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Re: Indian classical music
On Tue, 8 Oct 1996, Pete Koniuto wrote:
>
> Loopers,
>
> On Mon, 7 Oct 1996, Dave Stagner wrote:
>
> > The other source was a book by English free improvisor Derek Bailey,
> > called (appropriately enough) "Musical Improvisation". Bailey devoted
> > two chapters of this rather thin volume to Indian classical music,
> > praising it extensively as an improvisational structure. He spent
> > much time dealing with the basic musical theory, which is more
> > philosophical than "musical" in nature. Because there really isn't a
> > written form for the music, there is debate over even the number of
> > notes in an octave.
>
> Small correction: The book by Derek Bailey is actually called
> _Improvisation: its nature and practice in music_, published in 1980,
>but
> then a second edition appeared in 1992 from the London publisher, British
> Library National Sound Archive.
Thanks for the correction. I'm going from memory here. Heck, I only
recently rediscovered my copy, buried in a box with a bunch of
half-demolished electronics I stripped for parts. I was terrified I
had loaned it out to someone and never got it back!
> But, alas, even the second edition is out of print already. However,
> i am sure a copy of at least one of these editions is available in
> your local library.
I've NEVER seen it in a library, including a couple of university
libraries. Then again, given the typical Ivory Tower conservatory
attitude toward improvisation...
> There is another *excellent* book for those interested in the
>fundamentals
> of Indian Classical music--the terminology and such. It was written by
>a
> woman whose name eludes me for the moment, but i have it at home
>somewhere,
> i believe. So i'll post the info tomorrow.
Please do! All I have are my Ali Akbar Khan records, the Bailey book,
and memories of a conversation from years ago. It seems to me Indian
music theory might go a long way toward capturing an understanding of
looping, where Western theory falls flat.
-dave
By "beauty," I mean that which seems complete.
Obversely, that the incomplete, or the mutilated, is the ugly.
Venus De Milo.
To a child she is ugly.
-Charles Fort dstagner@icarus.net