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How to listen to contemporary classical music | Ksenia Anufrieva | TEDxKulibinPark 

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What is "contemporary classical music" ? And how should we listen to the music, which is written by nowadays "Mozarts" and "Beethovens"? This idea is explained in the following Talk by Ksenia Anufrieva. Ksenia is a musicologist and the curator of the musical direction in the Volga-Vyatka branch of the Arsenal State Center of Contemporary Art. Ksenia organizes and brings to life various concerts of modern academic music and tells how to listen to the music that modern composers create. Музыковед, куратор музыкального направления в Волго-Вятском филиале Государственного центра современного искусства «Арсенал». Преподаватель Нижегородского Государственного музыкального колледжа. Куратор проекта «опера МАРЕВО», получившего национальную премию «Инновация». Ксения занимается организацией и проведением концертов современной академической музыки. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

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15 сен 2019

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Комментарии : 94   
@andrewtrovato1828
@andrewtrovato1828 3 месяца назад
You cant take a narrow sample of music written in the current era and say that is what contemporary music is. There are many musicians/composers like myself who are in complete disagreement with and create works on a very different basis than all the music you show and call "contemporary". There is an infinite valley of artistic expression and human feeling between what you call "contemporary" and what you would probably consider just a "style copy" of the past, which you dont say outright but is the logical conclusion by your exclusion and presentation.
@ZachPetch
@ZachPetch 2 года назад
It is difficult to say where exactly something transitions from being a musical performance and sound-based performance art. But I suspect that there is a great deal of contemporary classical music that doesn't make one wonder whether or not they're listening to music. Consider Arvo Part's 4th symphony ("Los Angeles"), which certainly doesn't contain much (if any) rhythm or motive or chord progression, and is dramatically different from any of Beethoven or Tchaikovsky's work, but is still unmistakably musical. Surely that is more what we ought to consider "contemporary classical music" and not "modern performance art" like holding cello strings attached to plastic bottles and scratching a bow across them. Of course, I am not a musicologist. So maybe my perspective is flawed.
@gon9684
@gon9684 2 года назад
Exactly. Some of it really is not classical at all, and most don't realize it, but most contemporary music is highly structured and logical. There are very very different movements as well. I'd say most people are pretty ok with say, John Adams music, which is a kind of taking minimalism and turning it into something not minimal again like with Harmonielehre... I understand that it's a complex topic, but often the way contemporary classical music is treated and known for is annoying to say the least, you rarely see a work by an established composer that isn't really hard to do well, specially in the last 40/50 years, composers used to be able to get away with more stuff, but the times for deconstruction of art are far gone and rarely you see such efforts received well, at least in the music world, the plastic and performance arts have turned a bit more into a circus where the message is sometimes the focus, and any real artist should be wise enough to understand that the quality of execution is more important than any message possible, and messages can just be spoken and transmitted
@alirezashojaei4634
@alirezashojaei4634 6 месяцев назад
I think the main problem with contemporary composers is that they thrive to be distinctive instead of innovative. It's possible to be innovative with the use of harmony and tonality.
@MetalCrull
@MetalCrull 2 месяца назад
For what I understand there's a lot of experimentation involved at the core of this kind of music. Not just the research of new sounds, I think it also pushes the boundaries of what we conceive as being music, like, actually testing how far can you go, where's the line. Someone in the comments used the term "sound-based performance art" and I think it fits well. It's experimentation, abstraction, it's stuff that serves a purpose when it's tailored to enhance film scenes... I guess the problem with it for some people starts when you call it straightforward music.
@unknown6390
@unknown6390 Год назад
Wow the comments did not pass the test 😂
@wojtekimbier
@wojtekimbier 4 года назад
This is exactly the discussion that I searched for during my train when a thought came to my mind that the classics can't be where that branch of music ended
@edwardgivenscomposer
@edwardgivenscomposer 3 года назад
wow. that was unconvincing.
@aktchungrabanio6467
@aktchungrabanio6467 2 года назад
agreed
@PeaceNinja007
@PeaceNinja007 3 месяца назад
Ted talk will let just anyone talk nowadays lol
@pete_kane
@pete_kane 3 года назад
I came for the 0-3-5
@nicolamazzoli2424
@nicolamazzoli2424 2 года назад
in other words, everything but music. I totally see the water jar piece being the equivalent of Beethoven's 9th in 200 years from now . sadness
@VivekPatel-ze6jy
@VivekPatel-ze6jy 8 месяцев назад
Contemporary classical isn't just what she showed 😭 Classical music that's enjoyable to listen to is absolutely still being made
@invisiblyvisible5307
@invisiblyvisible5307 4 года назад
Anyone know where the first song she played on the piano is from?
@TheTomzy93
@TheTomzy93 3 года назад
cheek to cheek
@edwardgivenscomposer
@edwardgivenscomposer 3 года назад
@@TheTomzy93 played like a drunken Lawrence Welk but OK
@anthonycook6213
@anthonycook6213 День назад
I think the problem is how to listen to composed music in general. Unfortunately, FM Classical radio (at least in Los Angeles) considers anything written after 1910 as "contemporary," gives Classical music a fossil in a museum approach, and does not treat music as a living art. The concept of a concert where people may expect something like Haydn and instead get Zappa may have a problematic formality to it, while at the same time, advanced techniques of composition used in movie soundtracks can be related to by audiences naturally. Also, it seems that untrained audiences automatically know how to listen to some music by Phillip Glass, Arvo Part, or Hans Zimmer, where they might need more help with Machaut, Schubert, Brahms, Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Cage, or Elliot Carter. In my experience, just being exposed to music in the first place is half the battle. Teaching people where to find examples of music to explore may help, as so much is online today. A great talk, and an important topic.
@googlekopfkind
@googlekopfkind Год назад
i studied this s*** because i love to compose. no one in the class could compose, and certainly not the professor. and they didnt know how to play jazz
@apersonlikeanyother6895
@apersonlikeanyother6895 4 года назад
It’s fascinating how scared some people are of new or different things. We see this in contemporary art too. Partly it’s because of the mainstream media of course, always choosing extreme examples and presenting them as if average. If you are open to the idea of any sound potentially being music your life becomes more joyous.
@Ludwigooo
@Ludwigooo 3 года назад
Exactly this. It applies to life also. Openness in life. "Judgemental-ity" gets us nowhere.
@nicolamazzoli2424
@nicolamazzoli2424 2 года назад
the same way you're not afraid of pineapple on pizza, you just vomit it out your nose! And that's part of the experience too.
@spiritualpolitics8205
@spiritualpolitics8205 Месяц назад
This is I think a fine window into how to experience this modern classical music. The problem that lurks in the background is nobody sane is going to reply those pieces 100 times the way one would the Bach Brandenburg 5, nor should they... I think there might be a more limited use case for much modern music, which is not to stereotype it all. After all, much baroque and old music is not all that good either. That said it would be difficult to see any modern composer beating Bach at his best, by furlongs.
@anthonycook6213
@anthonycook6213 День назад
Remember that the Brandenberg Concerti were unknown to the world until the mid 1800's.
@alanrobertson9790
@alanrobertson9790 3 месяца назад
Not my comment but as a young composer put it when there is a requirement to think out of the box, this becomes the box.
@PeterPrevos
@PeterPrevos Месяц назад
While this music might be interesting at a cerebral level, where is the emotion, the passion?
@dodola9955
@dodola9955 Год назад
the thing with bottles is just sound, the thing with the audience is called a happening. most of so called new music could easily be done by AI and probably better.
@aspiebear
@aspiebear 3 года назад
My mummy says that reminded her of her bizarre experience of hearing Morgen und Abend at the ROH in 2015! I am glad my ears are cloth!
@Garinioss
@Garinioss Год назад
Well, that was awkward...
@user-ur4di4ot8q
@user-ur4di4ot8q 2 года назад
Good music doesn't need a "strategy to listen" to.
@dulvab9968
@dulvab9968 2 месяца назад
This is literally a lie cause anybody who listens to music beyond a casual level has a strategy to approaching music
@MrLULE
@MrLULE Месяц назад
​@@dulvab9968yup. As a classical era music listener, not everyone will get it but approaching it with an open mind and i tend to listen for stuff thats happening at the background specially with orchestral music, it really makes me appreciate it more when I hear composers putting soo much effort to the stuff people dont hear much when casually listening.
@80C_
@80C_ Год назад
Academic music takes itself too seriously and is obsolete: not because it is a genre (which is an awful barrier concept that is the residual of an old millenium where human inequality was widely endorsed), but because it is an audience, the audience of academia. There is definitively a barrier between entitlement and not-entitlement, not to mention the old ideas of the pre-internet world when knowledge was pretty much an exclusive niche for the affluent. So far, since the birth of mass production and technological mass production, academic music attempted desperately to widen the gap with the "proletarian" audience that had existed since countless centuries. When literacy and technological advancement and music affordability became widespread, academic music basically sought to keep this distance simply by "reducing" its "accessibility" in a desperate attempt at preserving its snob status, therefore the perceived "weirdness" of much vanguarde, but do not get fooled: most avantgarde is as uninspired as the commercial music heard outside the academia, and often penned and produced by major graduates from the most prestigious colleges around the world, in a sublime act of hypocrisy. Moreover, most of this academic snobbery is pretty much confined to Europe: a lot of world traditions (possibly, most world traditions) do not even have "composers" to begin with, even though it is art music. Therefore, it is not a surprise that a lot of the current contemporary "art" world is overstressing "inclusivity" themes to dispel the notion of undemocraticness (eg: lots of music seminars and events are unreasonably priced, the "art world" is NOT open to anyone), but do not get fooled, pretty much all high culture is desperately seeking to maintain its hierarchy by alienating its potential fans, self-enclosing in a gerontocratic veil of "superiority". The avantgarde is long dead: future generations, rather than "understanding it", will understand it as a precise historical period where composers were either geniouses alienated by the horrors of WW2 seeking to distance itself from the hipocrisy of the music world (eg: Stockhausen) or, in the worst of cases, were "second-wave" pretentious academics following those footsteps without quite feeling from inside that kind of music of their predecessors. Most contemporary music, whether academic or not, is insincere in that very aspect. One for all: most musical revolutions of the last century, from the record to noise to sound masses and so forth, were born OUTSIDE the academia, or were even anti-academic and possibly obstacled. Such a far cry from the contemporary art scene where every rehearsal is a work of genious art as long as it is entitled by itself and its circuit to be so. Early modernists were not even concerned with that and did not expect that. The more academia reinforce the fact that vitality can come out only of its entitled niche or from corporational tyranny the more we are far from witnessing art. The facts that academia refuses to recognize un-academic music as art and the fact that a lot of conservatory graduates still think of the Beatles as art is the demonstration of how far is all of that stuff from being art. At most, it is business.
@rogerhardy6306
@rogerhardy6306 5 дней назад
There is one simple test for music. Does it sound good? If it has to be explained then there is something wrong. Music should stand on its own two feet, just as does painting or writing. Great music is great because it sounds great and requires the participation of the listener to 'complete the artwork'. The only emotion this contemporary music arouses in me is mild anger and bemusement. Lesson 1. Music should sound good. There is no lesson 2.
@anthonycook6213
@anthonycook6213 День назад
I don't completely agree. Some music I can't live without today I found on first exposure to be either too boring or horrible (Franz Schubert and Charles Ives) to bother with the first time I heard them, although I came around to them without having them explained. Unfamiliar ideas may change your thinking and can take time to digest.
@rogerhardy6306
@rogerhardy6306 День назад
I understand that POV and agree with you. I hated a lot of Stravinsky and the early Strauss operas but now live them... and I think they sound good!
@mustafaamirnaifalimari9041
@mustafaamirnaifalimari9041 3 года назад
That was awful.
@hatzer3780
@hatzer3780 2 года назад
I did not understand a singel thing, I guess im uncultured
@PeaceNinja007
@PeaceNinja007 Год назад
It’s more just sound effects to me .. I can’t even compare it to music.. 🤷‍♂️
@stephenweigel
@stephenweigel 3 месяца назад
You should watch movies without any sound design then :( if abstract sounds are really so horrible!!!
@PeaceNinja007
@PeaceNinja007 3 месяца назад
@@stephenweigelOrganized sound can sound good and if it’s organized in a particular way, it can compliment a movie scene. But this? Eeeeh.. 😬
@stephenweigel
@stephenweigel 3 месяца назад
@@PeaceNinja007 do you not see the potential in using these sorts of sounds as raw materials?
@PeaceNinja007
@PeaceNinja007 3 месяца назад
@@stephenweigel Yes. That’s why I said .. [Sound Effects] But I wouldn’t call this music. It’s not organized sound.
@stephenweigel
@stephenweigel 3 месяца назад
@@PeaceNinja007 yeah it is! It is literally an organized performance
@michaelsoza4183
@michaelsoza4183 3 года назад
One more musicologistwho dont understand nothing in music ....
@thibomeurkens2296
@thibomeurkens2296 Год назад
I agree, she truly knows a lot about music. A fascinating video indeed.
@Bguitarney
@Bguitarney Месяц назад
It all good. I understand how to. Don’t! Haha nah kaariaho is great, the Thomas ades, richter, Prokofiev lol paino sonata number 6. Liszt of contemporary. Ight don’t? Haha I kid scelsi, legiti, John Coltrane, Hendrix. Lol Sofia G. Elliot carter now there a wild one. Bang clang pow what about that Italian futurist Luigi guy, that his art of noise or noise … something it’s a manifesto and the even ahead of what the young lady intends to explain. Read the manifesto
@Checkmate1138
@Checkmate1138 3 года назад
It's easy -- just listen to it. If you like it, great. If you don't, move on.
@andreyserebryakov2231
@andreyserebryakov2231 3 года назад
Exactly lol
@aktchungrabanio6467
@aktchungrabanio6467 2 года назад
Which is exactly why this kind of music has no audience.
@Checkmate1138
@Checkmate1138 2 года назад
@@aktchungrabanio6467 Then that's life.... c'est la vie. If they want an audience, they should make music that's more appealing to others. Or just have lots of luck and a slim chance that the music will be timeless like those we still admire: Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, etc.
@thelondoners-lifeisart
@thelondoners-lifeisart 2 года назад
If life is only about entertainment without learning to understand and feel others world experiences sure… but surely… are we missing out on so much beauty. Perhaps it is the mindset of today that has become spoiled for choice and yet we are never satisfied… The world is rocking from our lack of insight and patience … can we make the time to wonder why and change this pattern of behavior?
@Checkmate1138
@Checkmate1138 2 года назад
@@thelondoners-lifeisart Well, perhaps we might miss out on it (though not necessarily), but if it's meaningful, then the generations that follow after us will be the ones to truly appreciate the artwork, long after the artist and us are gone.
@yoddeb
@yoddeb 19 дней назад
Absurd intellectual gymnastics.
@laramack7440
@laramack7440 2 года назад
That cello thing was awful
@SophieLeung-du9we
@SophieLeung-du9we 11 месяцев назад
I thinks that is a fun effect ❤
@Geratoth
@Geratoth 3 года назад
Horrible ideas, woman.
@intothewoods263
@intothewoods263 3 года назад
Shut up
@tamer3397
@tamer3397 3 года назад
@@intothewoods263 you shut up!
@alanrobertson9790
@alanrobertson9790 3 месяца назад
Horrible sounds too.
@ruffgook
@ruffgook 3 года назад
contemporary classical music is just collection of different sounds, mostly annoying sounds.
@PhucNguyen-yn7ng
@PhucNguyen-yn7ng 8 месяцев назад
When you have the ability to give up this idea, you will start to love contemporary music
@ruffgook
@ruffgook 5 месяцев назад
@@PhucNguyen-yn7ng just like i wouldn't enjoy recording of toilet sounds, same goes for contemporary classical music.
@PhucNguyen-yn7ng
@PhucNguyen-yn7ng 5 месяцев назад
@@ruffgook Okay it’s up to you!
@michaelpersil6573
@michaelpersil6573 5 месяцев назад
Interesting that you say „giving up on the idea of music“, because it exactly sounds like it - someone has given up on their passions in life, and has no reason to inspire anyone anymore. I wonder why so many people give up on composition after 2 years of attaining their degree. Because it’s pointless to compose without meaning, intention, expression.
@jdiwkall
@jdiwkall 4 месяца назад
While there are many gimmicky composers there are certainly truly great 20th century composers....one is witold Lutoslawski.... Dissonance, atonality, and aleatorism crafted into music of such unfathomable depth and sometimes deeply Romantic
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