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Re: Electronic music (was Re: Is there a moderator here?)
At 11:59 PM -0800 11/17/02, Mark wrote:
>I think I disagree with you Richard. Not that I think your list isn't
>great, I just think it's important to start with people that are more
>current ..Then you go back and find the root, when you have some
>context. No? When I've tried to go to the root of things without
>an understanding of what's
>happening, I find myself having a difficult time getting a fix sometimes.
De gustibus non est desputandum.
My own taste in research is to go immediately for the root as soon as
I'm aware of its existence. Sometimes one discovers these roots
through references from more familiar artists, as I learned of Varèse
from a quotation on the first Mothers album and I learned of
Stockhausen from a mention on the second Who album. Once I knew that
Stockhausen existed I immediately bought the DDG album containing
"Gesang der Jünglinge" and "Kontakte" and WHAM! I was hooked. It was
1966. I was 20 years old at the time and playing in a folk rock band.
There simply wasn't any contemporary "mainstream" electronic music at
the time.
Similarly when I first became conscious of Indian music through
George Harrison's use of the sitar on Norwegian Wood I immediately
bought a couple of Ravi Shankar albums and listened to them over and
over. It really wasn't that much of a stretch, as long as I kept my
ears open (unlike my stepfather, who on hearing one of my raga
records during a visit home for the holidays, referred to Sharkar as
"Johnny One-Note").
But again, "De gustibus..." While I think that most of us have
absorbed, at least subliminally, such a variety of musical sounds and
styles throughout our lives that nothing we hear can be truly that
surprising, perhaps many people are too set in their musical tastes
to plunge headfirst into the abyss. I admit that it took me a while
to hear blues as more than primitive three-chord vamping. All I was
hearing was the surface. And I didn't have a true appreciation for
African music until I actually learned to play it from a Ghanaian
master drummer.
--
______________________________________________________________
Richard Zvonar, PhD
(818) 788-2202
http://www.zvonar.com
http://RZCybernetics.com