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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2013 at 11:45
I feel personally, if an improv solo is flowing, melodic, and complex within a section of a prog piece, it remains to be worthwhile and timeless to me. It truly depends on how a musician approaches improv in a prog piece. Stylistically..what specific part of music culture does it derive from? ...and how is it presented overall?
 
 
An audience can express the most scattered references revolving around their personal judgements. Sometimes those personal judgements are based on historical facts of repeated history in music cultures of the world. What a person reads about musichistory cannot always be a hundred percent applied to the musician who is putting a plan in motion. Therefore it cannot be said that every speculation or passed judgement holds water..because improvisation for example is part of a entire process trading back and forth between the musician's brain, dream state, and what is defined as playing from the heart. And....the ear! The training of the ear (of course), and the independent natural ear. The music theory/training along with your senses or reflexes of the body can produce amazing results. Sometimes an audience will not see that in a musician because they are looking for something else which perhaps they've been educated to. Then they miss the point and they won't hear what I hear. This occurs more often when I perform or watch great musicians in larger, more popular cities. The irony which conflicts with my observation is the fact that the most simplistic sounding artists like Bob Dylan laid their innovative foundations in the popular cities. You might consider that it was the times we were living in, but no, I disagree with that because people in groves, crawling out of the woodwork are in the audience to make shrude judgements in the big cities and that social environment is increased in large numbers. My only protest is they are basing their observations on historical knowledge like extremists and not understanding the freedom of expression in music.
 
There are major concerns with any kind of audience and a musician must stay even tempered. A musician shouldn't take their high expectations to the emotional level. On another note many critics, experienced musicians, and fanatical fans in the audience... I tend to disagree with a majority of the time. This is because they will make an analogy based on music theory, compare 1 player to another, and rely on what they've read about the history of music theory or some phony Rock journalist that I seriously doubt. Point is...if you haven't been a traveling professional musician yourself, then you shouldn't believe everything one reads or statements from professional musicians who are simply not open minded. The publications industry is a corrupted society that prints lies about artists who are offended and refuse to defend themselves and the foolish artists who DO constantly defend themselves and sometimes even go on a suicide mission after reading several garbage production write ups about their music and personal life. In which case is untrue, yet it's brainwashed a percentage of your fans to believe otherwise and you're screwed whether you open your mouth or not. Music presents the option of freely expressing yourself. It is sometimes greatly misunderstood by many and musicians are debated and placed in a contest. As usual, in a typical American social environment ( that of course includes people from different generations) , there will be a great misunderstanding between themselves and debates over great musicians who are in question.due to some half witted theory. 
 
There is a percentage of musicians and fans who grew up on the guitar playing of Joe Satriani who simply can't and won't understand what might be grand about Mike Bloomfield's guitar style on "Albert's Shuffle". It is unknown to them. They follow this rule which teaches not to repeat the past or what has already been done. They have no respect for Classical composers etc. They proceed to create on their own, ignore icons/innovators from the past and the end result is that they are STILL repeating what has already been accomplished. This agenda is in reverse mode and doesn't open a door for honest creativity. I don't believe stamping out the past will help you to create anything original and new. It is very childish to resent your past teachings and very egotistical to believe you can surpass every master. How did this attitude become so vast in the music business? I witness this behaviour in many of the venues I play and in music stores.
 
I have never heard so many well spoken, thought out comments, from people who haven't a clue about breaking barriers or rules in music. It's either too many notes for them to digest or they are set on insulting the songwriting of Lennon/McCartney giving examples of their vast popularity...which is a mawk..or laughing at something which contains basic chord changes and melody. Either way....they are missing out on a vital point of why a musician doesn't have to live up to anyone's expectations..regarding composition or improvisation. Jethro Tull's Aqualung is like gospel to these people and most of the other Tull albums are alien. There is something a bit too American about that. Ian Anderson never understood the abundance of interest in America and always catagorized Aqualung simply as a collection of songs. Whether you are performing a piece that's reminiscent of Far Corner and Univers Zero or a simplistic type of singer songwriter ballad, only a small portion of the audience will pick up on the essence of the music or that understanding in general of freedom of expression.
 
 
 
 
 


Edited by TODDLER - September 05 2013 at 12:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2013 at 13:32
I'm not sure I agree with you there Toddler (meh, I wish I knew your real name, I dislike talking to people through their screen persona's), then I'm not fully sure I understand you completely, or whether I'm even on the same page. Improvisation either works or it doesn't regardless of any cultural references or context - urban settings are no less restricting or open to improv than rural ones - the whole hip-hop rap culture is based upon improvisation, techno and rave was improvised, even line-dancing is improvised. It works or it doesn't is a judgement made by the audience in real-time, we can record it and listen back at our leisure to nit-pick and over analyse direction and knowing references and argue over an unresolved note being a technical mistake or an artistic inflection, but at the time the audience got into it or got bored, no other immediate analysis ensues - you liked it or you didn't. Sure the audience may be knowledgeable enough to pick-up a musical reference as it happens and that will be either acknowledged as a direct connection ("Oh, yeah, that's like from Freebird maann.. cool" - nod appreciatively, holding lit lighters aloft, air-guitar soloing as they went), or ignored as irrelevant ("¬_¬") or dismissed as cliché ("Oh maann, not Freebored again"). How the performers decide whether it works or it doesn't is entirely up to them, they know what they're playing and they (should) know how the audience is responding. If there is an improvised solo in the middle of a set piece then it must entertain or it has no reason to prolong the agony - showboating has to be entertaining, and not just for the spectacle - the purpose of any performance, whether strictly orchestrated or completely improvised, is essentially to entertain the audience - even if that goes spectacularly wrong - we love to see them fall flat on their faces as much as we dig a show of self-indulgence (and the line between one and the other is often so narrow that it can't be seen until it's too late). There is a trade-off between indulging yourself and indulging the audience - if both are in step then all's well, when they are not is it the audiences expectation or the performer's that is at fault? Common sense says it's a bit of both, if it isn't then both are at the wrong gig.
 
[A friend of mine formed a power-trio that he used to showcase his guitar skills (he played in several bands, including a dixieland jazz ensemble - any gig that would allow him to play and learn was a valid gig as far as he was concerned) - they'd play instantly recognisable covers of all genres simply so he could do what he loved - play the guitar. People went to his shows to see him play and the two other guys knew this, that was the nature of the gig. While the entire performance was a demonstration of his enjoyment in playing guitar, during a rendition of the Sesame Street theme tune (tv themes were a regular part of the set) he'd go off on an extended guitar solo and the drummer and bass-player would tag-along for the ride for the first five minutes, then the bassman would look to the drummer, put down his bass and head to the bar; a few minutes later the drummer would follow suit; they'd grab a brew and join the audience, sat cross-legged on the floor watching him entertain the masses with his fretboard dexterity and masterly study of the pentatonic scales; when they'd had enough they'd rejoin him onstage and continue where they'd left off, finally bringing the song to a conclusion with "Today's show was brought to you by the letter 4" (or similar, 'twas never the same twice). And the crowd went wild... I've seen that solo last for nigh-on 20 minutes on some nights (on a good night), if the audience was into it, on other nights it would barely last 5 and the bassman and drummer would miss-out on their half-time tipple.]
 
I'm not even convinced there is a cultural separation between improvisation and composed pieces on a social level either (high status vs low status music) - vis-à-vis between the sight-reading of the classically trained over the playing-by-ear of the self-taught musician - the former is capable of improvisation because that is part of the theory of music and historically was part of any orchestral piece, ad libitum is a classical music term that we use now as "ad-lib" - cadenza was a note to the soloist to let-rip with the improvisation - a directive to showboat that people like Paganini took to heart (it's only since the advent of recording has classical music become so rigid and definitive) and a self-taught musician can be just as restricted by what he has learnt as we perceive any classically trained musician to be - 16-bar blues becomes a constraint - verse and chorus must have four lines, it must be played in a minor key, modulation only permitted is between accepted keys, etc.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2013 at 18:00
Originally posted by The Pessimist The Pessimist wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


Originally posted by The Pessimist The Pessimist wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

It's the veritable STAFF banging on the ground in "Amadeus" ... or nowadays ... even worse ... the DAW!

What does this even mean? I mean literally and semantically btw, not  philosophiocally or ideologically or metahysically or any of that make-it-up-as-you-go-along drivel.
LOLI read an interesting book on the relationship between music and poetry once having said that... So I kind of get moshkito's meaning

So in Pedro's absence, would you care to elucidate? I mean on the particular sentence I quoted... STAFFs and DAWs.
 
I don't mean on the relationship of iambic pentameter to music (the meter in pentameter gives the game away there), because I know that is about rhythm and tempo and how that relates to the natural rhythm and tempo of life, the dynamics of speech and the drama of ... well, drama, so it is then music in words (as opposed to the words in music that are found in musical farce and opera). Understanding music allows us to understand, interpret and enjoy the plays of Shakespeare as they were written, rather than a cold reading of the words off the page  - understanding iambic pentameter will gain you no insight into the appreciation of music, classical or otherwise. Which is why I pushed this question in the first place.
 
I'm not going to elucidate on Pedro's point because in all honesty I don't REALLY know what he's talking about, but I get the gist.All I was really commenting on is a human being's natural aesthetic attraction to rhythm and pattern, and thus it dominates almost everything in our lives, including our speech. Even if you look at prose, it has a rhythm to it (regular syllable lengths) if we're talking of the literary greats like Dickens, Fitzgerald and Tolstoy. If we go into poetry there is a distinct relationship to music. It's renowned that Emily Dickenson wrote bar lines and rhythmical marks on her manuscripts, similarly with Blake.


Well I guess William Blake's 'Songs of experience' could be considered to me rhythmical bliss. ;)
Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2013 at 09:46
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I'm not sure I agree with you there Toddler (meh, I wish I knew your real name, I dislike talking to people through their screen persona's), then I'm not fully sure I understand you completely, or whether I'm even on the same page. Improvisation either works or it doesn't regardless of any cultural references or context....I am merely making reference to the life of a musician. It's a little off topic, but since improvisation is an aspect to music that the audience reacts to , either positive or negative, much of the growth the audience needs to experience regarding improvisation is important to the arts. A person may be disgusted/jaded over a solo and they become discouraged over the entire record and regret the download or purchase. Ten years later ...after their brain develops in sophisticated areas which inspires them to investigate different walks of life, they will once again hear that particular recording at a friend's house and feel very confused as to why they may have reacted harshly at first. Now ..they want to purchase the recording again. That is a kind of growth expansion in society which is difficult to pin-point regarding the psychological patterns of it. Since improvisation is often misunderstood as much as it's understood, it creates an extreme mixed bag of opinions/emotional reactions/insults from your audience. The audience is very important and as a experienced composer/musician you must respect them and have love in your heart for them.
 
If there is an abundance of people who like your music , but dislike certain aspects of it...it will not hurt you, the musician/composer..or your ego..to give in just enough to please your fans. Maybe...they will understand later in life..(as I said before), you have to be concerned with the impression you leave with your audience . It is a job of a musician/composer to please the audience. Personal preferences or tastes in music of each individual in the audience is a seperate issue. It doesn't have too much significance when naturally most music fans change their opinion on music as they grow older. That's why it's important to reach your audience. As an artist...you may be misunderstood for a few years and then one day..people have an interest in you. That's basically the audience growing and if you are a very talented composer, it's a very good deed in working towards people hearing your music. It's a difficult goal, but a good deed as some people may be socially healed from your music. They can control their anger issues after listening to your music.    
 
 
- urban settings are no less restricting or open to improv than rural ones - the whole hip-hop rap culture is based upon improvisation, techno and rave was improvised, even line-dancing is improvised. It works or it doesn't is a judgement made by the audience in real-time, we can record it and listen back at our leisure to nit-pick and over analyse direction and knowing references and argue over an unresolved note being a technical mistake or an artistic inflection, but at the time the audience got into it or got bored, no other immediate analysis ensues - you liked it or you didn't. Sure the audience may be knowledgeable enough to pick-up a musical reference as it happens and that will be either acknowledged as a direct connection ("Oh, yeah, that's like from Freebird maann.. cool" - nod appreciatively, holding lit lighters aloft, air-guitar soloing as they went), or ignored as irrelevant ("¬_¬") or dismissed as cliché ("Oh maann, not Freebored again"). How the performers decide whether it works or it doesn't is entirely up to them, they know what they're playing and they (should) know how the audience is responding. If there is an improvised solo in the middle of a set piece then it must entertain or it has no reason to prolong the agony - showboating has to be entertaining, and not just for the spectacle - the purpose of any performance, whether strictly orchestrated or completely improvised, is essentially to entertain the audience - even if that goes spectacularly wrong - we love to see them fall flat on their faces as much as we dig a show of self-indulgence (and the line between one and the other is often so narrow that it can't be seen until it's too late). There is a trade-off between indulging yourself and indulging the audience - if both are in step then all's well, when they are not is it the audiences expectation or the performer's that is at fault? Common sense says it's a bit of both, if it isn't then both are at the wrong gig.  Very true!
 
[A friend of mine formed a power-trio that he used to showcase his guitar skills (he played in several bands, including a dixieland jazz ensemble - any gig that would allow him to play and learn was a valid gig as far as he was concerned) - they'd play instantly recognisable covers of all genres simply so he could do what he loved - play the guitar. People went to his shows to see him play and the two other guys knew this, that was the nature of the gig. While the entire performance was a demonstration of his enjoyment in playing guitar, during a rendition of the Sesame Street theme tune (tv themes were a regular part of the set) he'd go off on an extended guitar solo and the drummer and bass-player would tag-along for the ride for the first five minutes, then the bassman would look to the drummer, put down his bass and head to the bar; a few minutes later the drummer would follow suit; they'd grab a brew and join the audience, sat cross-legged on the floor watching him entertain the masses with his fretboard dexterity and masterly study of the pentatonic scales; when they'd had enough they'd rejoin him onstage and continue where they'd left off, finally bringing the song to a conclusion with "Today's show was brought to you by the letter 4" (or similar, 'twas never the same twice). And the crowd went wild... I've seen that solo last for nigh-on 20 minutes on some nights (on a good night), if the audience was into it, on other nights it would barely last 5 and the bassman and drummer would miss-out on their half-time tipple.]
 
Interesting.
 
I'm not even convinced there is a cultural separation between improvisation and composed pieces on a social level either (high status vs low status music) - vis-à-vis between the sight-reading of the classically trained over the playing-by-ear of the self-taught musician - the former is capable of improvisation because that is part of the theory of music and historically was part of any orchestral piece, ad libitum is a classical music term that we use now as "ad-lib" - cadenza was a note to the soloist to let-rip with the improvisation - a directive to showboat that people like Paganini took to heart (it's only since the advent of recording has classical music become so rigid and definitive) and a self-taught musician can be just as restricted by what he has learnt as we perceive any classically trained musician to be - 16-bar blues becomes a constraint - verse and chorus must have four lines, it must be played in a minor key, modulation only permitted is between accepted keys, etc.
Truly interesting! On another note...I have observed improvisation for many decades practically worshipping various musicians in the Rock/Prog Rock/Jazz/Blues world for their originality discovering along the way that labels often come with a definition and catagorization which places the average or even diverse listener in a position to sometimes dismiss awesome improvisation.  A person may only think they dislike Blues based on the details of the catagorization ...that the music lacks in some area because it's definition printed by a journalist is repulsive to them. It is that way and music is treated as something very stupied and there are all these barriers that block the minds of people for years until they might open up later and decide to give the music one more chance. It's runs a little deeper than the old saying "You either like it or you don't" I can't agree with that because humans grow or blossom into something much different over a course of time. People are sometimes ignorant and back their points with a bad image given to the artist by the journalist. Because I traveled the road about 30 years...I know from hands on experience that the journalist/record staff and the artist are at odds. Anyone can figure that out by simply watching a YES documentary where Chris Squire is expressing to everyone how much he loved the freedom to write and record what he desired and the executives allowing it.
 
It was such a "cut-throat" scene in the 70's when I played in Prog cover bands. All the bands were squeezing original songs into their acts and playing covers of Prog was a means of gaining the respect of a huge following of Prog during that time. If you continued the path and exceeded your expectations , you would find yourself opening for Prog acts in theatres of the U.S.  If the headliner disliked your band because the musicians in it were more seasoned, they would tip the sound tech and request the tech to clutter the sound with echo, muffle all lead guitar solos, produce the drums to sound like cardboard boxes, produce phony and intentional feedback sounds through the P.A. of the most offensive nature to the audience's ears...while your band was performing. I'm sorry to say, but back in 1978...very few people knew it was a sabatoge of the most horrific magnitude and simply assumed your band was horrible. It's very moronic and disappointing for only a minority of audience members to read between the lines and as a result defend your position. Unfortunately..over decades a majority of people dislike improvisation due to a stunt like that. It lacks glory , it's cowardly, but it brainwashes the average listener into believing the false side of the particular event/show.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2013 at 10:53
When improvising 30 second notes on the guitar (for example), the foundations of theory are so incredibly cemented into your personal knowledge...that there are no thoughts entering the mind. Everything is second nature and the most simple visual ..such as a quick glance of the ocean while performing on stage can alter your solo. This is a dream state which you create yourself or another way of observing it would be to say that when an artist is surrounded by nature during a performance, a much different and unique improvisation tends to surface. This is to say that it is not intended through the musician's mind to program a cosmic or universal sounding improv. Because nature is simply there, it supposedly channels some kind of inspiration through the artist. It can often be a debate if your heart tells you that the feelings  you experience are real and completely unknown and your logic says that your mind is playing tricks on you.
 
I believe that some  traditional Japanese 14th century pieces were written with the musician surrounding themselves with nature. It could be a means of channeling. I recall many years ago practicing Paganini pieces on the Classical guitar , my teacher guiding me through my flaws on theory , and for 12 or 15 hrs. a day. One day the teacher is busy and I drive to a field, practice the pieces and suddenly am inspired to add reflections of the composers pieces to my own music..which I am certain would have not occured if I had remained in a practice room surrounded by 4 walls and 1 very small window. It's confusing, but maybe there is some kind of energy that doesn't reveal itself through logic, but channels through the musician. When my uncle sight read Mozart or Chopin , he would be presently playing the fourth measure while programming the 7th or 8th measure into his mind. Retaining the measures that were not yet to be played is asking your brain to work in non-restricted areas which seem strange at first and later becomes second nature. So perhaps only the fear of the brain being restricted is in the lesson you learn. Like a math problem that is very complex where upon some individuals may understand the key to solving it at first glance. Because they are always thinking steps ahead. It is sometimes a simple thought process and other times complex. It is very common and humans tend to utilize that craft of the brain in many walks of life.   Such as improvising 30 second notes without actually thinking about anything. It sometimes feels as if your brain doesn't work like other's because of what you are accomplishing based on your background of theory and natural ability. It always feels like something unexplainable exists ..which is a debate for me..however some musicians sware by it and claim it is a spiritual experience.
 
 
You can produce fine Jazz compositions by escaping through a fantasy. Each one of your compositions can be titled on a subject matter and you're producing the music rapidly by surrounding yourself with a landscape. You may desire to complete a specific piece in your room, finding that what has been retained in your mind was created 2 hrs. ago in the field and new ideas for the composition to record are not surfacing. When you return to the field the next day, the new ideas surface and the creation blossoms. It can give you the impression that this energy controls you. But again...my mind could be playing tricks on me. History states otherwise and there are musicians who are innovators that choose the hilltop over the practice room.


Edited by TODDLER - September 06 2013 at 11:07
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 04:42
Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

....I am merely making reference to the life of a musician. It's a little off topic, but since improvisation is an aspect to music that the audience reacts to , either positive or negative, much of the growth the audience needs to experience regarding improvisation is important to the arts. A person may be disgusted/jaded over a solo and they become discouraged over the entire record and regret the download or purchase. Ten years later ...after their brain develops in sophisticated areas which inspires them to investigate different walks of life, they will once again hear that particular recording at a friend's house and feel very confused as to why they may have reacted harshly at first. Now ..they want to purchase the recording again. That is a kind of growth expansion in society which is difficult to pin-point regarding the psychological patterns of it. Since improvisation is often misunderstood as much as it's understood, it creates an extreme mixed bag of opinions/emotional reactions/insults from your audience. The audience is very important and as a experienced composer/musician you must respect them and have love in your heart for them.
 
If there is an abundance of people who like your music , but dislike certain aspects of it...it will not hurt you, the musician/composer..or your ego..to give in just enough to please your fans. Maybe...they will understand later in life..(as I said before), you have to be concerned with the impression you leave with your audience . It is a job of a musician/composer to please the audience. Personal preferences or tastes in music of each individual in the audience is a seperate issue. It doesn't have too much significance when naturally most music fans change their opinion on music as they grow older. That's why it's important to reach your audience. As an artist...you may be misunderstood for a few years and then one day..people have an interest in you. That's basically the audience growing and if you are a very talented composer, it's a very good deed in working towards people hearing your music. It's a difficult goal, but a good deed as some people may be socially healed from your music. They can control their anger issues after listening to your music.    
I cannot say that this is has been my experience, what I did not like 40 years ago remains on the dislike pile no matter how much I have grown, learnt or developed in the intervening years - taste is not a matter of education, though I do agree that it can affect appreciation: things I liked back then I can appreciate better through experience. Then I may be odd in that respect, I certainly see people having negative reactions to pieces of music they once loved because of over-exposure and I don't "get" that - saying that an album is "overrated" because they've heard it too often makes little sense to me, so growing to like something (through a better understanding) is alien to me too. No amount of education, growth or understanding is ever going to change my opinion of any piece of music if I didn't like it to begin with. Even Tales From Topographic Oceans where I overcame my initial disapointment to eventually rate it 2nd behind Relayer was not a result of any change in my understanding of music, it just took a while to get into. Then we are talking about Progressive Rock, where tunes seldom pass the "whistle test" and take time to get into, they are not necessarily instant gratification.
Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

 
Truly interesting! On another note...I have observed improvisation for many decades practically worshipping various musicians in the Rock/Prog Rock/Jazz/Blues world for their originality discovering along the way that labels often come with a definition and catagorization which places the average or even diverse listener in a position to sometimes dismiss awesome improvisation.  A person may only think they dislike Blues based on the details of the catagorization ...that the music lacks in some area because it's definition printed by a journalist is repulsive to them. It is that way and music is treated as something very stupied and there are all these barriers that block the minds of people for years until they might open up later and decide to give the music one more chance. It's runs a little deeper than the old saying "You either like it or you don't" I can't agree with that because humans grow or blossom into something much different over a course of time. People are sometimes ignorant and back their points with a bad image given to the artist by the journalist. Because I traveled the road about 30 years...I know from hands on experience that the journalist/record staff and the artist are at odds. Anyone can figure that out by simply watching a YES documentary where Chris Squire is expressing to everyone how much he loved the freedom to write and record what he desired and the executives allowing it.
I judge music with my ears not my eyes - what a rock journalist says about a style of music is their opinion not mine - we take what we read to reinforce our predelictions, preconceptions and personal preferences - if a hack journo says something complimentary about something I like or something negative about something I dislike then that bolsters my own opinion, if we disagree then that also strengthens my opinion - it is unlikely they would ever change or affect my opinion. The simple observation that we are here talking about Progressive Rock 30 years after the rock-press's backlash against it is proof positive of that - those of us who liked Prog in the 70s are still here liking Prog in the 21st century irregardless of what the bandwagon-jumpers of the 1980s were saying.
 
Improvisation has it's place - bands like Pink Floyd and Van der Graaf Generator would not have produced the magnificent set-peices they did without improvisation even when that improvisation was in a recording studio or infront of a live audience. With Floyd we see that "in real time" with the development of songs like Astronomy Domine or Set The Controls from Pschedelic Rock studio recordings to Progressive Rock live recording and the expansion of the live The Son of Nothing into the studio version as Echoes and we can see the 4 minute Embryo develop into a 20+ minute live jam that eventually went nowhere. As I implied before with improvisation in classical music, once someone records a (popular or sucessful) version of a cadenza or ad libitum to a piece of classical composition, it becomes the definative version - subsequent recordings and renditions tend to replicate that improvisation rather than create one anew, and so it is with rock music (in the main ... I'm not sure whether Amon Düül II's epic Yeti improvisation was ever performed the same twice, we only have the studio album version to go by).
Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

  
It was such a "cut-throat" scene in the 70's when I played in Prog cover bands. All the bands were squeezing original songs into their acts and playing covers of Prog was a means of gaining the respect of a huge following of Prog during that time. If you continued the path and exceeded your expectations , you would find yourself opening for Prog acts in theatres of the U.S.  If the headliner disliked your band because the musicians in it were more seasoned, they would tip the sound tech and request the tech to clutter the sound with echo, muffle all lead guitar solos, produce the drums to sound like cardboard boxes, produce phony and intentional feedback sounds through the P.A. of the most offensive nature to the audience's ears...while your band was performing. I'm sorry to say, but back in 1978...very few people knew it was a sabatoge of the most horrific magnitude and simply assumed your band was horrible. It's very moronic and disappointing for only a minority of audience members to read between the lines and as a result defend your position. Unfortunately..over decades a majority of people dislike improvisation due to a stunt like that. It lacks glory , it's cowardly, but it brainwashes the average listener into believing the false side of the particular event/show.
I have experienced this too often to dismiss it as co-incidence, though I don't know the real reason for it - I too have always assumed it was something to do with the headline act (management, sound techs/engineers, whoever) not wanting to be upstaged by the support act rather than professional jealousy. Too many times has the sound level and sound quality has taken a significant jump from support to headline that (as someone who understands these things from a technical aspect) the cause is obviously the result of deliberate intent rather than the support band being bad. Having said that, as a once promoter of live gigs I have experienced bands who couldn't be arsed to sound check before going on stage ("We don't need a sound-check, we're a plug and play band" ...) leaving the sound engineer to wing-it, tweaking the sound has they played - this phenomenon is easily recognisable because the overall sound will improve as the band plays (assuming the sound engineer was worth his salt) - I would never permit the band I managed to do that - I insisted that they "hit the ground running" and that required a good sound-check before going on stage to get the levels right. Having sat through many sound checks I know the dramatic difference a small amount of EQ can make to a drum sound or guitar tone, then I also know that room acoustics change when people are added, but that does not account for the drastic improvement in sound heard when the main act starts playing.
 
I suspect you are right and people are swayed by this subterfuge - too many times do you read "I saw band X support band Y and they were horrible" .. sad really.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 13:47
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Pessimist The Pessimist wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

It's the veritable STAFF banging on the ground in "Amadeus" ... or nowadays ... even worse ... the DAW!
What does this even mean? I mean literally and semantically btw, not  philosophiocally or ideologically or metahysically or any of that make-it-up-as-you-go-along drivel.


LOL

I read an interesting book on the relationship between music and poetry once having said that... So I kind of get moshkito's meaning

So in Pedro's absence, would you care to elucidate? I mean on the particular sentence I quoted... STAFFs and DAWs.
...
 
The staff, the fun example you can use from the film ... is the meter ... you have to follow it, and stay on it ... that is ... so to speak ... the academic view, and in this case ... the poopular view ... which has a tendency to hurt new forms of music and you know that!
 
The DAW, is the modern time keeper ... banging the staff at whatever BPM you want ... and precisely so ... which means your music has to adhere to a set standard, when history has been the exact opposite.
 
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

...
I don't mean on the relationship of iambic pentameter to music (the meter in pentameter gives the game away there), because I know that is about rhythm and tempo and how that relates to the natural rhythm and tempo of life, the dynamics of speech and the drama of ... well, drama, so it is then music in words (as opposed to the words in music that are found in musical farce and opera). Understanding music allows us to understand, interpret and enjoy the plays of Shakespeare as they were written, rather than a cold reading of the words off the page  - understanding iambic pentameter will gain you no insight into the appreciation of music, classical or otherwise.
...
 
It was a way of saying that there was a classical context and then there was a different context ... and the academicos, as I like to call them, who did not like the avant-garde, and the experimental and the unusual. Progressive music would likely not have come up were it not for the "open" affirmations in so many different art circles at the time!
 
What else is new? ... it's been the same fight for hundreds of years, and here we are ... still fighting for a "system", and we're doing this in a board that supports bands that went away from the "system" --- for a while --- to create some amazing music that we still love dearly!
 
It's hard discussing this with you guys ... as much as you are both excellent, and I appreciate these discussions, in the end, I find it sad that it becomes a personal attack and not about the subject.
 
I have entered here, MY EXPERIENCE, with actors and in the arts. THAT experience, has been, quite consistent with a lot of internal books and works I have read, from LIlly, to Monroe, to Castaneda, to Huxley, to Crowley, to Fortune, to Gurdgieff  ... an endless listing ... but even mentioning things like that is hard ... because you are talking about 40 years of reading, studying and experimenting ... and then finding words for it ... was hard enough ... and then folks making it sound like my experience is not a valid one! ... is really hard to deal with.
 
It's a lifelong journey as it is.
 
I remember a funny story from Carlos' books that is almost the same here ... he was always told to look for his palm and look at it in his dreams, and he never succeeded ... and finally he asked what the exercise was all about ... and it was a joke ... we could have said look for your dick or some deity ... but it would have been to easy for you to not pay attention any more and go look anywhere, but where you needed to go!
 
You just never know ... and how afraid are you of learning more?


Edited by moshkito - September 07 2013 at 14:59
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 14:46
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

It's the veritable STAFF banging on the ground in "Amadeus" ... or nowadays ... even worse ... the DAW!
What does this even mean? I mean literally and semantically btw, not  philosophiocally or ideologically or metahysically or any of that make-it-up-as-you-go-along drivel.
The staff, the fun example you can use from the film ... is the meter ... you have to follow it, and stay on it ... that is ... so to speak ... the academic view, and in this case ... the poopular view ... which has a tendency to hurt new forms of music and you know that!
What Staff from the film? - be more specific - not all have seen the film and not all that have seen it can recall ever minor detail scene by scene, frame by frame. We cannot read minds.
 
The only staff banging I remember is the flunky annoucing the arrival of the archbishop (and Mozart wasn't even present in that scene). If there is another then please refresh my beer-addled memory.
 
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

The DAW, is the modern time keeper ... banging the staff at whatever BPM you want ... and precisely so ... which means your music has to adhere to a set standard, when history has been the exact opposite.
 
Nope. A DAW is like a tape recorder connected to a computer. If you want to use it just as a multitrack tape recorder then you can - it is entirely in the control of the artist/engineer/producer. If you want to use the internal metronome then you can - it is entirely up to you, some bands do, many more don't.
 
In the days of analogue tape recorders people used metronomes to keep time - just because the dreadful clockwork mechanism exists (I have nice antique brass one in a very nice square-based pyramid shaped mahogany box), it does not mean that every musician in history used them to mark time. 
 
As I have said so often on this forum - it is not the tools but how you use them - just because a feature exists it does not mean that everyone uses them.
 
HOWEVER...
 
I got that you were attempting to make a pun on staff BUT a musical STAFF does not mark time, it delineates PITCH (note) - you were referring to bar lines that mark the measure (but not the meter) - one feature of musical staves is that they DO NOT give any indication of timing at all. Meter is something completely different regarding the phrasing of the music - a meter can span several measures and should not be confused with measure or time signature.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 14:59
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

...
I don't mean on the relationship of iambic pentameter to music (the meter in pentameter gives the game away there), because I know that is about rhythm and tempo and how that relates to the natural rhythm and tempo of life, the dynamics of speech and the drama of ... well, drama, so it is then music in words (as opposed to the words in music that are found in musical farce and opera). Understanding music allows us to understand, interpret and enjoy the plays of Shakespeare as they were written, rather than a cold reading of the words off the page  - understanding iambic pentameter will gain you no insight into the appreciation of music, classical or otherwise.
...
 
It was a way of saying that there was a classical context and then there was a different context ... and the academicos, as I like to call them, who did not like the avant-garde, and the experimental and the unusual. Progressive music would likely not have come up were it not for the "open" affirmations in so many different art circles at the time!
 
What else is new? ... it's been the same fight for hundreds of years, and here we are ... still fighting for a "system", and we're doing this in a board that supports bands that went away from the "system" --- for a while --- to create some amazing music that we still love dearly!
 
It's hard discussing this with you guys ... as much as you are both excellent, and I appreciate these discussions, in the end, I find it sad that it becomes a personal attack and not about the subject.
 
I have entered here, MY EXPERIENCE, with actors and in the arts. THAT experience, has been, quite consistent with a lot of internal books and works I have read, from LIlly, to Monroe, to Castaneda, to Huxley, to Crowley, to Fortune, to Gurdgieff  ... an endless listing ... but even mentioning things like that is hard ... because you are talking about 40 years of reading, studying and experimenting ... and then finding words for it ... was hard enough ... and then folks making it sound like my experience is not a valid one! ... is really hard to deal with.
 
It's a lifelong journey as it is.
No personal attack Pedro - I just want to know the answer to the bloody question:
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

wtf does iambic pentameter have to do with classical music appreciation? Confused
You made a comment I did not understand:
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

There is no "implicit knowledge" in the design and work of a "raga", for example, WHEN IT HITS, though more than likely the player will start with a theme, and the idea is to lose it and become so tied to the music itself that the "notes" become invisible, and you just sit there and appreciate the music coming, and this is NOT the classical music appreciation society counting every note and every this and that and telling you that you don't know what the iambic pentameter is all about (no kidding! btw!).
And all I ask is you explain that one effing phrase. What does Iambic Pentameter have to do with classical music appreciation?
 
Come on. Be reasonable and help me understand what you typed - help me understand the words you wrote,
 
I know what Iambic Pentameter is. I understand what it is and how it works. I also have some knowledge of music theory and classical music and yes, I understand that too to some degree. All I want to know is what you think that connection is. That's all. No personal attack, no ridicule. Serious enquiry.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 15:06
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

There is no "implicit knowledge" in the design and work of a "raga", for example, WHEN IT HITS, though more than likely the player will start with a theme, and the idea is to lose it and become so tied to the music itself that the "notes" become invisible, and you just sit there and appreciate the music coming, and this is NOT the classical music appreciation society counting every note and every this and that and telling you that you don't know what the iambic pentameter is all about (no kidding! btw!).
 
And all I ask is you explain that one effing phrase. What does Iambic Pentameter have to do with classical music appreciation?
 
Come on. Be reasonable and help me understand what you typed - help me understand the words you wrote,
 
I know what Iambic Pentameter is. I understand what it is and how it works. I also have some knowledge of music theory and classical music and yes, I understand that too to some degree. All I want to know is what you think that connection is. That's all. No personal attack, no ridicule. Serious enquiry.
 
 
It was a comparative point ... to me, it was the same painting ... old croony goons with their staffs cranking in on the ground ... and then seeing so much of the music that comes out today also be all formulaic ... because all the tools and teachers are the same thing ... the strict-ness of the iambic pentameter! The strictness of the music rules. The Strictness of the definition of "progressive"! The strictness of the definition of "jazz"!
 
It's ok to give you an idea of what it might sound like ... but you know what? ... the best, like "Yeti" defies description!
 
It's no longer, even, about the person, or the character ... it's about its language!
 
For me, we have to decide WHERE we want to be when it comes to "improvisation" ... before, inside, or after! Comments BEFORE and AFTER ... are NOT the experience ... and to me, things like Yeti, and some other Guru Guru are true "improvisational" experiences ... there is no before or after ... there just is ... and that is what you hear.
 
This "inside", is what transforms ALL artists ... and in many ways, they know it.  Weather they stick to it, or not ... is another story!
 
Music, like many other arts, can be a lot more ... than its "language", or the details that we come up with ... much later!


Edited by moshkito - September 07 2013 at 15:11
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 15:36
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

There is no "implicit knowledge" in the design and work of a "raga", for example, WHEN IT HITS, though more than likely the player will start with a theme, and the idea is to lose it and become so tied to the music itself that the "notes" become invisible, and you just sit there and appreciate the music coming, and this is NOT the classical music appreciation society counting every note and every this and that and telling you that you don't know what the iambic pentameter is all about (no kidding! btw!).
 
And all I ask is you explain that one effing phrase. What does Iambic Pentameter have to do with classical music appreciation?
 
Come on. Be reasonable and help me understand what you typed - help me understand the words you wrote,
 
I know what Iambic Pentameter is. I understand what it is and how it works. I also have some knowledge of music theory and classical music and yes, I understand that too to some degree. All I want to know is what you think that connection is. That's all. No personal attack, no ridicule. Serious enquiry.
 
 
It was a comparative point ... to me, it was the same painting ... old croony goons with their staffs cranking in on the ground ... and then seeing so much of the music that comes out today also be all formulaic ... because all the tools and teachers are the same thing ... the strict-ness of the iambic pentameter! The strictness of the music rules. The Strictness of the definition of "progressive"! The strictness of the definition of "jazz"!
 
It's ok to give you an idea of what it might sound like ... but you know what? ... the best, like "Yeti" defies description!
 
It's no longer, even, about the person, or the character ... it's about its language!
 
For me, we have to decide WHERE we want to be when it comes to "improvisation" ... before, inside, or after! Comments BEFORE and AFTER ... are NOT the experience ... and to me, things like Yeti, and some other Guru Guru are true "improvisational" experiences ... there is no before or after ... there just is ... and that is what you hear.
 
This "inside", is what transforms ALL artists ... and in many ways, they know it.  Weather they stick to it, or not ... is another story!
 
Music, like many other arts, can be a lot more ... than its "language", or the details that we come up with ... much later!
So, music appreciation has nothing to do with iambic pentameter and classical music appreciation has nothing to do with understanding iambic pentameter. YES or NO?


Other than that I think you are completely and utterly wrong, not in your interpretation but in the fundamental nature of what you are talking about. If what you believe is true, then your conclusions are perfectly correct, however, if what you believe to be true is incorrect (and I hold that it is), then your conclusions are completely and utterly wrong.

Iambic pentameter in poetry, and more specifically in Elizabethian drama, is far from strict - that's the whole freekin' point - it is the heartbeat and pace of a piece of drama that shifts and changes as the drama unfolds, it is precisely that dudes like Shakespeare messed around with the meter of iambic pentameter to control the power of the words to convey more than just their literal meaning is what makes 400 year old plays so relevant and alive today - understanding iambic pentameter and how Shakespeare used it so effectively is the key that unlocks the door to understanding why we revere him so highly. And that has nothing to do with appreciating a piece of classical music!


Peace out.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 17:45
I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 18:27
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 18:32
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 18:58
Oh, another afterthought tagged onto the end of a post after I'd already quoted it... more l'esprit d'escalier LOL
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

 
I remember a funny story from Carlos' books that is almost the same here ... he was always told to look for his palm and look at it in his dreams, and he never succeeded ... and finally he asked what the exercise was all about ... and it was a joke ... we could have said look for your dick or some deity ... but it would have been to easy for you to not pay attention any more and go look anywhere, but where you needed to go!
 
You just never know ... and how afraid are you of learning more?
I'm always willing to learn more. A day I didn't learn something new is a day wasted.
 
I presume you are referring to Carlos Castaneda and his lessons in lucid dreaming, or has Carlos the Jackal written a self-help book?
 
A direct question is always something I feel requires a direct answer, otherwise it just looks evasive and condescending I've yet to experience an evasive or condescending response that makes me feel inferior.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 18:59
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.


Rapped by none other than Will-i-ambic.
nice Approve Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 19:03
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.


Rapped by none other than Will-i-ambic.
nice Approve Clap


In lieu of applause, please be so kind as to interpret Moshkito's posts instead. Confused
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 20:23
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.


Rapped by none other than Will-i-ambic.
nice Approve Clap


In lieu of applause, please be so kind as to interpret Moshkito's posts instead. Confused
Must I?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 20:41
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.


Rapped by none other than Will-i-ambic.
nice Approve Clap


In lieu of applause, please be so kind as to interpret Moshkito's posts instead. Confused
Must I?


Yes, I am afraid you must. There is a codicil at the end of the Prog Archives Site Administration Agreement (fourth line from the bottom, in miniscule Carolingian script) that states, and I quote:

Any posts of an obscure, illegible or eccentric nature, including hieroglyphics, run-on sentences, walls of text and treatises of new-age philosophical meandering best read in a haze of patchouli oil whilst wearing a t-shirt embossed with the likenesses of Alan Ginsberg, René Magritte, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jim Morrison or Carlos Castaneda, must be deciphered for the edification and education of the Prog-Archive users at large by said Site Administrator, within reason and dependent on whether or not the post in question is complete gibberish and/or spam, until death do you part. Amen.



Edited by The Dark Elf - September 07 2013 at 20:44
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 21:26
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

I'd like to hear an improvised piece of iambic pentameter. Solo, in the middle of a jam. And use rhyme royale, please.
That's one for the rap boys - the ta-dum beat (dubstep) and double couplet at the end of each stanza would suit rap quite well I think.


Rapped by none other than Will-i-ambic.
nice Approve Clap


In lieu of applause, please be so kind as to interpret Moshkito's posts instead. Confused
Must I?


Yes, I am afraid you must. There is a codicil at the end of the Prog Archives Site Administration Agreement (fourth line from the bottom, in miniscule Carolingian script) that states, and I quote:

Any posts of an obscure, illegible or eccentric nature, including hieroglyphics, run-on sentences, walls of text and treatises of new-age philosophical meandering best read in a haze of patchouli oil whilst wearing a t-shirt embossed with the likenesses of Alan Ginsberg, René Magritte, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jim Morrison or Carlos Castaneda, must be deciphered for the edification and education of the Prog-Archive users at large by said Site Administrator, within reason and dependent on whether or not it is complete gibberish or spam, until death do you part. Amen.

Fairy snuff. If you insist.
 
The basic premise is: Academia believes rules are not made to be broken. Prog Rock (and specifically improvisation in Prog Rock) broke the rules and academia hates them for it.
 
This premise is illustrated by examples that flit through the art forms like mixed metaphors in run-on sentences that appear to be non sequiturs unless you know the backstory to each part.
 
The fictional Amadeus the Movie perpetuates many myths, one of which is that the aficionado's of the day counted the notes in one of Mozart's operas (apparently by banging their staffs on the ground, though personally I don't recall that happening in the film) and decided there was "too many notes" - the scriptwriter then added "we can only listen to so many notes in one evening" or words to that effect. Which I suggest is not only inaccurate, it is also completely wrong. Mozart was composing during what we now call the Classical Era (they did not call it that at the time) which marked a dramatic change from the previous Baroque Era (and they didn't call it that at the time either) where music became simpler, clearer, lighter, less polyphony (barely any counterpoint), shorter melodies and thus had fewer notes than Baroque - 20 years after the fall from fashion of Baroque Mozart started to put some of that complexity back into his music, which was seen as unfashionable for 1781 - so the "too many notes" was just a way of saying "a bit too Baroque". Unfortunately the misunderstanding of the "too many notes" myth lingers on because of that blasted film, and here it is used as an illustration of academia criticising Mozart for breaking the rules, which of course they weren't and he didn't. No one sits counting the notes in a piece of music, it's a preposterous notion. Similarily an academic criticising a troup of thespians for not doing the iambic pentameter correctly implies that the da dum da dum da dum da dum da dum rhythm is a strict rule that shall not be broken (ie you must stress the dum not the da) - yet Will.i.am Shakespeare broke the rule frequently for dramatic effect, so to recite those lines without breaking the rule in the same way is actually breaking it twice (and not in a good way since the dramatic effect Shak.e.speare wanted is now lost). How understanding iambic pentameter relates to classical music appreciation has yet to be established but apparently questioning that is to question 40 years of experience and that is apparently a personal attack (as is this, probably) which apparently is justification enough for a counter-attack on my ability to learn, apparently.
 
:-\
 
 
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