Pre-Raphaelite II: March 8th, 2008
The Creation: A Guided Tour
3. Advanced Tour | Brickle on Brickle |
Page 3 of 3 Anderson: We really need Dr. Oliver Sacks to help us unravel brain functions in Pre-Raphaelite as opposed to other music. Perhaps contextual music would involve emotional responses to short-term memory. Normal music, and the Pre-Raphaelite strategy engages long term memory as well. (!) And yet some of us get sentimental about hearing that old high modernist 20th music..... Brickle: Remember, also, that composers use different parts of their brains than their listeners. A seismic event for me was hearing how Harold Budd was turning to the pursuit of music that was "mindlessly pretty." I love his music and didn't give a damn that it was mindless, or so he claimed. The music had to be diabolically clever and profoundly thought-through to seem so effortlessly lovely without being offensively stupid. Anderson: Yes--I understand the Heifetz filter. Who's Ramsey Lewis? I'll have to google him. Anderson: This is very helpful to me, and I hope it will be clear to others. This discussion also helps explain why I decided on a Pre-Raphaelite theme for the program on which The Creation is featured. Next, there's an Advanced Tour of the Creation --William Anderson |
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