▲ | mingus88 a day ago | |||||||
In other words “interpretation” It’s so funny coming from a musical background and reading all these comments of people who have no idea what they are talking about criticizing one of the worlds most famous modern composers Every performance ever done has been the performer interpreting the composer’s score and making it their own. Nobody want to hear a robotic perfectly accurate recreation of what is on the page, because even the act of transcription alters the composer’s intent. The score is not the art! There is no perfection in art. It’s all subjective, by the literal definition of art. | ||||||||
▲ | jacobgkau a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> Every performance ever done has been the performer interpreting the composer’s score and making it their own. To be fair, there are multiple lines of thought on that matter. Some conductors enjoy "making it their own," while other conductors attempt to discover and reproduce the composer's original intention as closely as possible. Toscanini comes to mind as a historical example of the latter, although I'm sure there are others. At a certain point, a composer needs to provide information to compose a piece. What if someone wrote a "solo" that just said "improvise" and contained no notes at all? The argument being presented above is that Cage did the tempo equivalent of that. This is a philosophy argument at best, not "people who have no idea what they're talking about." | ||||||||
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▲ | Retric a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Nothing stops someone interpreting an infinity sign. The point is both are impossible to achieve, not that nobody can make a related performance. |