I have
been roaming this planet for nigh on 60 years and have yet to feel
that anything is really too much, or I am too old to grasp the latest
in culture or technology. My parents were very much into trying out
with somewhat middling success, old stone-age computer games, PONG, or TANK, or whatever
the current game was at the time on BETA Max and all sorts of
horrible stuff.
I am
currently having a good run of luck, telling those idiots on Twitter,
something like "@Microsoft will pick your PC". I keep sending them
messages like, “Thanks for the advice, I'll be sure to get that
Commodore 64, you assholes. It sure beats the blue screen of death.”
Some idiot actually answered that. I also told them I was thrilled
for the quick response regarding the Atari that I should purchase.
Microsoft. Motto: We can accommodate any level of stupid.
Same
thing with music. I follow 2 shows pretty religiously; "Grimm" and "The
Following." Imagine my glee when they both used some Rammstein which
is a hugely popular death-metal band out of Germany and employs very traditional
old world (read Beethoven and mostly, 2nd Viennese school
types of song-writing.) I find them to be most distinctive, not only
in sound, but they are one of the only bands since Pink Floyd and the
Police who compose and perform songs in odd meters, like 7/4. That really thrills me
when bands are so willing to take a chance like that. They will be
remembered years from now. Some of my younger friends don't get it.
“But
Mary,” they'll say. “You're eleventy-billion years old, how can
you like this stuff?” 3 words. I've played it. And much more. One
thing about most musicians, we're always scratching around for good
contemporary music that pushes that envelope. Cutting edge, but not
shit. There are those who think that Alban Berg is horrid, and Arnold
Schoenberg is terrible, and that's fine. I do like them. But, please God, no Anton
Bruckner. We had a rehearsal one night, and for some half-assed
reason, the conductor decided the violinists weren't putting enough
whatever into their tremolo. He spent an hour and a half on that shit
and 4 wind players fell asleep and out of their chairs. I fall asleep
playing Bruckner. He's glacial, but I don't hate him like I hate
Mozart, but still, he runs a close second. I have yet to run into any neo-Romantic, or really
contemporary music that wasn't pretty awesome.
Well,
actually, I take that back. I had to listen to some total shit in
college. I remember 2 pieces (mercifully, only 2) by student
composers; always a crap-shoot in my opinion. I can't write music
worth a shit. I took Composition and wisely decided to hang up my
feathered quill after the “sure-fire method” provided me ever so
kindly, by Mr. John Hathaway, provoked him to comment, “God, that's
terrible!” And, it truly was. I never tried to conduct either, as
that would be akin to cows trying to drive; a force against nature.
Leave me to my true talent; the viola. I just pretend to play violin
and I don't even pretend that I do. I come right out and tell people
that I can't play the fucking violin. Yet, for some reason, people
insist on hiring me to play the damned thing. I guess they feel the
need for some random stupid, especially if it's in the 1st
violin section.
Anyway,
these 2 student composer pieces were going to change the face of modern
classical music I am sure. To what I am not sure. One was for 2
upright pianos, and a celesta, a sort of tinkly little drawing-room
sort of keyboard-y contraption. This piece was as much about the
placement of the instruments as the performance, which tells you something about the quality of the music right there. It was a giant fail
on both counts. The pianos were set very close together, with the
celesta jammed in between the 2 pianos. The players sat with their
backs to the audience and proceeded to beat in a very clamorous and
monotonous manner for 3 movements. There were no changes in tempi,
dynamics, just a bunch of clanging around, then stop. More wild clamorous clanging. Caesura. Repeat clanging. And so forth. Finally, the people stood up and faced the audience. Wild applause at the end,
because at last, this abortion was over and done with. The players
took their bows. I didn't have any tomatoes or rocks to throw, so I
was rather put out. And no shots rang out; the firing squad having fallen asleep.
The next
opus, was by some guy named Duckworth. His piece was called something
asinine like “4 for 440.” He had 4 oboe players in every corner
of the concert hall and all they did was play a 440 A for about a
zillion years. The gimmick here was that they did the same A in
different meters, different lengths, triplets, 16th
notes, yada yada yada. It sucked. About 5 minutes into it I was
already calling it “that piece by Duckshit.” 45 minutes later,
this snore-fest was still going on, as these asshat oboe players were
flinging this same A all over the hall. The atmosphere was funereal.
You couldn't hear any breathing; I think the patrons had died. Death
by double-reed boredom.
I hate
gimmicky music like this. We had to go to these concerts in college
and I think we were made to, because our Professors did and so, we
were made to suffer, because I sure didn't get anything out of any of
it, except what not to do, should I ever write music (yeah, that was
gonna happen) and a passing grade. I actually got stuck playing in
one; a god-forsaken trombone and viola duet. The stupidest pairing of
two instruments ever and “complete” with interpretive dancing,
another stupid art form that is usually performed by 70-year old
women in church, to some avant-garde mass, written by a music
minister who flunked 1st and 2nd year
composition, but insists he was just “misunderstood." Balls. He
sucked as a composer.
These
dancers, in leotard unis and hoods, snaked their ways over the
theater seats, towards us, the hapless musicians. Maybe there was a
point to be made there, but I was edging my way to stage-left, on the
chance they were carnivorous. I didn't want to be some sort of
low-rent “Le Sacre du Printemps,” by Igor Stravinsky. Low-rent, hell. This would have
had to come from e-Bay, or half.com, were they around in the '70s, it
was that bad. I can't remember how the damn thing ended. It just sort
of stopped, as if the “composer,” who was also the trombone
player lost interest in the whole enterprise and called it a day.
To the
riotous applause of 3 people, 2 of whom were the trombonist's
parents, I packed up Wolf, beat feet and got the Hell out of there.
The piece was like this: 20 minutes of me playing staccato, and the
trombone was farting and here are the Snake people coming at us from
the audience. I didn't even want my name in the program. Come to
think of it, I don't think there was a program, thank God. So, I was
safely anonymous.
So,
yeah, I love contemporary music, but good stuff, and none of that was
it. Give me some “Bohemian Rhapsody” or “Dust in the Wind” or
Pink Floyd's “The Wall” or Styx's “Domo Arigato,” or Alan
Parson's Project, “Psychobabble Rap” or “Eye in The Sky” all
of which I've played. Along with Mahler, Smokey Robinson and all the
rest. But, I am eclectic; I cut my teeth on Richard Strauss,
Beethoven, Brahms, Rachmaninoff, Stravinsky and Shostakovich and
Tchaikovsky. Throw in some Rimsky-Korsakov and Ipolitov-Ivanov to
keep it interesting. As long as it's good.
Next up: The Young Person's Guide to Opera
2 comments:
knowing very little about music - I couldn't say if agreed or not - pretensious rubbish annoys - but sometimes I feel that stuff that is raved over is pretensious so I' no real judge - I have always enjoyed some of each type of music that evolves - but am picky! strange beats and rythms delight - odd unknown (to me) instruments the same. I just like reading your flows of words - like molten larva streaming down a nightscape - makes my day:)
You are one of my very most favorite people and authors! Pretense and "Emperors' New Clothes"-ism truly ires me. Musicians, and other artists I'm sure spend enormous amounts of time finding their own voices, and then along comes Barnum and Bailey, with gimmicks a-plenty. Shiny pretties to amuse the masses. Aargh! Your praise regarding the flow of my words if very much appreciated, my dear. I attribute that to the musical ear I possess. I hear music in everything!
Post a Comment