Classical music & the Internets

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Here's an interesting New Yorker article about Classical music and the Internet.

Some highlights:
A tour of music’s new virtual realm might begin at www.schoenberg.at, the Web site of the Arnold Schoenberg Center, in Vienna. In a handsome twist of fate, the most famously difficult composer of the twentieth century is now the most instantly accessible: possibly no modern artist has such a large Web presence. On the site, you can read immaculate digital reproductions of Schoenberg’s correspondence, listen to his complete works on streaming audio, examine his designs for various inventions and gadgets (including a typewriter for musical notation), and follow links to YouTube videos of him playing tennis.


Go next to Think Denk, the blog of the pianist Jeremy Denk, a superb musician who writes with arresting sensitivity and wit. The central predicament of Denk’s existence is that he is struggling to master the great works of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries while meandering through a twenty-first-century landscape of airports, Starbucks outlets, and chain hotels. He relishes moments of absurd collision. While he is practicing the finger-busting fugue of Beethoven’s “Hammerklavier” Sonata, his wearied brain discovers that the principal fugue subject matches the theme song of “Three’s Company”


Perhaps the most constructive digitization of classical music is taking place on a Web site called Keeping Score, which is hosted by the San Francisco Symphony. Michael Tilson Thomas, the San Francisco’s music director, has set a new standard for educational programming with a series of behind-the-music radio and television broadcasts. To accompany the TV shows, which delve into canonical works such as Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony and Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring,” Tilson Thomas and the orchestra have set up high-tech pages where listeners can follow the score bar by bar, stop to listen to the conductor’s explanations of the particulars, and see musicians demonstrate how Stravinsky reinvented their instruments.

Classical music & the Internets

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Buy Mr. Ross' book The Rest Is Noise.

On the subject of Hatto/technology, I recall seeing something somewhere at some point about a "re-perfomance" of a Glenn Gould recording, via computer analysis/mechanical execution, seemingly in order to trigger a renewal of the copyright.

I guess there was also this one thing, somewhere up in one of them New England states, where a theater was screening HD transmissions of operas which were occurring live in a separate location.

Classical music & the Internets

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newberry wrote:
Perhaps the most constructive digitization of classical music is taking place on a Web site called Keeping Score, which is hosted by the San Francisco Symphony. Michael Tilson Thomas, the San Francisco’s music director, has set a new standard for educational programming with a series of behind-the-music radio and television broadcasts. To accompany the TV shows, which delve into canonical works such as Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony and Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring,” Tilson Thomas and the orchestra have set up high-tech pages where listeners can follow the score bar by bar, stop to listen to the conductor’s explanations of the particulars, and see musicians demonstrate how Stravinsky reinvented their instruments.


My interest in classical music is modest at best, but this has piqued my curiosity. First episode is November 2, apparently.

Thanks for the heads-up, newberry.
You had me at Sex Traction Aunts Getting Vodka-Rogered On Glass Furniture

Classical music & the Internets

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This Keeping Score online stuff is FANTASTIC! Damn, I just got started on the Eroica companion site, with the measure-by-measure guide to the score, and I've already gotten a case of goosebumps.

I have no musical training and no knowledge of theory, so this sort of layman's explication is fascinating and compelling. Sort of brings me back to my university days, when I first started learning to dig deep into a piece of literature and tease out all its magic.

I also can't get over how well done and how rich the interactivity is.

Great stuff!
You had me at Sex Traction Aunts Getting Vodka-Rogered On Glass Furniture

Classical music & the Internets

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I gotta bump this, because anyone who's ever wanted to learn more about classical composition really needs to see how well they've executed these interactive mini-sites for each of the chosen pieces of music.

I spent all afternoon on Eroica yesterday and I still didn't exhaust all the material.
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