The TRUTH: Why Modern Music Is Awful
In this postmodern cultural marxist age we live in now, even our music has been affected. Just like our cars, just like your kids, just like the lamestream news of the day...everything is the same; a lie, compressed into an equality of outcome instead of an outcome of individual greatness, competence and uniqueness.
The latter is what most of us here, have grown up with and sought to achieve in our own life times.
Lamestream Uniqueness today is an illusion, decorated with bells and whistles. The risk has been removed therefore the value created is mediocre at best.
No wonder why, more and more people today are unhappy; as Robert from Straight line Logic has explained...true happiness comes from seeking wisdom, creating values with increasing competence and attaining Joy in the process.
Do you concur..?
The latter is what most of us here, have grown up with and sought to achieve in our own life times.
Lamestream Uniqueness today is an illusion, decorated with bells and whistles. The risk has been removed therefore the value created is mediocre at best.
No wonder why, more and more people today are unhappy; as Robert from Straight line Logic has explained...true happiness comes from seeking wisdom, creating values with increasing competence and attaining Joy in the process.
Do you concur..?
Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
There is no magic to a tuning standard of "438", which happened to be one of many choices employed in the 19th century. There is no such thing as a frequency's "beneficial effect on the bodies cells" affecting music as "healthful and harmful frequencies alternate from the shuman resonance on up". That is gibberish. It is your own mysticism, not the "ancients'".
This is not a political topic and Ayn Rand didn't try to turn everything into politics either. It has nothing to do with a "stealing of personal freedom".
Musicians adopt a tuning standard for objective requirements of the production of music, including the physical compatibility of the instruments, not to a "concession to Germans" and not for the preposterous Pythagorian number mysticism claiming an impossible "resonance" with a "heartbeat" or "cells".
The tuning standard is irrelevant to the sound of the music one chooses to produce and has nothing to do with Wagner's style. If you want it to sound differently due to pitch then play in whatever style you choose in a chosen octave and key relative to whatever the tuning standard is. You missed the whole point.
I think most of us have complained about the music these days but thought it was just a generational thing like what we ourselves went through but now we have reason to think differently.
Another piece of the puzzle.
Another type of modern music to consider is 'movie music', which is the only worthy successor to the earlier classical music. You can't dance to it, but people do listen to soundtracks a lot.
Good topic, Carl.
Jan
As far as a de-evolutionary intention we look to how art and language was purposely confounded by the postmodernist and ask...why not music too! The video shows, at least in the short time frame investigated, that it was intentional on an economic scale but it still begs the question, was it part of our dumbing down or is it just an accidental consequence.
The earliest body of music we have is from the Renaissance. This was dance music, or song, or very closely derived therefrom. The orchestras were simple, more of a garage band size, and the musicians were classed as 'high level servants' as opposed to professional entertainers. The music was highly repetitive (as is necessary for dancing and/or singing!).
Joseph Hayden moved music from the small band of Elizabethan era performance to what is now called the 'sonata form', which forms the basis of the symphonies of the next few centuries. He also increased the size of the band to that of a small orchestra. Similarly Bach's fugues and meditations move music from dance and song into pure music.
If the video had included music from the 17-18th centuries, it would have shown (I think) the rather simple and repetitive tunes from those eras giving way to the more complex Baroque and Classical works - the reverse of what he shows for the modern music.
After the Classical era, the Romantic era of music began, with huge orchestras playing complex music to a musically educated audience. Even workmen, going to lay bricks at their job, were whistling motifs from the symphonies or singing parts from the operas.
This era ended with the invention of recorded music, which made it socially unnecessary for 'everyman' to know how to play a musical instrument (hence decreasing overall musical knowledge). Increasingly distanced from the common audience, the early 20th century, Classical music drifted off into the appalling hinterlands of dissonance via Scriabin and other such composers, ending in the slo-mo-car-crash 'music' of the current classical music vogue.
It is no wonder that everyman turned away from this dissonance into pop music, which then became the hum and whistle music of everyman.
It is at this point that the video picks up, but if you were to extrapolate what the curve might have looked like were the past of music included, you would probably see a double wave-form, with high points of complexity and sophistication during the 19th Century (for classical music) and the 20th Century (for pop music). I suspect that the height of the wave for pop music is far lower than that of the classical. That would be interesting to investigate, but not so long as the researcher only took a tiny view of a short span of the history of music, as this video unfortunately did.
Jan, a fan of the 19th century's music
What is increasingly interesting though, is that there is some value to what the ancients thought and expressed. Not all of it was mystical thinking.
I see controlling hands of Germany and the UN as part of the equation, of predecessor to our current race relations, which they wanted to smooth out at the time.
There still are some very talented performers though. They just aren't the ones that are foisted on the public as "pop stars."
The majority of todays "singers" are just screamers/yodelers.
I guess that is what my parents thought when I listened to Elvis and Bill Haley and the Comets.
No, it doesn't "all come from the liberal mindsets in the MSM executives" and the solution is not "values of the past". Reason and a proper philosophy are required for choosing values, not "tradition".
The single frequency of a tuning standard alleged to have killed music has nothing whatsoever to do with the changing styles (due primarily to sense of life) or the large number of factors that go into making musical sounds and their relations, which are much more than a single frequency or associated perceived pitch within a range spanning octaves.
Likewise for the "computer guy" claiming to have shown that "the beat had intentionally been changed to go against what was natural to the heartbeat". A moment's reflection tells you that the human heartbeat varies dramatically between individuals and within the same individual, measured in beats per minute, and that the tuning standard is a single pure tone measured in cycles per second. Claims of his pronouncements are the typical mystical and subjectivist dogma that make no sense.
The "computer guy's" pronouncement, along with similar dogma from mystics appealing to “the heartbeat of Earth” and claims that "432Hz resonates with the golden ratio" are all no better than primitive Pythgorean number mysticism in a new age of irrationalism creeping for dominance in the 21st century as people gravitate to the mystical with no concept of causality and explanation. Please, not on an Ayn Rand forum.
The standards for tuning have varied enormously throughout history. Until around the time of Galileo no standard was possible because there were no accurate clocks and no means to measure the frequencies.
Once comparisons were possible, several different "standards" coexisted in different regions, with some differences so large as to literally cause a clash at the level of playing in different keys, at least a half tone away (one sharp or flat difference).
The frequency standard for tuning -- today 440Hz, adopted by the American Federation of Musicians in 1917, by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, and then progressively more accepted -- is a relative standard for consistency, not a departure in 1940 from an alleged Perfection of a mystical "338" as the source of "modern music killing music". One French standard adopting a popular pitch in the mid 1800s was 435, while German orchestras and bands was soon at 440 and the British royal standard was above 1850 and rising during the last half the 19th century.
There are many books on the physics and psychology of music, the role of chord ratios, overtones, different scales, etc., and you can read a summary of the history of the pitch standard in particular at http://capionlarsen.com/history-pitch/
If your father was playing in Big Bands in the 1940s he would be familiar with the early 20th century incompatible "high" 440 and "low" 452-457 pitches for which instruments were built. Brass bands especially were still playing the "high" pitch, and "high" pitch instruments used in jazz were still common. English and Salvation Army brass bands used the "high" pitch until 1964 when production of the instruments stopped. If you buy an antique or old classic instrument today you still have to be careful of what pitch you are getting. (I have a 1911 Holton cornet with two sets of slides and a 19th century French LaLeur sheperd's crook cornet that was professionally modified with longer tubing to drop the pitch.)
But the mystical dogmatism evangelizing for an irrelevant magic "438" has no rational place here and nothing to offer a discussion of musical qualities. The relative standard to which a group of instruments are tuned for consistency has nothing to do with the musical sound characteristics, other than the simple up or down, and which depend on physics and the style and ability of playing, not mystical "resonance with the heartbeat" and other such nonsense.
Sound quality differences due to tuning alone depends on the methods of tuning, including multiple degrees of freedom of the instruments and the nonlinear variations with frequency, temperature, and loudness, which are subtle but can be noticeable, not a Pythagorean mystic's magic number.
It's a little hard to detect but I noticed that when musicians played at 432 here at Hospice...I was more at ease and the music sounded somehow better...I didn't know at first that they were not tuned to 440...I learned that later.
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