Friday, December 6, 2019

Friday Miscellanea

The world's top two earning musicians this year are Taylor Swift, number one at $185 million and Kanye West, number two at $150 million. This has to be the golden age of music, right?

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Every now and then you can catch one of those retro tv shows out in an anachronism they are not likely to be themselves aware of. I've been watching Mindhunter lately, which is quite an interesting show. It is set in the late 1970s and as far as I can tell, there are no anachronisms in the cars, sets, fashions, etc. However in one early episode a character uses the phrase "to beg the question" in a way that shows that the show was written in the last couple of years. I am old enough to remember when people used to know the meaning of phrases like "to beg the question" and "to coin a phrase." But in the last ten or twenty years, this has all gone away and you almost never hear them used correctly. "To beg the question" refers to the logical fallacy that occurs when the premiss of the argument assumes the conclusion. But in recent years it has come to mean "to pose the question" which seems more common sense, even though wrong. Similarly, the phrase "to coin a phrase" meant to invent a new expression, but recently it has come to mean "to repeat a stereotypical sentiment." Ceteris paribus, I prefer the original meanings.

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Norman Lebrecht has a lovely tribute to conductor Mariss Jansons who just passed away this week.
If you were fortunate enough to know Mariss Jansons, you soon became aware that he was one of the kindest men alive and that he had no interest whatsoever in the business of music.
I spent a morning with him once in a deprived area of Pittsburgh, where he devoted as much respect and attention to a classroom of welfare kids as he did to the Vienna Philharmonic in their finest suits. Respect was his watchword. He treated every person as his equal.
I had a ticket to see him conduct at the Salzburg Festival last summer, but sadly, that was a concert he had to cancel and so I saw Yannick Nezét-Séguin instead.

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I found this interesting clip through Slipped Disc--a comparison of three great pianos: Steinway, Fazioli, Bösendorfer.


I have had this long-standing liking for Bösendorfer, based on a recording from long ago and I don't even remember which one! I am totally objective because I don't even play piano. Based on the first round, the Steinway sounds absolutely lovely in all registers, the Fazioli is really dry in the treble and the Bösendorfer is quite nice in the bass, but not as nice as the Steinway in the treble. Your thoughts?

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I used to think the Grawemeyer Award was the best, or at least, the least-bad, composer award because of its multiple stages. It depended on more than the votes of a few cronies. Alas, I'm not sure if this is still the case: LEI LIANG WINS 2020 GRAWEMEYER AWARD FOR CLIMATE CHANGE-INSPIRED PIECE.
Chinese-American composer Lei Liang has won the 2020 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition for an orchestral work that evokes the threat posed by climate change and the opportunity it offers for redemption. Boston Modern Orchestra Project commissioned the winning piece, A Thousand Mountains, a Million Streams, which premiered in 2018 in Boston’s Jordan Hall with Gil Rose conducting. 
“The world we live in today is dangerous,” explained Liang. “Our very existence is threatened by global warming, which is causing violent disruptions to the living things on our planet and being made worse by human irresponsibility. When creating the work, I wanted to convey the importance of preserving our landscapes, both physically and spiritually, to sustain a place where we and our children can belong.”
AGH! Sorry, that expostulation was solely for the well-massaged clichéed sentiments, not for the music itself, which I hope is a lot more creative. And no, our existence is not in the slightest threatened by global warming, which only exists in speculative computer models. Annual deaths in the US from falling down the stairs: 1,300. Annual deaths from global warming: 0. Ban stairs! Or, alternatively, my next piece is going to be a meditation on the danger of going down stairs.

I eagerly await your outraged comments!

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Professional violinist Joanna Maurer recently played on the film scores of both the comic book-inspired drama Joker and the holiday comedy Noelle. She did the same work, for equally prominent companies.
But the New York-based musician says she'll earn 75 per cent less for Noelle simply because it was released on Disney Plus, the new video-streaming service that launched on Nov. 14 and has already garnered more than 10 million subscribers.
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Working-class libraries and archives, the writings of autodidacts and the annals of adult education reveal a dynamic tradition of working-class access to the ancient Greeks and Romans, not only through language study but through translations and visual culture. Classical materials have been present in the identity construction and psychological experience of substantial groups of working-class Britons. Dissenting academies, Nonconformist Sunday schools and Methodist preacher-training initiatives all encouraged those who attended them to read widely in ancient history, ideas and rhetorical handbooks. Classical topics were included on the curricula of Mutual Improvement Societies, adult schools, Mechanics’ Institutes, university extension schemes, the Workers’ Educational Association, trade unions and the early Labour Colleges. These initiatives did much to counter the sluggish legislative response to workers’ demands for education: it was not until the Elementary Education Acts of 1870 and 1880 that even rudimentary instruction in literacy and numeracy, let alone access to classical culture, became universally and freely available to children under 13.
The whole article is worth reading for its detailed discussion. I came from a very lower middle class background. Both my parents never rose above Grade 8 in formal education. But I was always attracted to libraries and serious writing both fiction and non-fiction and never felt anything else other than encouragement my whole life in educational institutions. So you can imagine with what horror I regard the current attempts to ban authors because they are dead while males, to "de-colonize" literature, to ban every manifestation of Western Civilization that does not meet "woke" standards.

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For our envoi today, let's listen to some of the Lei Liang piece. It is in many separate clips on YouTube. Here are the first three (and of course, Blogger won't embed):




I don't know about you, but I listened to several of these mini-sections and it reminded me a lot of Messiaen with extra Asian influence, but with more threat and less joy.

8 comments:

Steven said...

Re the Aeon essay, it's much worse than any PC nonsense. One hears horror stories about libraries here in the UK making room for junk books by throwing out (literally in skips) old and often antiquarian books. I've been told that there is, or at least was, a rule that they are not supposed to throw out any books of which there is no other copy in the public library system. The problems with this rule should be obvious, and I'm fairly sure it is often flouted anyway. Somewhere (wish I could remember where) Theodore Dalrymple wrote about a library which threw away valuable books by the ton for the stupidest of reasons: to sell books worth more than a certain amount would require the full agreement of the town council -- so it was much easier, they decided, to simply throw the books away.

I despair at how populist and myopic libraries have become. They've made themselves irrelevant by becoming mere commercial enterprises for the hiring out of popular book and film titles, and a place for toddlers to run around and make a racket while mothers gossip. As 'cultural' activities become more and more alien to the general population, we don't think, *now is the time to bring culture to the people*; rather, we think we better dumb things down so as keep the money coming in and not exclude anyone. Libraries think that their traditional role as custodians who are there to make knowledge available to all to be a dreadfully silly and old-fashioned view. It's all about providing a 'community service', whatever that is. There are no longer librarians, but 'customer service assistants' or at best 'library assistants'. Libraries which were once housed in wonderful old buildings -- perilous staircases, claustrophobic shelves, places with a real sense of history and culture -- have now moved to sterile homogeneous monstrosities that better fit various regulations and ideologies. I often despair about my country!

By the way, when we will hear Dark Dream? I've been awaiting eagerly its online premiere.

Bryan Townsend said...

Thanks so much for the comment, Steven. I think what makes me feel the pain of all this so keenly is that it is the very people that we have trusted to be the guardians and communicators of culture, librarians and humanities departments of universities, that seem to be the betrayers. Not all, certainly. When I visited my alma mater a year or so ago, it seemed to be just as it always had been, a real engine and repository of culture. That was McGill School of Music. Mind you, there are rumblings even there.

My apologies about Dark Dream! It has been ready to go for a long time. I was going to put it up last Sunday, but I got swamped with various other things. I just want to review the photos and I will aim for this Sunday.

Steven said...

Quite alright, very much look forward to hearing it!

Bryan Townsend said...

Now I truly am committed!

Gavin said...

The "new" meaning of begging the question has been around for a long time -- here's a bit from William Safire complaining about it in 1998: http://tinyurl.com/6bd2g6. And in that piece he's complaining that it's in common usage.

As to climate change, I'll just say that I disagree but this blog is probably not the right forum to debate it.

Bryan Townsend said...

"New" vs "old" is relative, of course. I learned the meaning of the phrase long before the 90s, so...

No, you are correct, this is not the right forum to debate climate change. But could I propose this? It seems to me that a composer hanging the moral (and aesthetic?) significance of his work on such an obviously political hook as climate change is something we could debate? But that opens up several other cans of worms, doesn't it? The way to avoid all those fruitless debates would be to simply take the piece as an aesthetic object, severing it from all that superfluous context. But the composer asks us not to do that, doesn't he? It's a nice kettle of fish, really.

Gavin said...

>> "New" vs "old" is relative, of course. I learned the meaning of the phrase
>> long before the 90s, so...

I just meant that the incorrect usage is probably not anachronistic, even in the late '70s.

I think that what happened to "To coin a phrase" was that it was used sarcastically to say "I know this is a well-worn phrase," and people became used to thinking of it as referring to old phrases.

Bryan Townsend said...

Memory can be faulty, of course, but I honestly don't remember the phrase "begging the question" being misused until sometime in the 90s. You are probably right about "to coin a phrase."