Mitos sobre la música clásica contemporánea
Tom Service ofrece The five myths about contemporary classical music (también tiene una guía de música clásica contemporánea que es más que interesante) donde intenta responder a las razones más habituales que se ofrecen para no acercarse a este tipo de música. Entresaco de dos respuestas:
First, one of the signal, culture-changing achievements of contemporary music is that it opens your mind and ears to re-hear the world, to realise the beauty that’s around us in sounds we would otherwise call noises. That’s part of the genius of John Cage or Helmut Lachenmann, one way in which the world becomes a different place when you listen to their music. But there’s something else: the visceral impact of music such as Iannis Xenakis’s Jonchaies, Stockhausen’s Gruppen for three orchestral groups or Luciano Berio’s Coro is like nothing else music has done before. This music opens up huge reservoirs of feeling and physicality. Listen to any, and have your squeaky gates of perception opened up.
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So much of the great, radical music of the past 100 years bypasses the world of convention and intellect to go straight to the guts of sonic power, and to shake up your solar plexus. There’s a good argument that the less you know about Mozart or Schubert, the more directly you can understand the sounds composers create today.
Feliz exploración.
(¿Lo de música clásica contemporánea no suena raro? Es como si se estuviesen mezclando épocas diferentes. Hay quien prefiere “música culta”, pero no estoy seguro de eso sea mejor)