I think we should all employ the Deaf ear in a certain direction

Debbie Schmidt Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 12, 2010, at 1:56 PM, [email protected] wrote:

>
> There's a big danger to that idea though. When you put too much into  
> music, you put a big old box around it. You limit it.
>
> One of the smartest people I've ever met asked us once in an  
> orchestration class what music was. The correct definition is  
> 'organized sound'. That's it. Your interpretation, your emotion,  
> your 'feelings' or 'gut' or whatever is not part of that definition.  
> A lot of music was composed programatically. Some was composed out  
> of form only. Why should we be forced to attach emotions to music at  
> all when some music was not composed to trigger a response from the  
> audience at all.
>
> You can have an emotional response. You may not have one. That's  
> your call. However, when you start bridging into the realm of  
> 'spiritualism' in music then you're getting into a realm that,  
> again, is indistinguishable from make-believe.
>
> In other words (and I've said this how many times now?) you can have  
> that feeling all you want, but it does no good to teach it because  
> you can't teach it, and it does no good to really progress playing  
> and progress music because you might as well be talking about magic  
> purple monkeys or the ether theory or something.
>
> If you are able to analyze and figure out what Perlman or Domingo or  
> even Ravi Shankar was doing then you are able to learn it yourself,  
> you become able to teach it, and more people can figure out how to  
> be just as great. They are human, too. What they are doing is  
> nothing magical. They aren't invoking Thor and Loki and an army of  
> Frost Giants. They aren't using a magic ring. They don't have a  
> spear and magic helmet.
>
> I advocate figuring it out. Some advocate a blank stare.
>
> -William
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steven Mumford <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Mon, Jul 12, 2010 1:45 pm
> Subject: Re: [Hornlist] About those brass playing robots...
>
>
>    Of course you can study all the things that can be defined about  
> music and
>
> that's a good start.  When I was in school, other students would  
> complain "I
>
> don't know why I have to study all this theory, I'm a performance  
> major".
>
> HaHa!
>
>    Can musicality be taught?  Of course.  You can teach all the  
> mechanics of
>
> phrasing, which notes get emphasis and why and that's a good start,  
> but I'm sure
>
> we've all heard playing that was embarassingly "over musical" so  
> that doesn't
>
> always work.  So can you specifically define exactly what perfectly  
> sublime
>
> music would be?  Well, I suppose so.  You could take a performance  
> by Heifetz
>
> and put an exact value on the loudness, duration, timbre etc. of  
> each note and
>
> there you'd have it.  But what if Perlman comes along and plays it,  
> also
>
> sublimely, but differently?  Oh dear, now we have to start over.   
> Could Heifetz
>
> give you the exact parameters of each note played?  I think he would  
> have given
>
> you a quizzical look if you had asked.  Anybody trying to analyze  
> while playing
>
> would not be giving a very interesting performance.  You analyze  
> before
>
> playing.
>
>    You could try to teach a student by putting specific values to  
> every
>
> parameter... or you could just play.  It's a VERY interesting  
> experience to
>
> teach a lesson without saying a single word.  Shut the hell up and  
> play!  You
>
> define music by playing it, not by measuring it or talking about it.
>
>
>
> - Steve Mumford
>
>
>
>
>
>
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