OK, is this the worst piece of music writing ever?

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place: flavor town
something else: donkey sauce

Belgian Flanders Albums Chart (Sufjan Grafton), Saturday, 29 March 2014 04:08 (ten years ago) link

i fear the troll is too subtle. also i think i mentioned elsewhere, its u&k when talking about teenage dream to talk about Bonnie McKee.

but otoh these articles are great!

eric banana (s.clover), Saturday, 29 March 2014 04:09 (ten years ago) link

Thanks s.clover. I'm not experienced enough of a writer to trust myself, and so far the troll-signifiers have just been pissing off people who think I'm taking digs at "academic writing as a whole" which is, y'know, unfortunate. I'm writing an explain about "why all Gaga's songs sound the same (and why this is a good thing) and why Bad Romance will be a longtime radio staple" but after that I think I'm gonna get out while I'm ahead

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Saturday, 29 March 2014 07:07 (ten years ago) link

Owen, I love these two articles. I think there is a place for academic analysis of pop culture (it's sort of why I joined ILX in the first place). Wished more people were going that way instead of down the Buzzfeed style route.

Jill, Saturday, 29 March 2014 09:13 (ten years ago) link

was going to post those owen reviews here; glad there's discussion about them. they are great. i don't get why there aren't more like it. sports fans crave hyper-complex analysis about offensive formations in football; defensive strategies in basketball; the nuances of pitchers' approaches to particular batters. i don't see why music fans wouldn't want similarly hyper-complex analysis of new records. plus, it's good to learn things, and these reviews are good teaching tools. anyway, they are great to read, and i hope there will be more.

Daniel, Esq 2, Saturday, 29 March 2014 20:56 (ten years ago) link

srsly.

how's life, Saturday, 29 March 2014 22:23 (ten years ago) link

Yeah I really like musical analysis and enjoy the pieces overall. Even if you can't explain why a piece is good or not good or why one person loves it and another is bored by it, it's still interesting to examine what the song is doing and how.

james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 00:41 (ten years ago) link

people complained that the steely dan 33.3 was too dry - which it was - but they attributed that dryness to how it focused mainly on what was going on musically, which was a breath of fresh air for me

(or if you must, "data") (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Sunday, 30 March 2014 00:48 (ten years ago) link

I know it sounds a bit assholish to say this, but I feel like a lack of musical education is a big part of why that kind of reaction happens. Being able to analyze what's going on formally in a song is actually a great pleasure. Obviously it's going to be boring as shit to read that if you can't follow it though.

james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 00:57 (ten years ago) link

Even if you can't explain why a piece is good or not good or why one person loves it and another is bored by it

I would completely disagree that this is a shortcoming of musicological analysis, if that's what you mean.

timellison, Sunday, 30 March 2014 01:28 (ten years ago) link

I am not at all afraid to be the asshole who says that ppl don't know enough about musical analysis to be talking about music, esp since I know exactly enough music theory to get through my various musical endeavors

Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Sunday, 30 March 2014 03:17 (ten years ago) link

This is kind of turning into a subthread that has nothing to do with the thread anymore, but I also feel like music itself would be better if both artists and audiences had broader musical knowledge. I mean there's lots of great really simple pop music, but today compared to, say, 1965, or 1975, or 1985, I feel like there is so little that ISN'T simple. I just feel like there's less harmonic and melodic variety and imagination in today's pop music. Formal musical education isn't about playing or writing "right" imo but about opening up possibilities -- how to find 12 other chords I could go to from this chord that would also sound good, how to write a melody that doesn't just follow the root or third, how to do stuff that isn't obvious to the ear but actually might sound cool anyway.

james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 03:36 (ten years ago) link

And I don't want to get into the whole "there are other kinds of musical knowledge" thing, because of course there are. There's knowledge relating to rhythm and texture and feel and style and all that stuff is really important, so I guess I'm just saying "knowledge" in terms of harmony and melodic writing.

james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 03:37 (ten years ago) link

It's a frustrating exercise for me, because like "I have so much to say about Lady Gaga!" but at the same time I cannot, actually, get through reading a single fucking wikipedia page breakdown of any Sibelius symphony, they have been dissected so irrelevantly and uninterestingly by musicologists who, instead of identifying the innovative features in the orchestration or handling-of-material, just throw their "it's in b-minor and then goes to G-major" dicks around. Seriously if you want to see "worst piece of music writing ever" just look at a wiki for a Tchaikovsky symphony, I'll be over here slitting my wrists

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 05:53 (ten years ago) link

what I'm trying to say is: musicology is awesome but musicologists need to take an atavan or fifty

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 05:55 (ten years ago) link

I think there is a place for academic analysis of pop culture (it's sort of why I joined ILX in the first place). Wished more people were going that way instead of down the Buzzfeed style route.

If you're interested, fwiw, academic music theorists have been doing plenty of analysis of popular music over the last couple of decades (especially considering that it's hard to come up with something new to say about Bach). You could start with Music Theory Online maybe, which usually runs a piece on popular music, is a top journal in the field, and is usually relatively readable: http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/issues.php

This issue was completely devoted to rock music, for example: http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.11.17.3/toc.17.3.html

This is something of a 'classic' book: http://www.amazon.ca/Understanding-Rock-Essays-Musical-Analysis/dp/0195100050

Kyle Adams's work on rap and Lori Burns's work generally (http://www.music.uottawa.ca/faculty/burns.html, has a few MTO articles, has written book chapters on Lady Gaga, Dixie Chicks, and Rihanna if you're concerned that the pop being analysed isn't always pop enough) are usually great.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:05 (ten years ago) link

Sorry, the Dixie Chicks thing was an article.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:06 (ten years ago) link

What is the *place* you're referring to that musicology cannot attain (and that, presumably, something else can)?

― timellison,

Well, let me return to the example I used about versifying. I can argue that Frost's use of iambic tetrameter in "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" enforces the mind-numbing regularity of the speaker's mission, most notably in the line "And miles to go before I sleep." But I could also argue that the unyielding beat of that tetrameter reduces the poem to a greeting card. Frost's choice of meter is a fact; what you and I deduce from those facts is an opinion.

I'm not at all suggesting a musicological approach is flawed, only that mentioning a series of facts about clusters and time signatures and chord sequences still adduce opinions.

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:21 (ten years ago) link

Blind drunk when typing those last two posts, sorry to any musicologists

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:59 (ten years ago) link

Ha, I mean, Wikipedia is probably not the best source for quality musicological writing. I suspect that people are confusing musicology and music theory on this thread though.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:01 (ten years ago) link

Was wondering about that. What would you say is the difference?

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:03 (ten years ago) link

Ime, on this side of the Atlantic at least, a simple explanation would be:
music theory = formal/structural analysis of music (which includes model composition at the undergrad level)
musicology = humanities or social science approaches to the study of music

I think that in Europe, what I would call music theory can be included as a sub-discipline of musicology, actually, which would weaken my original point.

(Grove on musicology fwiw (they don't have a "music theory" article!):


The term ‘musicology’ has been defined in many different ways. As a method, it is a form of scholarship characterized by the procedures of research. A simple definition in these terms would be ‘the scholarly study of music’. Traditionally, musicology has borrowed from ‘art history for its historiographic paradigms and literary studies for its paleographic and philological principles’ (Treitler, 1995). A committee of the American Musicological Society (AMS) in 1955 also defined musicology as ‘a field of knowledge having as its object the investigation of the art of music as a physical, psychological, aesthetic, and cultural phenomenon’ (JAMS, viii, p.153). The last of these four attributes gives the definition considerable breadth, although music, and music as an ‘art’, remains at the centre of the investigation.

A third view, which neither of these definitions fully implies, is based on the belief that the advanced study of music should be centred not just on music but also on musicians acting within a social and cultural environment. This shift from music as a product (which tends to imply fixity) to music as a process involving composer, performer and consumer (i.e. listeners) has involved new methods, some of them borrowed from the social sciences, particularly anthropology, ethnology, linguistics, sociology and more recently politics, gender studies and cultural theory. This type of inquiry is also associated with ethnomusicology. Harrison (1963) and other ethnomusicologists have suggested that ‘It is the function of all musicology to be in fact ethnomusicology; that is, to take its range of research to include material that is termed “sociological”’

)

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:14 (ten years ago) link

In the US/Canada, ime, I think it would more common for theory/composition to be combined in a department or 'area' within a department as for theory/musicology to be combined, although the latter is definitely not unheard of.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:18 (ten years ago) link

@ Sund4r I keep up with that journal but have learned to skip the articles about pop rock and rap. My ish is that those pop articles seem intended for an audience of no-one. The language is too academic for people who're interested in Radiohead, and Radiohead is too easily parsed for people who can comprehend an academic theoretical approach. I mean:

“Paranoid Android” was composed and recorded by the alternative rock band Radiohead and appears on their widely acclaimed album OK Computer (1997).(9) As Radiohead critics and fans point out, the title of the rock song references the fictional character “Marvin the Paranoid Android” from Douglas Adams’s 1978 BBC radio comedy series The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, which was later adapted into a series of books. Unlike Adams’s comedic portrayal of the depressed robot Marvin, however, Radiohead’s “Paranoid Android” appears to depict a socially alienated and anxiety-ridden persona surrounded by a society consumed by the trappings of capitalism––one of several themes that the album explores. Power (“When I am king”) and materialism (“gucci”; “yuppies”) generate self-importance (“Why don’t you remember my name”) and excess (“piggy”), threatening to consume, impair, and silence (“With your opinions which are of no consequence at all”) in the desire for more (Example 1a). The fear and realization that the capitalist machine has participated in the formation of the subject and created, as a condition of possibility, the potential to equate the valuation of material goods with identity and self-worth, provokes a split subject––a “paranoid android” who recognizes that its individual thoughts and ambitions may also be a product of the capitalist machine (“Please could you stop the noise . . . from all the unborn chicken voices in my head”).(10) The plea to be cleansed (“Rain down on me from a great height”) from the markers of a capitalist identity proves futile in the song’s final section; the potential for grace and intervention is met with a cynicism that God may be passive (“God loves his children, yeah!”), leaving the persona no escape from Pandemonium. That all of the individuals in “Paranoid Android” are condemned to the same fate, regardless of social status or wealth, lends an ironic twist to the song’s ending.

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link

My eyes glazed over there too but that's just like an introductory paragraph about the song more generally, though, right? The meat of the piece is the actual musical analysis.

I totally disagree with this!:

Radiohead is too easily parsed for people who can comprehend an academic theoretical approach.
It's way easier to parse something that i) is written on paper and/or ii) is played on acoustic instruments, not to mention something that follows CPP harmonic or formal conventions (or is far simpler in those terms than Radiohead is).

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:31 (ten years ago) link

Even under the rubric of Theory, don't different people use it to mean different things at different times? An old school classical guy might be referring to something out of the common practice period, particularly the law as laid down by Rameau in 1722, whereas a recent Berklee grad is walking around with his head stuffed up with Chord Scale Theory?

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:32 (ten years ago) link

My eyes glazed over too but I hadn't put together where the title "Paranoid Android" came from so I learned something.

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:34 (ten years ago) link

*moves to the other thread*

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link

Even under the rubric of Theory, don't different people use it to mean different things at different times? An old school classical guy might be referring to something out of the common practice period, particularly the law as laid down by Rameau in 1722, whereas a recent Berklee grad is walking around with his head stuffed up with Chord Scale Theory?

Sure, but they're both doing structural/formal analysis of music. They're just working with different repertoire. They could still present at similar conferences, etc. Anyway, I better go mark some counterpoint.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link

(Xp)I guess what I am trying to say is if you define theory as something like "the study of what chords go together and what melodies go with them" then there are different approaches to theory and some explain certain things better than others. What is surprising or not done in one theory is not surprising and done all the time in another. If you don't take this into account then theory is kind of a strawman.

*ok I'm leaving too*

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:39 (ten years ago) link

(Something about tyranny of theory, blah blah blah)

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:45 (ten years ago) link

I want to continue this discussion just in the more specific "talking about articles" thread instead of the "lol at this guy" thread

continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:54 (ten years ago) link

Should we start a new thread for theory and pop or take it here?: Rolling Music Theory Thread

(I don't think math & music would be the right place.)

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link

Yes, the math & music thread is too specialized, but that rolling theory thread looks fine. Plus I'm sure it will makeTim happy.

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:15 (ten years ago) link

Moved.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link

I'm not at all suggesting a musicological approach is flawed, only that mentioning a series of facts about clusters and time signatures and chord sequences still adduce opinions.

Yes, but like with any discussion about things other than facts, you usually proceed without undercutting what you're doing by asserting that you'll never be able to communicate and that everyone's frame of reference is entirely alien to your own.

What I do definitely "veers into qualitative stuff," as Hurting 2 put it. In fact, that's the whole point of it.

timellison, Sunday, 30 March 2014 18:10 (ten years ago) link

I think very few music theorists would claim that certain chord progressions or melodic leaps in certain contexts or certain kinds of voice leading sound objectively "better" or "worse" than others, but they might describe "effects" that they create, as well as how they rate in certain historical periods in terms of what is more or less common, what would be more or less expected, etc. Of course, all this stuff can be shaped by culture and by individual music experience, so it gets to be a bit of a mindfuck. A very simplistic but classic example is that the very fact that a major key sounds "happy" and a minor key sounds "sad" has been shown to be culturally conditioned, and there are cultures where minor is not associated with "sad" at all.

There's a quote I love from Marc Ribot that playing a standard is like playing a duet with the audience's memory. But in a way all music plays a duet with the audience's expectations -- you're used to hearing a certain chord progression resolve a certain way and suddenly someone fakes you out and has it not resolve but move to a series of chords that leads to a key change. Even if you don't know how to identify what you hear in music theory terms, you still hear it. But then if you aren't used to the chord progression resolving a certain way in the first place, you might not experience the exciting "surprise" of it moving in a different direction. It's not much different than when a film plays with a trope -- if you don't know the trope, the play isn't very meaningful to you.

james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:04 (ten years ago) link

A very simplistic but classic example is that the very fact that a major key sounds "happy" and a minor key sounds "sad" has been shown to be culturally conditioned, and there are cultures where minor is not associated with "sad" at all.

Wait, is this true? Where is this study?

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:10 (ten years ago) link

Pharrell's house

fauxpas cola (darraghmac), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:41 (ten years ago) link

Ah

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:52 (ten years ago) link

is Pharrell's house close to Daryl's?

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:52 (ten years ago) link

well this ain't exactly a peer-reviewed journal, but
http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/the-science-of-music-why-do-songs-in-a-minor-key-sound-sad

james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 31 March 2014 03:04 (ten years ago) link

well this ain't exactly a peer-reviewed journal, but
Better not let Sund4r see that.

Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 31 March 2014 03:07 (ten years ago) link

hey guys she's baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack

waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 31 March 2014 19:27 (ten years ago) link

update: she listened to a record at the wrong speed

waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 31 March 2014 19:27 (ten years ago) link

In the guise of open-mindedness and inclusivity, poptimism gives critics — and by extension, fans — carte blanche to be less adventurous. If we are all talking about Miley Cyrus, then we do not need to wrestle with knottier music that might require some effort to appreciate.

Preach

waterbabies (waterface), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link

Hahaha that URL is straight trolling ilx

Raptain Chillips (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link

the rise of.... what decade is this?

have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:48 (ten years ago) link

*closes tab when he mentions The Great Beauty as an example of something of quality*

Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link


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