusion guitarists, like Allan Holdsworth. He's all about speed and tapping, mostly and it just feels a lot less soulful to me
^That was obviously a quote from James. What is "soulful" "Emotive" etc etc is obviously completely subjective. I too listened to a lot of blues back in the day and even now that listening experience has influenced my guitar playing, but I'll be honest in that a lot of a blues solos are just, dull and unexciting for me.
I suppose some people really are just sticking to the basic pattern with that stuff, which probably would be pretty dull to someone who knows a lot about guitar playing, and music generally.
Well, over time, it just got less interesting to listen. I still love some blues, like Stevie Ray Vaughn , but then again he is known for having pretty good technical ability for a blues player, but I guess it was more the much older blues with more primitive levels of technique that bores me almost instantly now.
Allan Holdsworth is indeed, a noted Jazz Fusion virtuoso guitarists and a hero of mine, with his astounding legato technique (sorry James, Holdsworth didn't actually use much tapping throughout his career at all) and smooth, flowing soloing style. An no, he isn't all about speed, as their is a lot of slow melodies in his playing too, but due to chromatic passing tones sometimes these melodic lines don't sound overly melodic to musically untrained ears. James's knowledge of musical concepts, theory, level of aural ability etc is obviously not up to par with mine and as I've noted before a lot of non musicians can find this virtuoso type playing cold and sterlie, while to some musicians (such as myself) it's incredibly compelling and emotive to listen to.
This is exactly what I’m getting at. To a lot of people, that kind of thing might sound like an onslaught of musical data that their brain has no idea what to do with. But someone with either enough knowledge or enough innate understanding of these things can hear all kinds of nuances that the average listener might miss.
And that's exactly why I love being a musician, because it can give me a perspective non musicians can often miss out on.
To my ears, Allan Holdsworth's solos are incredibly moving and to me the astounding technique he possesses is merely just a tool for self expression and isn't about speed for speeds sake. And indeed, for me this was part of the "learn to listen" (learning music theory, learning to play guitar) process for me
Whether or not someone starts out with the skill to understand this sort of thing, I think maybe the curiosity to go out and learn about it is the thing that’s hardwired. No-one can make you learn anything – even if you’re not teaching yourself, you have to give admittance to the information that’s being handed to you. And of course all the theory is meaningless until you hear it in action.
Well, despite never being good at school (I've failed the last year of high school twice to be honest), I always loved learning on my own accord, so while I found it hard to get motivated to do an essay at school, to be able to sit there and just run through music theory on my own for hours and play 2-6 hours everyday has never been a problem
2. I like a lot of different prog styles/genres, from the quirky Canterbury style of Soft Machine, crushing heavy Tech/Extreme Prog metal bands, Symphonic, Avante Garde Prog (James ,I've been to busy lately to get some RIO stuff, I promise I'll get some alright, Mother is home, so I'll see about some UZ stuff, so don't blast me!) Post Rock/Metal/Math Rock/Experimental Metal etc etc. As a musician, I can appreciate music from extremely melodic, to music which is atonal/dissonant (Considering I enjoy Arnold Schoenberg's 12 tone serialism works, I think can handle a little..... okay a lot of atonality/dissonance), but I guess lately I've been listening to a lot of stuff which is really a balance between the two, just depends on how I feel or whatever the week is like really.
I think it was ill-advised exposure to Schoenberg that did for me when I was 17 and had a music teacher who liked to show off (every week, he’d force me to hear something even more brutal and unfamiliar!). I’m still yet to explore all those serious modern composers. You have my admiration.
Hehe, I'm no walking dictionary of the more modern composers, I'll tell you that much My favorites are probably Liszt and Chopin from the Romantic period, always beautiful and emotive music to me.
2b. Am I a rebel? I guess throughout the years I've been told my taste in music sucks, that I should play a different style on guitar, but I stuck to my own guns and it was well worth it in the end, since it's helped me to come closer to finding out who I am, although now I share a common taste with some friends who are into heavier prog styles, although that's a minority of my friend's really (I think that answered itConfused, wasn't
Anyone who tells you that you should sound like anyone other than yourself is… well… wrong. That’s all. You seem to have very wide and varied tastes, so there can’t be many people with whom you have no taste in common at all.
And that's something I've preached to people too, to pursue your own musical endeavors
3. I like both complex and simple music , but the beauty in prog is, the seemingly simple stuff is still more complex than some might believe, so I guess I meant more the "simple but yet somewhat complex" music rather than just straight out as simple like a pop song or something like that.
“Simple yet somewhat complex” – this is what I’ve been trying to put my finger on with the music I like best. I don’t know whether it’s just because a really good composer/musician can make something that’s fairly complex sound very elegant and uncluttered (and in that way, seem simple – or ‘simply presented’, perhaps), or whether it’s one of those things where the elements that are left out, or implied, become as significant as the elements that are emphasised, or whether it’s simply that I am dumb and don’t understand music theory… but yeah. ‘Simple and complicated at the same time’ is a good description of some of my favourite music. If you can think of a better way to say that… let me know!
Simplex?
No idea in this corner either, simple and complicated simultaneously is all I've got
S I like Post Rock/Metal, so nope, ambient stuff doesn't bore me at all, in response to I can't remember who it was that said ambient stuff bored them somewhat. I'll probably add more to this discussion later when I can think up some more stuff
Thanks for your input, and I’m sorry for the delayed response to it…
No problems.
And about the lack of emoticons showing up in words, that was because I copied and pasted what I wrote into Wordpad, and the day after when I completed my response, I pasted it back into the reply box and the emoticons obviously didn't show up as intended
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 04 2005
Location: Malaria
Status: Offline
Points: 89372
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Posted: July 25 2008 at 11:42 |
Simple yet complex = Koenjihyakkei
That's a perfect example for me.
I will get back to this thread later but I'm pushed for time right now.
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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1065
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Posted: July 25 2008 at 12:39 |
Dean wrote:
Interesting idea, as an engineer I generally prove my understanding of a concept by aplication rather than re-wording - if I can use it then I've probably understood it, even if I cannot explain it. |
Excellent point, and indicative of how utterly different two people's mental landscapes can be! I've no idea how many different 'thinking styles' there are, but maybe this is something else that has an impact on how different people approach their musical understanding... Some people will understand by doing (esp. those who pick up a guitar or whatever and have go themselves), others by explaining (like Yours Truly I guess, despite the lack of proper terminology!), and others still by some other manner, I'm sure!
Dean wrote:
Isn't this curiocity or quest for musical knowledge an innate ability in itself? Not everyone wants to explore Advant Garde music, not everyone cares enought about music to want to know what makes it music, what drove the composer to create those dissonant sounds (*meh* not all abstract music is dissonant). There must be something in the make-up of some people that makes abstract music accessible to them (even if they don't actually like it) that is not present in others. |
Oh yes, I think that must be true. But curiosity can be awakened and encouraged, or ignored and dampened. I suppose everyone has curiosity, but to varying degrees. (And not necessarily about music!)
Dean wrote:
A friend of mine's father is the director of the local youth choir and he contends that anyone can be taught to sing... if that were true then we wouldn't need auto-tune. But as that article points out: "While some tone-challenged people may benefit from training, Dalla Bella doubts that they can all learn to carry a tune". | I've heard of people who thought they were tone deaf being coaxed, via intensive training (mostly focused on listening skills, to tell whether they're hitting the right note, and physical awareness, i.e. knowing how various sounds 'feel' to produce), into being able to sing in tune, but it seems like a laborious process. Almost like re-learning a whole sense!
Dean wrote:
I also believe that anyone can compose music - producing a basic melody is too stupidly simple for it to be otherwise - but elevating that to the level of a symphony is something else.
I use to be wary of the "composer" tag too, but now it doesn't bother me... the music I create is composed, it has structure and form, ergo, I compose. (I use to call my compositions "constructions" because that is essentially the process I use, but that sounded even more pretentious) |
Oh, yes. Making up a basic tune is indeed stupidly simple. I think most people probably do it without even realising. Maybe it takes knowing you're doing it to get a simple melody into your conscious mind so you can work it up into a song. Obviously anything very much more complex (up to and including symphonies!) would need a musical education of some sort, because otherwise you wouldn't know the capabilities of various instruments, the structure you needed to adhere to in order to call it a symphony, how to write it all down... Songs, though, are probably part of basic human communication.
I really only write songs. Sometimes they go together to form longer pieces, for which you could use a fancy word like 'suite' or 'cycle', but I think even those terms are too high-falutin' for what I do!!
Dean wrote:
tsk! listening to someone singing in a made-up language, whatever next. |
Careful, now... do you want a bunch of aggrieved Magma freaks shouting "Wurdah!" at you?!
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Padraic
Special Collaborator
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Joined: February 16 2006
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Posted: July 28 2008 at 17:26 |
song_of_copper wrote:
So, with that preamble concluded, here's the main question of the post:
Is your super-epyck-fantastique music-listening ability an innate gift, or a skill you have learned?
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I wanted to think about this a bit before I crafted a response, but here's the bottom line answer: I learned it from my father. What did I learn? I learned that music was something one could take the time to sit down and appreciate, because that's exactly what he did: he was (still is, always has been) an audiophile, so after researching and getting fantastic components, speakers, etc. you obviously want to sit down and enjoy your "investment"...but I still learned from him to isolate the various instruments and hear what the musicians were doing, appreciate a clever turn of phrase in the lyrics of a song, or (as I got older and he got more into classical music) a bit more complex ideas such as variations on a theme. Funny thing is, not a single minute of all the music he played and I heard growing up was what we quasi-identify as "progressive rock" or "prog". My particular taste for that type of music I can only describe as innate (when I first heard Fragile by Yes at the age of about 11 or 12 there was an instant appreciation and "click", that elevated the music above all else I had experienced to date), I had to discover that type of music largely on my own and I knew almost nobody else that liked it. So for me it was the role model of my Dad that taught me to be a "Participant Listener", as it were, because that's exactly what he did, and it never occurred to me to be otherwise - and to be honest, I think there are degrees of this sort of characterization. "Proggers" would perhaps be on the high "participation" side of this scale (appreciation of complexity and patience for long compositions), but that's not to say that my wife and a lot of my friends can't sit and listen to music as well at their own level of "participation" - in fact, I know very few people who would probably be called "consumers", or whatever you call those for whom music is as much of a background noise as the little fan I run when I go to sleep. It's certainly next to impossible for those of us who frequent this forum to begin to conceive of living that way. Recap: that I have some level of musical listening ability is learned; that I apply those things to progressive rock/music is just my innate passion - being drawn to this music is not something I can explain. Of course, there's the whole topic of musical tastes changing over one's life and how previous experiences can shape the direction of one's musical journey...but that's for another blog.
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stonebeard
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Joined: May 27 2005
Location: NE Indiana
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Posted: July 28 2008 at 17:31 |
I just listen to prog for the women. What, do you guys actually like this stuff.
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sleeper
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 09 2005
Location: Entropia
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Points: 16449
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Posted: July 28 2008 at 19:22 |
May I start by saying that this is an impressive blog and has got me truly thinking like few things have in recent weeks. I guess a round of disembleing (spelling isnt one of my strong points, I think this may become apparent today ) on my own history is called for which will tie in to say latter in the post and may give a better perspective of where my musical habbits come from. <deep breath> Before I was 16 I can honestly say that music was very much a non-entity for me, the only times I listened to it was when a good friend of mine would bring his cheap stereo round and we'ed listen to the radio whilst playing on the PlayStation (thoughs days that we stayed in, anyway). Unfortunatly, the radio station we always had on was Galaxy ( , its a wonder I wasnt turned off from music altogether). I wouldnt say I hated it at the time, just didnt pay it any attention, I was 16 when I bought my first album, Red Hot Chili Peppers By the Way. I can remember that for about the next two years after this I was mildely into the realm of the then indy scene until a mate of mine lent me Dream Theaters Images and Words, closely followed by Scenes from a Memory and Symphony X'sThe Divine Wings of Tragedy and V: The New Mythology Suite. I was, without doubt, blown away on first listening to them as it was far and away very different and on first impression obviously far more complex than anything Coldplay was doing. Since then I've been on a bit of a quest to find more and more prog to listen to to the point where I am now buying about 3-5 albums per week, many of which I havnt heard a note of and am eagely anticipating the first listen. (Unserprisingly, this really seemed to kick off when I discovered this site, as my sig would attest to. Funny that ) As to the main question, the short answer is both, but again a bit more detail on me to give a betterview of my musical habits is needed. I may be about the only persson here that will say that the PS2 and GT3/4 have been instrumental in helpping me along with my prog appreciation, and no, its not for the sound track supplied by Feeder. I have distinct memories of spending time playing this game whilst having, in particular, The Mars Volta's De- Loused in the Comatorium on (around early 2005 then). Over those few months I became increasingly aware that my ability to concentrate on the minutae of the music as well as effectively play the game was increasing to the point that I can now do other thigs whilst listning to and concentrating a fair bit, though not totally, on the music (as I write this, I am listening to Dark Suns Existence and, hopefully, making something resembaling sense here). The point of my rambalings was to show that my ability to pick up on very different music to the norm, whether I have been exposed to something even remotly like it or not before, and like or at least appreciate is inate but my skill for detailed listening was something built up over time (and entirely by accident). Right, as for the seperate, and very interesting, points you've made: 1a. I wouldnt go so far to call my self a musician but I do attempt to play the bass (for as long as I've been into music I've seemed to focus on the rhythm section the most, whch might in part explain why it was Chili's that were the first band I ever bought a CD of) from time to time. I picked it up, really, in an attempt to emulate my favourite bands but it has since expanded to encompass a desire to have a better understanding of what it is I'm listening to beyond "that was interesting". In this regards I'm definitely with TGM:Orb and Dean in that prog can inspire people to take up musicianship to help them understand what their heroes are playing, though I doubt this would be the first and main consideration when picking up that axe for the first time, but I'd be surprised if it didnt creep in quickly. Conversly, prog by its very nature would garner at least some proffesional interest from musicians and those that have even some small exerience of plonking a piano or picking a guitar may find it more imediatly attractive than those that dont have any musical experience. 1b. I am, without doubt, a usless singer who can not keep in tune, but I at least seem to have a half decent ear for things like this. Not sure whether thats actualy related, I think it would have more to do with how sensitive your hearing is and just how honest/ self critical you are. 2. Like you, my musical taste definitely runs to the darker side of prog far more than the lighter, nicer side (cant stand Yes, not too keen on the Flower Kings but love Van der Graaf Generator and King Crimson) but there are many, many prog listeners who are definitely the other way round. As to the general masses, I'd say that those that dont follow music as closely as most of us here do would much prefer "happier" music than something that was melencholic, doom laden or disturbing, though aggressive might be a different matter (thinks of "Gangsta rap", but not too hard). I think that in the end it comes down to two things, the way they treat music listening and the personality of the indavidual. Thats two variables but each with a massive range of atributes that will be the determaning factors here. 3. With film/TV scores I get the feeling that people either take little notice of it or they associate it directly with something that is happening on screen, but may not care too much for it if is played on its own. For my part, I tend to ignore it almost all of the time, but then I think music in films is so overused and saturated that the only way I would notice it is when its not there. Ring is one of my favourite films in part because there is so little music. In fact, the only time I hafe taken more than a passing notice of a score is in the TV series Battlestar Galactica (the new one), which uses minimalism to stunning effect, but I'm rambeling now. What bores me is the lack of a point to what is going on in music. Simple can be intersting if done in a clever way and with a clear goal, Pink Floyd were masters of this IMO but electronic bands are the complete oposite (generalisation here, I havnt explored the electronic genre much and been given little desire to do so from what I've heard).The opposite is true of complex music, which can get lost in its own technique and forget that clinical technique isnt the only aspect of music. In general, though, I would much rather listen to complex music than simple. I'll take this furthar and say that listening to music that I find simplistic to a fault (pop, R&B, rap, a lot of indie, nu metal, "emo") is depressing for me to the point where I find it difficult to work more than 4 or 5 hours at work (where its on all the time) and not leave in a thouroghly sh*tty mood. In the end, I think I was always more predisposed to listen to prog, and by extent jazz and classical of which I am now beginning to explore, than pop from the beginning and probably has a lot more to do with nature rather than nurture as my dad's jazz days were long past by my earliest coherent memories and music actually played a near non existent role in my life before that first CD.
Edited by sleeper - July 28 2008 at 19:23
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Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 04 2005
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Posted: July 28 2008 at 19:26 |
I'm actually appreciating classical music a lot more now, than I did in the past. It is partly due to wanting to discover where the music I listen to comes from and partly because my ears are more finely tuned to that style of music, due mostly to my experience with chamber prog and klezmer.
This is one of the reasons I do not write reviews as much as I could... because I like to know the influences. I could review an album I love and then find out that something else sounds like it and from an earlier era and that could affect my overall vote for the album. Discovering the influences of a band/artist you appreciate, goes a long way to appreciating them more, I believe.
So I can certainly see my tastes changing... I just hope I never move away completely from my current musical loves. I can see myself listening to more and more jazz and classical music in the future and perhaps moving away from the noisier stuff.
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song_of_copper
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Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
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Posted: July 29 2008 at 04:56 |
stonebeard wrote:
I just listen to prog for the women. What, do you guys actually like this stuff.
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Haha! Well, us female prog listeners are obviously a cut above our unenlightened sisters (obviously! ), but if you want to impress us, you'd better be a bona fide virtuoso, pal. [Er, well, decent personal hygiene and the ability to make eye contact will do for starters... ]
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song_of_copper
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Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
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Posted: July 29 2008 at 05:10 |
NaturalScience wrote:
I wanted to think about this a bit before I crafted a response, but here's the bottom line answer:
I learned it from my father. What did I learn?
I learned that music was something one could take the time to sit down and appreciate, because that's exactly what he did: he was (still is, always has been) an audiophile, so after researching and getting fantastic components, speakers, etc. you obviously want to sit down and enjoy your "investment"...but I still learned from him to isolate the various instruments and hear what the musicians were doing, appreciate a clever turn of phrase in the lyrics of a song, or (as I got older and he got more into classical music) a bit more complex ideas such as variations on a theme. Funny thing is, not a single minute of all the music he played and I heard growing up was what we quasi-identify as "progressive rock" or "prog". My particular taste for that type of music I can only describe as innate (when I first heard Fragile by Yes at the age of about 11 or 12 there was an instant appreciation and "click", that elevated the music above all else I had experienced to date), I had to discover that type of music largely on my own and I knew almost nobody else that liked it.
That's a very good point. Children do learn by example, after all. Also, it helps if someone like your Dad is willing to share his enjoyment with you - music can be used to exclude and isolate as much as it can be enjoyed with others, and there must be plenty of audiophile Dads out there who would most likely say "Go away, I'm listening, do not disturb!"
It is interesting the way certain things 'click' immediately. I wish I knew how that works. Anyway, beginning by listening to classical music is a wonderful gateway to many other things (or so I hear. I've never been a major classical listener myself, but that is the stuff that has influenced almost everything else - as James says below).
So for me it was the role model of my Dad that taught me to be a "Participant Listener", as it were, because that's exactly what he did, and it never occurred to me to be otherwise - and to be honest, I think there are degrees of this sort of characterization. "Proggers" would perhaps be on the high "participation" side of this scale (appreciation of complexity and patience for long compositions), but that's not to say that my wife and a lot of my friends can't sit and listen to music as well at their own level of "participation" - in fact, I know very few people who would probably be called "consumers", or whatever you call those for whom music is as much of a background noise as the little fan I run when I go to sleep. It's certainly next to impossible for those of us who frequent this forum to begin to conceive of living that way.
Oh, I agree. The categories were rather blunt, black and white and extreme! I have come across quite a few 'consumers' myself, however. Maybe not quite to the extent of not really listening at all, but certainly to the extent of putting the radio on simply to ignore it, buying records simply because they had reached no. 1 in the charts, and liking a song simply for its 'danceability' or connection to some special nightclub experience - rather than the musical content itself...
Most people, however, whatever their taste, do of course like to concentrate on music from time to time.
Recap: that I have some level of musical listening ability is learned; that I apply those things to progressive rock/music is just my innate passion - being drawn to this music is not something I can explain.
Of course, there's the whole topic of musical tastes changing over one's life and how previous experiences can shape the direction of one's musical journey...but that's for another blog.
Do it, do it! And thanks for your comments on here.
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