Posts tagged: classical

Musical Stylin’

I was sent this video by a friend (thanks, Augie!) and just had to share it. While there are various styles of music, and we typically favor one (or a few) above the rest, this group demonstrates in a fun-yet-very-impressive way that they really aren’t as far removed from each other as we might think.

I’d never actually heard of this group before, but I’m told they may have played here on a recent tour of the US. You can be sure I’ll try to catch them on their next trip across the pond!

If you get a chance to see the MozART Group – or any other live music, for that matter – by all means, do so! There is much to be said for a live performance in terms of ideas and inspiration, and it keeps the music flowing – both for the artist(s) you’re seeing and for you as well! Until then, there’s always YouTube.  :-)

Keep playing,
Mark

For more information about the MozART Group, please visit their website here: The MozART Group.

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Classical Music is the Foundation

This is an extremely funny video that points out, far better than a case study ever could, how classical music serves as the underpinning for much of the music we know – regardless of genre!

Mr. Rob Paravonian covers a lot of ground in this video, beginning with the grudge cellists everywhere hold for Pachelbel’s Canon in D (for good reason) and quickly moving into a barrage of music of all stripes that can trace lineage to said Canon. Embedded in the humor is a nugget of truth that is difficult to ignore.

The topic comes up quite frequently: how helpful is classical training in music if you want to play <fill in the blank>? Well…pretty helpful, actually. Whatever your age or music-making interests, an investment in classical training can pay huge dividends.

Keep playing,
Mark

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Modern classical music and the brain

If you want to pick a fight with someone, just pick on their music.  :-)

This article from our friends across the pond really hits several nails on the head(s). In it, they highlight why modern atonal compositions are so difficult to fully appreciate, much less enjoy, even for the well-trained; to the general concert-going public, they are a bothersome chore to endure. I’m convinced that feeding audiences a steady diet of “this is good for you, you must take it” has contributed to the steady decline in attendance within orchestra halls everywhere. Rather than expanding the art, we’re strangling it.

A friend of mine who holds season tickets for a major symphony pointed this out to me years ago, and although his assessment was much less scientific, it was just as accurate. In his words, atonal compositions lack “toe tap-ability”. He enjoyed stretching his brain with the “new stuff”, but what kept him coming back was the “masters”, tonal compositions whose performance resulted in the audience humming them as they left after the concert.

Modern movie music composers understand this, and helps to explain the success of movie music performances in concert halls. They nearly always pack the house.

There will always be room for music that presses – or even shatters – boundaries. Yet this may not be the best goal:

“We measured the predictability of tone sequences in music by Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern and found the successive pitches were less predictable than random tone sequences.”

“For listeners, this means that, every time you try to predict what happens next, you fail. The result is an overwhelming feeling of confusion, and the constant failures to anticipate what will happen next means that there is no pleasure from accurate prediction.”

You may want to read the bold portions again and give them some thought. Less predictable than random? It’s sobering.

Lest I be branded a classical music heretic, I have to say I do enjoy some modern pieces, and I can appreciate aspects of nearly all of them…even those I heartily dislike. That said, the linked article goes a long way toward explaining why “classics” – music that has staying power, regardless of genre – become classics: they are approachable to the listener’s (and performer’s) brain. It’s all in the brain waves…  ;-)

When it’s all said and done, though, it’s all good…and variety just makes it better. So whatever you play, keep playing!

All the best,
Mark

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PTMs in the news: “passion players” in the UK

I will not denigrate Full-Time Musicians (FTMs) by saying that they play without feeling; I also won’t denigrate Part-Time Musicians (PTMs) by saying that “what we lack in ability we make up with enthusiasm”. Each idea can true or false at an individual level only. But – and you knew there had to be a “but”! – there is something to be said for the feelings that are stirred in someone for whom playing music is an obsession rather than a profession.

This article in the Guardian covers it very nicely. Here’s a small taste:

“Some friends and I started a Sunday evening chamber group – sometimes it’s a quartet, sometimes a piano quintet, sometimes a sextet. Some of the time we sound pretty ropey. But once in a while, something amazing happens: the endless complexity of those threads of Brahms, Schumann or Schubert come together and our individual lines become one. It’s almost embarrassing to use the word, in our cynical times, that best describes this feeling: joy.”

I can barely begin to describe how well this hits home, and I suspect you feel the same way. At various times, I have played in the following configurations:

  • Small, mixed-instrument ensemble
  • Unaccompanied solo
  • Piano-accompanied solo
  • Small band
  • Full orchestra
  • Dixieland jazz combo
  • Brass choir

While I have my preferences (which can change based upon the instrument I’m playing and my mood at the time!), all are richly rewarding and provide me with the deep satisfaction that playing good music provides. How can you play and not be touched by it?!?

If you have a story you’d like to share, please post a comment (below) or drop us a line; we’d love to hear about it! In the meantime, take some “artistic license” and play your music like the addiction it is. What can they do? Fire you?  :-)

All the best,
Mark

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Fun with music: a classic(al) cinema moment!

Most musicians know that classical music and the big screen can be merged with great success; in fact, most great movies have great scores, and many would consider it a requirement!

Say what??!?!

The following video from musicians and comedians extraordinaire Igudesman and Joo demonstrates just how complementary these two art forms are. Without further ado, I give you Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and James Bond…together at last.  8-)

Watching these two is a good reminder of just how much fun music can be. Enjoy!

All the best,
Mark

P.S. – For more Igudesman and Joo, please visit their official website!

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