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Date: | Mon, 2 Aug 1999 16:59:37 -0500 |
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Wes Crone advises me:
>Don't quit your day job professor. I think it an awful thing to criticize
>music in any way just because it sounds as if the author used harmonies
>which have already been used. IF the author hears music in his/her
>head...it is their music. If I write a song with a C chord going to an F6
>b5 and proceeding through several diminished and chromatic mediants and
>even an omnibus progression..I am sure somewhere in the world...that same
>progression has been used before.
Now that I have embraced Wes Crone's good advice about day jobs let me
correct his interpretation of my remarks. What I was referring to was a
situation such as the following hypothetical: composer hears Schubert's
Trout Quintet, says: I love that music and I can DO that, and turns out
a very, very similar piece we shall call the Salmon Sextet. That is in my
opinion not an authentic creative endeavor. But heck, Wes Crone's day job
IS being a composer, so who am I to criticize? Meanwhile, I shall return
to my own modest testing of the waters, so to speak, with my Guppy Duet-
a small first step.
Professor Bernard Chasan
Physics Department, Boston University
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