Support |
I think it's difficult to speak for the consciousness of another person. And, silly. M.. At 05:12 PM 11/11/02 -0000, you wrote: >"My point is that most folks don't have the tools to understand music the >way almost all of us here do." > >...or the knowledge. the things that make me smile/think/laugh about >music >are the subtle things... sometimes technical things...what i put into my >music, well, i write things that interest me...like playing a phrase in >7/8 >over a part in 5/8 and waiting to see what happens since it will start >cycling. i just don't think that the majority of listeners will catch >this >stuff but it's really the meat and potatoes of what i try to do. of >course, >you can't explain every subtle nuance of a tune to everybody so that >they'll >hear it through your ears and i suppose that's the beauty: that two people >can like the same thing and have totally opposing reasons for doing so. > >however, does knowing more about music make us capable of liking it >more...as in: "i can like this music better than you can"? i assert that >ignorance does limit appreciation...it's not as thorough and not as deep >(in >a quantitative way) and seems to be more of an aesthetic judgment (the >ignorant can only say "does this please my ears?") rather than an honest >appreciation and understanding. this all is not to say that my taste is >of >a greater value, because that's an inflation of the worth of somebody and >i'm not going there. > >-jim > > >