On Steve Hoffman Music Forums there’s an
interesting conversation going on around the topic: Is it OK to NOT like classical music?
For a look at the thread, click on this link. We might also ask: “Is it OK to not
like sushi, broccoli, rice cakes, Robert DeNiro films…the list could go on ad
infinitum. I personally feel it’s OK to
not like anything under the sun – you
fill in the blank. Who is better
qualified - beside you – to be the arbiter of your tastes and preferences? But I think we might be asking the wrong
question.
To me a better question is: “Is it OK to NOT
notice detail in the world around us?”
The answer here might be “Perhaps it’s really not OK to NOT notice
detail in the world around us.” If we’re
talking about the difference between red and green traffic lights, failure to
notice this particular detail might prove fatal – an event made easily possible
by texting while driving!
Certainly, failure to notice detail in music
will not lead to fatalities. It’s more like the difference between looking at
our world through corrective lenses that help us see every beautiful aspect of
that flower garden instead of a pleasant, blurry array of color. Whether we like the flower garden or not is a
decision we can make as we gaze on every subtle detail of the rose petals. But lacking this precise view of things, any
decision we make will be based on inadequate information.
One of the thoughts expressed in this forum
recounts the familiar generational argument. “The overall
popularity and sales of classical music, especially of the stuff made before,
say, the 50s, is diminishing, and that is no accident, as the generation that
classical music is culturally relevant to is dying off. And younger generations, starting with WWII
baby-boomers, have other types of music they are interested in, such as jazz or
blues. By the way, many of the same
arguments for jazz and blues are similar to the ones for classical, and I'm
starting to see hints of it with rock vs. hip-hop music as well. So, I'm wondering if it is a generational
thing where the aging generation is trying to assert their cultural identity in
a last gasp before it passes into history.”
As I have said in a previous blog, for me -
the ‘when was it written’ aspect of a musical composition is completely
irrelevant. If we receive, with an open
mind, each piece of music we encounter as a singular event to be taken or left
on its own merits, it doesn’t really matter whether it was written yesterday or
one thousand years ago. If we like it –
we like it – just like a piece of jewelry or pottery. If a ring catches our eye’s fancy, it doesn’t
matter if it was crafted last month or two hundred years ago.
I personally use one standard for deciding
whether I like an individual musical work regardless whether it is rock, pop,
classical, sacred, vulgar, old, new, etc.
If I listen to it, that is, give my undivided attention to it – enough times – to absorb and understand
its rhythms, melodies, textures, harmonies, dynamics, timbres and form…if I still don’t like it then it’s OK!
Maestro Maull with some of the campers and staff from Camp YDP, Paterson, New Jersey |
Over the course of four days, I’ve paid two visits to
Paterson, New Jersey – one visit to the young people at the Camp YDP after
school program and the other to be with the students in the Paterson Music
Project, modeled after the El Sistema program imported from Venezuela. As we listened together to music – with an
emphasis on noticing detail – we did not speak of when the music was written.
We barely spoke of who wrote
the music. But I can tell you that the
YDP campers had no problem recognizing a repeating melody. And more than a few of the young string
players of the Paterson Music Project quickly noticed when I played the ‘wrong
music’ on purpose – just to make sure they were really listening to and not
just hearing the music.
Did these 2nd through 8th
grade students enjoy the music of Vivaldi and Bach? They seemed to. I never mentioned that it was classical music
or that it was nearly three hundred years old! It was just enjoyable music. I wonder what the response would have been
had I begun my presentation with these words: “Today we’re going to listen to
some classical music. It is ‘GREAT MUSIC’
and because it is considered to be ‘GREAT MUSIC’ – you should pay attention and
you should like it!”
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