"problems" in pop music and the poss. need for a formalist criticism (your suggestions here!)

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on this thread, as on many others, i've called for a pop criticism more informed by an understanding of "how music works as music."

here's the thread where i (and anyone else who wishes to join me) pose examples of "problems" in pop music which Criticism As It Is Now have addressed unsatisfactorily (or only partially), and which some kind of musicology (broadly defined)-informed analysis might better address.

first example:

the new liz phair album.

every review seems to suggest that her sound is different, the "rough edges have been sanded off," etc.

most of guess have a *sense* of what this means--we can hear it, we can describe it impressionistically and a bit vaguely.

but what are the actual formal elements of liz phair's music that have been changed? what sorts of harmonies and chords etc. is she using that she hadn't before? is the harmonic pallette narrowed or broadened? etc.

i think someone could conceiveably explain this without being "show-offy" or terribly longwinded. and it would be terribly more interesting than the umpteenth review making the same nebulous comparison between new and old liz phair and arguing back and forth about whether she's "sold out" or not.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:34 (twenty-one years ago)

you so crazy.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:36 (twenty-one years ago)

This type of criticism doesn't seem very commercially viable.

n/a (Nick A.), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:37 (twenty-one years ago)

Chords/harmonies/notes are out, sonics are in.

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:41 (twenty-one years ago)

i think ama is maybe looking for a music criticism more akin to the film and book crit that shows up in places like harper's (just throwing a name out), which is all well and good, but these magazines couldn't give a good goddamn about popular music by and large.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:42 (twenty-one years ago)

music crit is more of a semi-complicated (in the when i show my mom a piece she "doesn't get it" because i have to condense my refs and ideas so much) shorthand these days mostly owing to reasons of space and commerce.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:44 (twenty-one years ago)

An amusing subset of criticism that does get more "technical": the record reviews near the back of drum/guitar/bass/keyboard/computer gear magazines.

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:45 (twenty-one years ago)

jordan: you mean production nuances? compression? EQ? the acoustics of recording studios? well, talk about that too. that'd be great!

jess: re. harper's, etc.: not quite. there are unfortunate deficits in film criticism as well. but it's unfortunate that so many magazines (and schools) have no space for pop music! (although sasha's new yorker column is a def. advance on that front, if it lasts.)

when is started this thread i was thinking less about the real-world problems with the viability of such a criticism (owing to commerce, etc.) than hoping for examples of how it could be useful. but we can talk about both.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:46 (twenty-one years ago)

And come to think of it, that might be what you're looking for, publications catering to musicians rather than a mass audience.

(x-post)

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:46 (twenty-one years ago)

several xposts

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:46 (twenty-one years ago)

well it would be "useful" in the sense that it would erase some of the ambiguity that accrues around pretty much useless phrases like "sell out", yr right.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:48 (twenty-one years ago)

jordan: a "poetics of popular music" would be more ambitious, less technical, more historial-social in its appreciation, than the stuff in music magazines. it wouldn't PRESUME the musical norms of a genre but inform the audience of same and perhaps the particular artist's contribution to/deviation from same. but it probably has as much in common w/such magazines as with rock criticism as practiced in the alteraweeklies.


MORE EXAMPLES PLS!!

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:48 (twenty-one years ago)

we're dangerously close to opening the "superwords" pandoras box here.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 20:49 (twenty-one years ago)

"less technical" is the wrong phrase

"less exclusively technical" is what i meant to write

(i felt rushed by the onslaught of xposts)

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:00 (twenty-one years ago)

One of the things I'm interested in doing is not just saying, "Elements of I Get Wet sound like Kimono My House," but showing how it is so. Showing that a particular lick/rhythm/etc. from a song on I Get Wet is derived from one on Kimono My House.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:03 (twenty-one years ago)

Gah. Just typed a long post and the computer ate it. Example, though - I'd like to see a more formalist approach with regard to singing. It often seems to be the area in which even good reviews can lapse into cliche, and a lot of the time it gets bizarrely overlooked as well (in comparison to other instruments, arrangements, samples) as a key aspect of a song (especially if the singer is not the songwriter). 90% of rock critics probably don't understand any vocal technicalities at all... I've often found posts by Dan and Jody Beth useful in the archives on this subject, actually, and there was a very interesting interview with Diamanda Galas I read once somewhere where she pinpointed a lot of specific vocal techniques which she felt weren't noticed too much.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:05 (twenty-one years ago)

thanks for the good examples, tim and alex (gah sorry if that sounds condescending, i don't mean it to be).

one possible thing that could happen as a result of a practiced formal criticism is bringing the art of criticism and the art of making music a bit closer together. it could even potentially help diminish the skepticism that many musicians feel toward criticism (though a lot of that skepticism is probably inevitable, not for the best reasons). i think a good formal criticism would be very informed by an understanding of the sort of choices artists in a given genre make (sometimes half-unconsciously?!) when creating music.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:08 (twenty-one years ago)

It's funny, I feel like whenever I try to write music criticism lately, I spend too much time talking about what individual instruments are doing, and not enough coming up with those impressionistic phrases that are often able to capture something as ineffable as music better than literal descriptions. Ideally, I'd like to see a mixture of both, though.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:09 (twenty-one years ago)

I think the biggest barrier to formal criticism is that a pretty good understanding of music theory etc is required. Most rock critics don't have this because most people generally don't have this... classical training seems to be essential for this.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:11 (twenty-one years ago)

One of the problems with a more formalist criticism -- at least if my own attempts are any indication -- is that it can seem so DRY. The impressionistic stuff is at least fairly entertaining and cleverly written sometimes. I don't want to lose any of the poetry in good criticism by focusing so much on musical technique.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:12 (twenty-one years ago)

i think good rhetoric and a precise well-developed argument ARE good writing, exciting writing, entertaining writing. i think writing about "technique" (though this is not really what i mean by a poetics of pop music) needn't be "dry" at all. i can't make this point strongly enough.

i think musical training is probably a prerequisite, but it would have to be a *modified* or *nuanced* classical training, since the same tools are not used for pop music (or even different genres of pop music) as for classical music.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:15 (twenty-one years ago)

the presumed dichotomy between "formal analysis" and "exciting criticism" is one i would like to see upset!

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:16 (twenty-one years ago)

Yeah, me too! I'm just saying, it's a challenge!

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:17 (twenty-one years ago)

I think the examples I cited (Dan and JBR's posts, that Diamanda Galas interview where she starts ranting passionately about singers she enjoys in really technical terms) upset that dichotomy!

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:17 (twenty-one years ago)

perhaps what ama is looking for is the crit version of steely dan

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:19 (twenty-one years ago)

that makes no sense but i like it :)

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:21 (twenty-one years ago)

heh i was thinking "technical prowess but an eye for language"

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:22 (twenty-one years ago)

go back to your ivory tower, hippie communist.

frankE (frankE), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:25 (twenty-one years ago)

The problem is with communicating this stuff to people who don't know music theory in a way that would make the reader even care for it.

I mean - so what if diamanda or any pop singer used this or that technique, you know.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:26 (twenty-one years ago)

gd thing abt ilm is that it picks on certain words/cliches and certain attitudes expressed by the reviewer but its going from that to the kinds of things that are being proposed in this thread.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:29 (twenty-one years ago)

I think one of the traps of placing the emphasis on classical training is that it encourages the writer to place to much emphasis on the structures of creation (ie. hypothetically the most rigorous and comprehensive review would essentially allow the reader to recreate the piece of music down to the last note, nuance and peculiarity) as opposed to the structures of reception. I'm more interested in determining how it is that listeners pick up on, categorise and pass judgment on aspects of music like vocal ability, "roughness", groove etc. And I don't mean sociological studies of listeners; rather, attempting to create critical models which map onto the the music's strategy of effectiveness in engaging the listener. How does a given piece of music "cast a spell" over us? Too much non-formal music resorts to quasi-mythic terminology at that point, but the spell in question is really a piece of elaborate charlatanism, a confluence of sonic tactics which, in the mind or the body of the listener, appears to be something more than a series of discrete sounds. What is it that is allowing to a piece of music to do this to us (both at a "textual" and contextual level)?

One way to do this is to look at the pre-existing metaphors and rationales that pop up in music reviews, but apart from the mythic aspect of some of the problems with these are that they're usually hobbled together cliches with no real explanatory power, or they're based on some concept external to music (eg. critics who treat songwriting like literature), or they're unknowingly discriminatory, veiling a "best practice" standard of which all other music is merely an inferior derivation.

Of course I think most critical concepts are going to suffer from this veiled best practice thing (whether the idol is real or imagined) because we use critical concepts to say something about the qualitative value of the music we're looking at. But I think it's important to allow for an endless multiplicity of critical models to explain this strategy of effectiveness, to allow the music we're looking at to determine the nature of the critical concept we use along an ascending model of analysis rather than a descending model of analysis. Indeed there can be no one model to explain this interaction between the music and the listener, because inherent to the success of a "strategy" is its novel combination of tactics, its element of surprise.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:41 (twenty-one years ago)

I love me the Tim.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:45 (twenty-one years ago)

You can't separate the two things. The tightness of the groove in James Brown or whatever is a concrete phenomenon that can be measured and analyzed. The "spell" is not a metaphysical thing; it's made up of real components.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:51 (twenty-one years ago)

A thread with a similar discussion is here :
C Eddy (or peeps like him) vs. J Pareles (or peeps like him)

... and of course many of you are familiar with it since you posted there as well.

Barry Bruner (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:53 (twenty-one years ago)

Yes exactly! But I don't think that simply explaining how the music was created necessarily covers the full extent of explaining how it operates on the listener (for one thing it misses out on, or misconstrues, the role of context). (x-post)

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 21:54 (twenty-one years ago)

i have to leave work in a moment, but v. briefly: i agree entirely tim. my model for this is the "poetics of cinema" explored in david bordwell's books, esp. his books on ozu and dreyer, in which the question is not so much "how did this music get made?" but "how does this music function as a work of art?" i.e. how do its effects function. which involves some sophisticated notions of how film is perceived/understood. so a "poetics of pop music" would involve reception as well, at a very fundamental level.

more later.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:00 (twenty-one years ago)

"The tightness of the groove in James Brown or whatever is a concrete phenomenon that can be measured and analyzed. The "spell" is not a metaphysical thing; it's made up of real components."

The next question I want to ask though is "for what reasons or under what conditions would the listener *want* a tight groove". I don't think you can rest on the technical explanation of the tightness of the groove as an explanation of the music's quality because that assumes that tightness (in grooves) is universally desirable.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:01 (twenty-one years ago)

right. this reminds me a quote from barthes. he was answering critics who argued that a "formalist" analysis was ahistorical. he responded that a naive formalism did indeed pull us out of history (w/unfortunate results) but a sophisticated formalism brought us closer to history than any other method. that is, understanding the concrete circumstances of the making of those james brown records would include not such technical issues but the proximate contexts in which the musical choices were made: the demands of the marketplace, demands of the record label, etc., which are in turn influenced by wider social phenomena. the trick is to follow this path outward very very carefully and methodically and sensibly, and not (as so much, if not most, rock criticism tends to do) leap from impressionistic description of music to broad arguments about society in a single bound.

ok i really gotta leave now....

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:09 (twenty-one years ago)

not JUST technical issues

i should add that between the music's creation and the "demands of the marketplace" there are even more proximate factors like the cost of a session, new dance crazes, james brown's bass player being fired on thursday, etc.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:11 (twenty-one years ago)

but thats still treating the music as an object not an experience

gaz (gaz), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:12 (twenty-one years ago)

As a component of Brown's music's *effect* on the listener, I would consider the tight groove to be a "tactic" rather than a "strategy" (although if we were to zero in on the groove itself we might see how it is comprised of a number of different "tactics"). Tactics in music as in battles are things which have a certain replicability across a number of situations; hence to explain their use one merely has to explain their technical operation. But a strategy is dependent on too many real-life variables. In battle it's the size of your enemy's force, their weapons, the lay of the land, the weather etc. In music it's the sensibility and predilections of the listener, the context in which the music is heard, the other music that person has heard, either in their life or just that day. In that sense a strategy cannot exist without a (real or hypothetical) listener, listening situation, listening history. Indeed, the third term that goes along with "tactic" and "strategy" is the "terrain" of the listener's context, upon which the strategy is always deployed. The overall "battle" - ie. what we are attempting to explain - is the listener's experience of the music, as opposed to the music itself, because a strategy without a situation to which it applies is kinda meaningless. (ha ha big xpost with amateurist and gaz!)

Rachel Stevens' "Some Girls" can be explained technically by breaking down its discrete sonic and musical components, but that doesn't explain the wealth of associations, the interlinks between sonics and contexts (most obviously the schaffel-pop groove, whose resonance will be utterly different depending on whether the listener can "place" it or not).

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:18 (twenty-one years ago)

It should go without saying that the strategy is neither identical to the creator's intentions, nor somehow "inherent" to the music as an object.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:19 (twenty-one years ago)

There's nothing necessarily wrong with treating music like an object. It IS an object.

Regarding the tightness of the groove: rhythmic regularity is significant in making people want to dance. That's how drum machines and Kraftwerk can be "funky." If you could show, graphically, how the members of James Brown's band's articulations are all constantly right on the beats (or on the upbeats or wherever they're supposed to go), and that the tempo stays very constant, that would be significant.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:21 (twenty-one years ago)

Yeah I accept that, and acknowledge that it's an enormous component in terms of how the music works. But does that explain why certain forms of tightness and funkiness go in and out of fashion? Or why some people like dancing to it and others don't? Or how people actually, physically dance to it? Again I don't see how that approach goes beyond a sort of ahistorical impersonal explanation that has to presume some ideal audience reaction for which there is no real explanation.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:32 (twenty-one years ago)

doesn't any discussion of why james brown's music "works" have to include a counter-example that "doesn't" work? and then we're already in a quagmire of "right" and "wrong".

xpost with tim

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:39 (twenty-one years ago)

i just plain flat out do not care about fifths or upbeats or thirds to fifths or minors or harmonic palettes. why should i give a shit about the structure to bizarre love triangle? or the roots of the feelies' polyrhythms? or want pick apart a song or artist until it's/they're just a piece of meat graded on its "quality".

personally, i want to feel it, not think it.

frankE (frankE), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:40 (twenty-one years ago)

I want to think about how you feel it.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:42 (twenty-one years ago)

"feeling" and "thinking" shouldn't be set against each other like dogs

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:43 (twenty-one years ago)

"feeling" without "thinking" about those feelings is the province of children and the mentally handicapped.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:43 (twenty-one years ago)

(sorry, that sounds harsher than i intended.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 9 September 2004 22:44 (twenty-one years ago)

amateurist, in my popular music studies class last year, we glanced at the work of grad students or profs who'd done just that - e.g. graphed out Dylan's intonation patterns or mapped out the patterns of Patti Smith's accenting in "Gloria". It really seems like what you're looking for is what's going on in academic study of pop.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Monday, 13 September 2004 21:53 (twenty-one years ago)

where is this academic study of pop happening? are there papers? conferences? i had no idea! tell me more!!

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 03:58 (twenty-one years ago)

re. melismatic wiggles, couldn't you talk about "steps"--their size and frequency and overall patterning?

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 03:58 (twenty-one years ago)

The "Not a Second Time" melisma (I assume you're talking about the one on the word "why" in "I see no use in wondering why") also has that pentatonic-like aspect, skipping the fourth on its way down. The fact that it's got the seventh in there, though, makes it less country sounding than "Cathy's Clown." Same is true of "All I've Got to Do."

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 04:11 (twenty-one years ago)

Putting the seventh in there! Didn't they know they were ruining rock and roll!

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 04:17 (twenty-one years ago)

amateurist: I can think of no better starting place than this. The reference info for the essay about "Gloria", for example, comes up if you go to Bibliographies -> Gilbert B. Rodman's bibliography -> D-G.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 04:21 (twenty-one years ago)

To a certain extent I think Amateurist is right in that he's just asking for people to be more explicit in their explanations of WHY things affect them and at the same time is calling on critics to be knowledgeable, two things that I can't help but think could be used to great positive effect by many critics who are already great.

djdee2005 (djdee2005), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 05:39 (twenty-one years ago)

[Steely Dan: "Steely Dan's name has been popping up as a hip musical crush. Remember, this glossy bop-pop was the indifferent aristocracy to punk rock's stone-throwing in the late 70's. People fought and died so our generation could listen to something better. "]

another "problem": explain exactly which set of music proclivities induce people to call steely dan "slick"

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 15 September 2004 06:34 (twenty-one years ago)

It's got to be instrumental timbre + playing accuracy/virtuosity, no? It would be interesting to know which particular instrument + amplification sounds factor into it with SD.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 September 2004 14:56 (twenty-one years ago)

When I saw this thread’s title I was thrown for a loop, imagining it would address the critical mode I might have employed pitching something to Art Forum in 1991 referencing Lacan’s "Ecrits" as a refractory text to address Donald Judd’s box art.

Which is my point, sorta. Whether you’re getting all musicologically formalist, or using deconstruction-y and/or heavy theory means to address the music at hand, you’re gonna leave some people going Wha?, or risk adopting an exposition heavy lecture on readers who will rightly despise you for it, or seem a self-satisfied prick.

Then there’s the problem/challenge of subjectivity, which I think no reviewer can be humble about enough, and, for me, is the most odious thing in music writing, except when it works. (I’m thinking James Baldwin’s essays on film, Mikal Gilmore’s "Night Music", or Andrew Vachss’ first-person in-novel odes to Judy Henske.)

To me, the main villain is word count, which superimposing a style right off, most often characterized by pushing the language/reference envelope at all times to create a sort of expressionistic sense of the musical piece, but most often at the expense of conveying basic considerations like, Dude, does this suck or what?

Which, in the extreme, leaves you with writing for academia or Maxim.

Me, I’d love to write about music from a sort of psycho-acoustic pathology POV, but I doubt I’m gonna find many buyers that way. It would be formalistic tho.

ian g, Wednesday, 15 September 2004 20:33 (twenty-one years ago)

my post above should read "musical proclivities"

sorry ian not ignoring your post--will post more later

amateur!!st, Wednesday, 15 September 2004 20:39 (twenty-one years ago)

don't feel ignored now--thanks

ian g, Wednesday, 15 September 2004 20:50 (twenty-one years ago)

The best music theory analysis of the Beatles exists here

mentalist (mentalist), Thursday, 16 September 2004 03:32 (twenty-one years ago)

ian i didn't finish yr post...too high a word count.

djdee2005 (djdee2005), Thursday, 16 September 2004 05:39 (twenty-one years ago)

mentalist: awesome. thank you.

AaronK (AaronK), Thursday, 16 September 2004 13:29 (twenty-one years ago)

"feeling" and "thinking" shouldn't be set against each other like dogs

OTM OTM OTM OTM OTM

Dan Perry '08 (Dan Perry), Thursday, 16 September 2004 13:32 (twenty-one years ago)

i couldnt read the whole thread but i feel you amat. so i'm blindly throwing this out there. a) pop music isn't dead yet, b) pop music didn't arise from the academic culture that breeds formalist critics, c) academics generally (generally) condescend pop, though it isn't omitted from academic forums at all.
i posted abt these before, but there's a book abt dylan i got based on a j. lethem review but haven't yet read. Ricks ("the great British literary critic") supposedly does a damn good job reading Dylan against Tennyson, etc, and the seven deadly sins. Lots of jackasses have tried it, and one succeeds.
as for more current music Adam Krim wrote a book called Rap Music and the Poetics of Identity, or something. I thought he was way off base most of the book, but he presents a fantastic general notion that Pop Matters wishes it could touch. His theory is that classical music theory is now a dead system (post serialists, bcs he discludes modern composers, for whom the genres of music theory decay. the difference btwn academically condescended "middlebrow" "IDM" and a theoretically modern composition would often not exist if someone arranged IDM differently) and now even theory should fall under Musicology, which would branch out fairly to all forms of music, because artistic merit cannot be rationed by faggots who condescend anything they think is "low" because they smack a bitch and say faggot.
my reverse classism is obviously getting the better of my writing here.

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 15:52 (twenty-one years ago)

i was offbase on that idm comment obv. hella academic books have been written abt microacoustics as the future of music

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 15:55 (twenty-one years ago)

I DONT THINK ANYONE SHOULD WRITE A FORMAL CRITICISM OF LIZ PHAIR FOR AT LEAST A FEW DECADES

peter $., Thursday, 16 September 2004 15:56 (twenty-one years ago)

but i think formal criticism of rap is absolutely necessary for the survival of american culture

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 15:56 (twenty-one years ago)

or an academic embrace, at least. the problem is that rap destroys genres more basically than dylan or liz

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 15:58 (twenty-one years ago)

is rap modern literature that's culturally infused with knowledge unknown for centuries? of course! but we need someone better than adam krim's AZ lovin' ass

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 15:59 (twenty-one years ago)

ethan to thread!

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:01 (twenty-one years ago)

ethan if you can hear me go to college and rib all those pretentious fuckasses one by one until you publish a study in some theory periodical abt B.G.!

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:03 (twenty-one years ago)

His theory is that classical music theory is now a dead system and now even theory should fall under Musicology, which would branch out fairly to all forms of music

I imagine some musicologists would say this has already happened, at least in theory (npi). In practice, because classical western music theory is so ingrained in academia and so 'known', it will still be taught generally whereas any other systems (like what?) will only be taught via specialization. Maybe time and a poetics of pop can/will change this.

Comme personne (common_person), Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:09 (twenty-one years ago)

Paul de Man to thread :(

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:12 (twenty-one years ago)

comme, i too imagine that. i do not think the importance of classical music will or should wane, but music is expanding. new systems of shorthand/comp are evolving that should render sheet music obsolete for the next generation. the new system has no boundaries. music videos. music-literature (dylan and 50).

i do not think the future of music should be all nirvana play-it-by-ear, but i do think microacoustics (not glitch so much as more complex scales. why can't i think of his name... jackson, j-ugh. i can't even think of the name of the scales he was foxing with) and indian/gamalan (sp) (TRITE!) ideas aren't necessarily primitive, and dance music was a result of phillip glass, who obv uses an arpegiator. yeah, i'm getting a little uppity.

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:20 (twenty-one years ago)

"via specialization"
who can say w/a straight face that the serialists were the most important composers after sad old mahler? the kids and the africans! who'll write the formal crits that tear down and rebuild the system of music education? smarter iterations of myself.

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:23 (twenty-one years ago)

again, i'm not suggesting that pop be analyzed in the terms developed for classical music. i think that's sort of a red herring.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:25 (twenty-one years ago)

POX "problems" in pop music with the need for formal criticism
1) lil scrappy - no problems
the only others i can think of are by roy orbison and the everly brothers :(

but then doesn't everyone review pop formally?

peter $.., Thursday, 16 September 2004 16:29 (twenty-one years ago)

"This fire is burnin'
and it's out of control
It's not a problem you can stop
It's rock n' roll
Suck on that"
-- Axl Rose, 1991

chuck, Thursday, 16 September 2004 17:34 (twenty-one years ago)

amt you mentioned boulez's 'orientations' on that andrew WK thread: so what is he doing in that book other than an analysis of classical in classical music terms? Some of the examples given on this thread seem to be analysis of pop recs in music theory type terms (ones that maybe were developed to describe classical music).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 16 September 2004 20:09 (twenty-one years ago)

hey julio.

boulez analyzes classical music using a method of formal analysis appropriate to classical music, so a pop equivalent of orientations would analyze pop music using a method of formal analysis appropriate to pop music (developing such a method is itself part of the "project" i'd like to see). my comparison was less about the specific methodology employed by boulez as about the rigor and precision of his thinking, the clarity of his rhetoric, and the ambitiousness of his project, i.e. breaking down a piece of music into all its constituent elements and finding out how it "works." i imagine this could be done for a pop record as well as a symphony.

as i've noted a few times upthread, music theory has already been adapted/revised/rebuilt for the purposes of analyzing different styles of music. the few examples of a precise music criticism that i've mentioned so far (franklin bruno etc.) themselves do this, in a somewhat casual fashion.

amateur!!st, Thursday, 16 September 2004 20:14 (twenty-one years ago)

oh wait axl rose says we oughtn't stop the rock. sorry.

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Friday, 17 September 2004 07:50 (twenty-one years ago)

We could carve up the domain of historical poetics in still other ways. Following R. S. Crane, we could distinguish studies of precompositional factors (sources, influences, cliches, received forms) from compositional ones (normalized principles of combination and transformation within works) and from postcompositional ones (effects, reception, varying responses in different contexts). For example, Noel Burch's To the Distant Observer treats Japanese cinema as the legatee of stylistic practices from earlier centuries, while Vance Kepley's In the Service of the State, using a different precompositional focus, traces more proximate influences on Dovzhenko's films. The work of Charles Musser, Tom Gunning, and Andre Gaudreault has demonstrated that pre-1915 films obey coherent compositional norms. And recent work in reception by Janet Staiger has revealed how audiences' varying construals of the same film presuppose historically variable viewing conventions. In my own studies of Dreyer and Ozu, I have tried to relate the three domains by suggesting historically determinate gaps among them. In the works of Ozu, for instance, source material and contemporary conventions are transformed by specific compositional procedures, but the results have been appropriated differently by various audiences.

Recognizing that linguistic analogies are notoriously shaky in film studies, I will risk one more mapping of the field. Like linguistics, film poetics has its "semantics," the study of how meaning is produced. It has its "syntactics," the study of rules for selecting and combining units (with respect to style, Raymond Bellour's micro-analyses; with respect to compositional form, Thierry Kuntzel's study of openings, Peter Wollen's applications of Propp, or Rick Altman's "dual-focus" narrative). And poetics has its "pragmatics," the study of how relations between viewer and text develop in the process of the film's unfolding (e.g., accounts of narration or of filmic "enunciation"). Meaning, structure, and process--these three aspects of any representational system are also central to poetics.

These equable mappings of the terrain conceal, of course, how much territory is in dispute. I have already suggested several issues about which poeticians wrangle; two more divergences seem to me worth brief discussion.

Across history, poetics has had to steer a course between strictly "immanent" accounts and strictly "subsumptive" ones. Few poeticians have been willing to accept the consequences of an utterly intrinsic account of constructional processes; even Wolfflin, mistakenly treated as the model of the pure formalist, explained changes in artistic styles partly by changes in a culture's visual habits. On the other side, very few poeticians have sought to account for every phenomenon by appeal to processes in other social domains; even the Zhdanovite recognizes some special quality in art. For most poeticians, the constructional principles studied are not self-sealed, but they are also not in every respect subsumable to other principles.

Assuming that the escape hatch of "relative autonomy" is of no help, we can distinguish two tendencies within poetics. One tendency hypothesizes that the phenomenon we study has a considerable degree of self-regulated coherence. The early Shklvosky seems to hold this view; he seeks to explain the laws of fairy tale composition by purely poetic principles like repetition, retardation, and so forth. He gives theoretical priority to such factors. In film poetics, perhaps Burch's Theory of Film Practice approaches this position. The second tendency, articulated by the later Russian Formalists and the Prague Structuralists, gives immanent factors only a methodological priority. For example, as Tynianov and Jakobson point out, even if the immanent evolution of literature can explain the direction of change, it cannot explain timing, which must be governed by extraliterary causes. A comparable position is taken by Staiger, Thompson, and myself in studying the history of the classical Hollywood cinema. Here the analyst looks first to the "immanent" factors that might be the most proximate and pertinent causal factors but also assumes that virtually every explanatory task will require moving to those mediations that lie in "adjacent" domains.

To continue the geographical metaphor, poetics is less a field with distinct boundaries than a kind of Alsace-Lorraine constantly being claimed by interested neighbors. On one side is Aesthetics, which, in the eighteenth century, replaced the study of poetic praxis with a concern for the philosophical problems involved in the creation and appreciation of beauty. On another side lies Semiotics, which seeks to subsume poetics into a general theory of the production of meaning. Interestingly, poeticians have been drafted into both camps. Aristotle, the Russian Formalists, and the Prague Structuralists can play roles in the history of aesthetics, as in Beardsley's survey history, or they can be promoted to the rank of proto-semioticians, as Peter Steiner does.

In my view, the tension between semiotics and aesthetics has been immensely fruitful. There remains, however, a core of questions and issues that cannot be wholly absorbed into the adjacent areas. It is useful to differentiate between the practical theory of an art and the philosophy of it. The "practical theory" of music or poetry, for instance rests upon a posteriori questions, involving empirical generalizations about conventions and practices in these arts. From this perspective, film poetics is a systematizing of theoretical inquiry into cinematic practices as they have existed. The philosophy of an art, on the other hand, inquires into the a priori aspects of it; it involves conceptual analysis of its logical nature and functions. On the whole, aesthetics concentrates upon such matters. As for semiotics, it concentrates on matters of meaning, which is only part of the effects for which a poetics seeks to account; on the other hand, if semiotics seeks to explain "the life of signs in society," it encompasses far more than any poetics can. Yet one should not discourage border crossings; if Barthes' S/Z offers a semiotics and Goodman's Languages of Art offers an aesthetics, both are splendid contributions to poetics.

amateur!!st, Monday, 20 September 2004 19:34 (twenty-one years ago)

Bop began with jazz but one afternoon somewhere on a sidewalk maybe 1939, 1940, Dizzy Gillespie or Charley Parker or Thelonious Monk was walking down past a men's clothing store on 42nd Street or South Main in L.A. and from the loudspeaker they suddenly heard a wild impossible mistake in jazz that only could have been heard inside their own imaginary head, and that is a new art. Bop.

lovebug starski (lovebug starski), Monday, 20 September 2004 20:01 (twenty-one years ago)

the great man theory: the cliff's notes

amateur!!st, Monday, 20 September 2004 20:03 (twenty-one years ago)

two months pass...
Amateurist, have you seen this? http://www.ume.maine.edu/~iaea/esaabstr.html

(apologies if you have)...

Gravel Puzzleworth (Gregory Henry), Monday, 29 November 2004 02:03 (twenty-one years ago)

at cursory glance a lot of that seemed like psuedoscience and naïve formalism.... based on the abstracts of course. but i'll have to look at it more closely.

amateur!!st, Monday, 29 November 2004 06:25 (twenty-one years ago)

two years pass...

This was an interesting thread.

Tim F, Monday, 25 June 2007 14:10 (eighteen years ago)

Except the actual answer was Lionel Hampton.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 25 June 2007 14:17 (eighteen years ago)

It's possible that "Cathy's Clown" is the source of the Beatles vocal wiggle even if no Beatles song ever had the precise notes of the Cathy wiggle.

is this what's meant by "leaving yrself wiggle room"??

m coleman, Monday, 25 June 2007 14:25 (eighteen years ago)

This is an interesting thread. I guess the stuff I've been doing on production / compression / sound is related to this; it's certainly an attempt to engage with music on a physical / technical level as well as a cultural / personal one. I'm not really interested in just saying "this record sounds bad", but rather "this record sounds bad because..." and then trying to extrapolate reasons for decisions in the process of production.

It's difficult though because I know for every one person who understands it, there are 100 who don't, and not because they can't, but because they don't think they're not bothered.

Scik Mouthy, Monday, 25 June 2007 14:40 (eighteen years ago)

Gordon Brown's probably not bothered about it at the moment.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 25 June 2007 15:20 (eighteen years ago)

I'm not really interested in just saying "this record sounds bad", but rather "this record sounds bad because..." and then trying to extrapolate reasons for decisions in the process of production IT WAS OVERCOMPRESSED

amirite?

That one guy that quit, Monday, 25 June 2007 15:30 (eighteen years ago)

Not quite. WHY WAS IT OVERCOMPRESSED? is the question.

Scik Mouthy, Monday, 25 June 2007 15:34 (eighteen years ago)

Thrusting Thatcherkids always need a bigger sonic hit.

"Wrongly compressed" might be more apposite here than "overcompressed" since many of the best records of the sixties benefited markedly from the latter.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 25 June 2007 15:49 (eighteen years ago)

Aye, I'd go along with that. If XTRMNTR was uncompressed it'd sound daft.

Scik Mouthy, Monday, 25 June 2007 15:50 (eighteen years ago)

four years pass...

i like this paragraph from the wikipedia page on usher's climax:

"Climax" is a quiet storm slow jam set in common time.[6][7][8] It is written in the key of C minor, and Usher's voice ranges from B♭3 to G5.[8] The music is built around a haunting riff, complemented by sparse drum machine and some musical accompaniment.[9] Its varying soundscape incorporates electronic effects such as clicks, hisses, whooshes, and low-frequency synths,[6][10] as well as subtle strings and scattered piano notes.[7] Music writers have noted Diplo's production as uncharacteristically reserved and understated.[9][10][11][12]
The song's musical structure is characterized by intervals in which the music builds to a potential break, but softly decrescendos instead.[11] As each verse concludes, the song's snapping, electronic rhythm track gradually softens and rippling synth chords repeat throughout the song.[7] Marc Hogan of Spin writes that Diplo "teases us with the sort of wubba-wubba subwoofer noises that have become inescapable in the past year or so of pop radio. But he never actually gives in with the full dubstep drop [...] the song keeps swelling to one big wave after another, without ever really reaching a single, song-stopping crescendo."[7] Hogan cites the bridge at around the three-minute mark as "the closest thing to a climax" on the song, "when the track gets as quiet as it ever has before becoming as lush as it ever gets."[7] Pitchfork Media's Carrie Battan calls the song "an exercise in the power of restraint", commenting that "Diplo shows uncharacteristic subtlety behind Usher's sentiment, with a beat that seems to hang suspended in midair."[11]

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 6 June 2012 11:02 (fourteen years ago)

i mean that isn't exactly what i had in mind when i started this thread but it was kind of refreshing to read in a wikipedia entry.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 6 June 2012 11:31 (fourteen years ago)


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