the pain in my knee is from a cut on my heart
I am going to set the record straight: I like classical music. A lot. My appreciation stems not from intellectual snobbery (everyone is a music snob, thinks the music they listen to is cutting edge). By and large I agree. What I would like to know is when did having a taste for dead composers make one less of a connoisseur?
The passion in a good composition escalates and engages my imagination. It is lyrical and poetic, without blessed words. The elitist mentality is a limitation. I understand that listening to Rachmaninov takes acclimation. Jazz does too. Training our ears and minds to hear the relationship between notes and melody is a practice of patience. It is resistance training. We are all brought up with notions that it is pretentious music, written for fine dining and elevators. Admitting to like classical music is akin to the first taste of flesh. At first the body is foreign and exotic, only handled (ha) in morsels. But our appetites, they do grow.
I am not arguing that everyone load their i-pods up with Handel's water music. I am suggesting that there may well be a composition that inspires and titillates you. The ears are organs which like variety. In a world of ever increasing spead and variety, the understanding of historical art is losing to the concupisent seduction of modern replicas.
1 comment:
I came to understand, appreciate, and thrive on classical music while deeply steeped in punk rock and metal. Listen to Tchaikovsky's 1812 and there are live cannons. Now thats hard core. Not to mention the speed of an Allegro con brio movement or the bombastic fat chords thrown down by Liszt. As titillating as these pieces may be for a punk rocker, there is also the side that easily evokes the sweet pathos of artistic expression. Power and beauty. This can lend itself to make any moment most profound. Furthermore, composers like Beethoven and Wagner had their hand in challenging/shattering the status quo of musical form and shaming their tame/lame contemporaries. I can dig that.
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