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View Poll Results: Is classical music still relevant today? | |||
YES | 193 | 93.69% | |
NO | 13 | 6.31% | |
Voters: 206. You may not vote on this poll |
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02-22-2022, 03:35 PM | #431 (permalink) |
Groupie
Join Date: Feb 2022
Posts: 11
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relevance is a dubious concept. If relevance is defined in consequentialist terms only, no music has greater relevance than Taylor Swift - and no human has greater influence than Selena Gomez or the Rock.
Give it another 50 years. Taylor Swift will be forgotten, but Beethoven will still be there making the world a better place. |
09-22-2022, 01:58 AM | #432 (permalink) |
Account Disabled
Join Date: Sep 2022
Location: Toronto
Posts: 5
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Yes, classical music is the fundamental of any music that exists today. You take Bach's Fugues for example, and you can learn how to layer sounds and how to exhibit each voice such that the listener can catch onto the melody, as well as create interesting harmonies.
The 1-4-5 chord progressions pop musicians use today are going out the window IMO. Classical music is on a comeback. Good music is good music regardless of instrumentation. |
12-05-2022, 06:02 PM | #434 (permalink) |
Music Addict
Join Date: Jun 2022
Location: Montauban, France
Posts: 130
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Classical is still alive and kicking. Familiar themes keep coming up in today's popular music. Love, tragedy, struggle, pain, glory, humility, pride. The whole schabang. What is music if it cannot express these ideas constantly. I listened to Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana (1935) today.
Carl Orff – O Fortuna www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTWvlwZ7AJw |
12-07-2022, 05:22 PM | #435 (permalink) |
AllTheWhileYouChargeAFee
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 1,174
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Carmina Burana is great, but it's "songs" are so catchy I tend to get them stuck in my head to an annoying degree. They're almost more like pop tunes.
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Stop and find a pretty shell for her Beach Boys vs Beatles comparisons begin here |
12-11-2022, 12:06 PM | #436 (permalink) | |
Music Addict
Join Date: Jun 2022
Location: Montauban, France
Posts: 130
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Quote:
Been listening to Ahmad Jamal for a number of years and the track “Swahililand” always stuck in my head. Recently I learnt from a Robert Glasper vid that it was sampled by J Dilla. Also interested in the piano runs and I thought hey a lot them sound like they could come from classical composers. Perhaps Debussy, Rachmaninov, Beethoven, Mozart? Any less mainstream, more obscure ones? Jamal strikes me as someone who played at the crossroads, taking the past and projecting into the future. Like the god Janus. Ahmad Jamal – Swahililand (1974) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3S1naGY9EQ |
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04-22-2023, 04:38 PM | #438 (permalink) | |
A.B.N.
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: NY baby
Posts: 11,451
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Short answer No and I still stand behind that to this day!
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04-22-2023, 05:33 PM | #439 (permalink) |
Groupie
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 14
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Every kind of music is relevant today, and for always.
As new listeners discover classical music, or rap, or rock, or jazz, or blues, etc. - the music is more than relevant to them. It often brings joy to have discovered something fantastic which until then they had no idea was there. |
04-23-2023, 11:13 PM | #440 (permalink) |
ask me about cosmology
Join Date: Oct 2016
Location: Milky Way Galaxy
Posts: 9,012
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we are all too busy listening to trash people clown stuff music by ICP and twisted!
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