Anforium wrote:@Warabalist
I expect more out of music than you do. I consider that music compete crap,yes. I could give a shit if people get drunk to it or have a good time. I like music that has real meaning and takes real talent to produce. Also, I expect the artists to write their own music, not pay others to do it for them.
WavesOfParadox wrote:"I consider that music is, by its very nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all, whether a feeling, an attitude of mind, or psychological mood, a phenomenon of nature, etc….Expression has never been an inherent property of music. That is by no means the purpose of its existence."
-Igor Stravinsky (from his autobiography)
Freewave wrote:Sometimes how music is made IS the concept attempted to be communicated. It might not be as listenable or enjoyable to most but pushing what is music and what it can be is important. Most of the time it may be feeling or a message but other times its as much about the creation.
Warbalist wrote:Anforium wrote:@Warabalist
I expect more out of music than you do. I consider that music compete crap,yes. I could give a shit if people get drunk to it or have a good time. I like music that has real meaning and takes real talent to produce. Also, I expect the artists to write their own music, not pay others to do it for them.
I'm thinking we might think similarly, but because of the wonder of the internet, it's not coming through so clearly. I'm not sure if you expect more from the music as much as expect more from the composers and performers of the music. What you're talking about doesn't have much to do with the actual notes on a page which convey only the idea of music.
Let me put it another way: if a Katy Perry song had the same chord progression as an Iron Maiden song, would that make the Iron Maiden song emotionless? Of course not! What about the performance? Well, that's probably where I'd start agreeing with you. Music can be emotionless when it either means nothing to the performer or the listener and on top of that, it's completely subjective.
And as far as expecting artists to write their own music, are you willing to throw out every classical performance, orchestral-based music in its entirety, Motown and nearly all popular music before the Beatles?
Aftermath wrote:[Lots of words]
XXDarkShadow79XX wrote:Good Post
K3WRO wrote:Music is my life
Without music, I won't have any of this life, I would have to stop having breakfast or starve,
Anyway, I see music as an auditory form of art, it's media, it's diverse, with many styles fitting to the certain type of people.
Music is one of the most astounding invention in human history, It might even be one of those things that makes us, humans unique.
Flinckie wrote:So bottom line is; music is a by-product of our ability to vocally communicate.
Dr_Dissonance wrote:Flinckie wrote:So bottom line is; music is a by-product of our ability to vocally communicate.
I'm just going to throw some fun facts into the fray.
Language actually developed from music, not the other way around! My choir director edited a big book about it that was released a few months ago. I've only read a snippet of it, but he talks a lot about it when we're doing choir conducting.
So, that raises the question, what was music to them? The primitive folk?
Kyoga wrote:to me, music is a way of expressing your own little imaginary world to whoever is willing to listen. I like to take my listeners into a small story whenever I write a song. Ambient or anything else I write is all directed to telling a story.
When I listen to music, what I want to do is be able to envision the world that the artist is trying to paint in his or her own eyes. so that I can see what they're trying to show me.
Music to me is imagination. A world that is of your own mind, but at the same time you're trying to share it with the rest of world through the delivery of descriptive sound and emotional composing. My music in particular is a string of little stories that mean a lot to me and my character as a person. Sad emotional songs, but also with a condemning calmness to them.
Songs like If Equestria Burns (which is about the betrayal of the people destroying equestria)
or songs like Going It Alone (where Rainbowdash remains the last survivor of her friends) where the emotion is delivered by a solo instrument, as she flies away in what she knows are her last moments.
Or even songs like In the Realm of the Liars, where the fear and desperation of the changeling kind grows drastically as their own kind face extinction and for their last hope they flee their dying home to find a potential way of survival.
All of these things are meant to be delivered. Emotions like sorrow, hope, desperation, anxiety, discovery, awe, fear, anguish, and the crushing fate of humility. They aren't meant to be happy emotions, but they're real ones that I feel are meant to be projected. Songs of mine will come about happiness and prosperity, but until these emotions are part of my world, I can't fairly display them to my listeners.
After all, those who listen to my music are listening to a little piece of myself, and i'm more than glad to share my world with them.
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