Listening to music as a music-maker
Posted: Wed Apr 29, 2009 6:32 pm
I will try to keep my thoughts coherent, beloved TubeNet, as this is something that is kinda blurry in my own noggin...
I've been thinking about something a lot recently. It involves listening to music and being one who creates music (a "musician").
The first time I gave this a thought was when I would, all of the sudden, have a new "favorite piece" of music after seeing a mini-documentary about it in class. We watched watch the M.T.T. "Keeping Scores" DVDs on Tchaikovsky's 4th and the Rite of Spring and I immediately became enthralled in both of them. I had heard of both, and had a recording of the Stravinsky, but never gave them a second thought until I saw those documentaries. I don't think I had become more "open-minded" or "serious" about music in that time period, so why did I feel such an urge to plunge my self into these pieces that I learned more about?
In band class, something I would do is find recordings of the music we were working on to hear how it sounded when performed. I find that, after viewing my tuba part in class, what I heard on the recording was more like an instructional video with its main goal to teach *me* how I should sound when I play it on my own. Does that make sense? It seems that the music loses its spirit, or something, when I'm not genuinely interested in hearing a just hearing a new piece of music.
So, I guess this is what I'm asking. For what reason would you be interested in listening to a new piece of music? Why would you buy *that* one instead of another one? Are you just looking for something new, are you performing it soon, did you just see it performed, what?
I hope that whole flood didn't sound like one of those program-produced Mad Libz, but I hope at least a few of you can make sense of it.
Aesthetically,
Jackson
I've been thinking about something a lot recently. It involves listening to music and being one who creates music (a "musician").
The first time I gave this a thought was when I would, all of the sudden, have a new "favorite piece" of music after seeing a mini-documentary about it in class. We watched watch the M.T.T. "Keeping Scores" DVDs on Tchaikovsky's 4th and the Rite of Spring and I immediately became enthralled in both of them. I had heard of both, and had a recording of the Stravinsky, but never gave them a second thought until I saw those documentaries. I don't think I had become more "open-minded" or "serious" about music in that time period, so why did I feel such an urge to plunge my self into these pieces that I learned more about?
In band class, something I would do is find recordings of the music we were working on to hear how it sounded when performed. I find that, after viewing my tuba part in class, what I heard on the recording was more like an instructional video with its main goal to teach *me* how I should sound when I play it on my own. Does that make sense? It seems that the music loses its spirit, or something, when I'm not genuinely interested in hearing a just hearing a new piece of music.
So, I guess this is what I'm asking. For what reason would you be interested in listening to a new piece of music? Why would you buy *that* one instead of another one? Are you just looking for something new, are you performing it soon, did you just see it performed, what?
I hope that whole flood didn't sound like one of those program-produced Mad Libz, but I hope at least a few of you can make sense of it.
Aesthetically,
Jackson