Musical concern: Burial
Posted: Fri Jan 04, 2008 1:04 am
nevermind.
busbus wrote:Hey Colonel, why waste the CPU cycles? It's the transitive property. You and I both learned it a while back in our respective grade schools.
tocharian wrote:simmo wrote:Rock is a form of music.
Music is a form of art.
Therefore, rock is a form of art.
x = y;
y = z;
->
x = z.
Lame. Still waiting.
Mandroid2.0 wrote:This discussion takes me back to the days of my liberal arts education, wherein my love of art and literature was persistently crushed by pretentious assholes who over-analyzed everything.
You know that adage, "those who can do, those who can't teach?"
In art, it goes, "those who can create, those who can't become art philosophers and write drab and bitter essays about how smart and insightful they are."
That having been stated, I think that Burial is definitely crap.
simmo wrote:tocharian wrote:simmo wrote:Rock is a form of music.
Music is a form of art.
Therefore, rock is a form of art.
x = y;
y = z;
->
x = z.
Lame. Still waiting.
In order to refute this argument, you need to deny either the predicate or the antecedent. If you wish to argue either that rock isn't music or music isn't art, be my guest - but it seems like a bit of a waste of breath to me.
warmowski wrote:tocharian wrote:
No, there were no "problems with the score" at all -- at least for the non-orchestral people.
I felt the problem was that we were there to record music being played, but the orchestra people instead of playing music turned in a kind of artless, earless, disengaged notation-staring exercise that resulted in only pitches and tones.
tocharian wrote:Construction workers don't improvise when there are problems with the blueprint...
emmanuelle cunt wrote:space for masturbating with eloquence
tocharian wrote:warmowski wrote:
No, there were no "problems with the score" at all -- at least for the non-orchestral people.
I felt the problem was that we were there to record music being played, but the orchestra people instead of playing music turned in a kind of artless, earless, disengaged notation-staring exercise that resulted in only pitches and tones.
Just this is a terrible and utterly alien description of classical musicians.
tocharian wrote:It's like someone asked you to describe a humming bird and you describe a chicken.
tocharian wrote:As far as improvising goes... of course it's easier to improvise in rock music. Continuing a circle of fifths or some pattern of chords is much easier than building on a highly inventive melodic idea requiring a high degree of technical skill to execute.
tocharian wrote:So let's just say rock music is the apex of culture, David Yow is as great a musician as János Starker and be done with it.
tocharian wrote:I'm not gonna say anymore after this because I seem to disagree with just about everyone here about talking about art... which is fine.