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Author Message
25 new of 194 responses total.
anderyn
response 81 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 03:23 UTC 2001

Well, it *is* rather appalling that Ann Arbor can't support a really good
independent record store any more. (While Schoolkids in Exile is still there,
it's not easy to walk into and you have to special order things quite a bit,
in my experience.)  I find the idea of not having the opportunity to actually
examine the things I am buying really annoying --- yes, I know you can listn
to a snippet from amazon.com....
other
response 82 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 04:13 UTC 2001

There is a steady audience for classical music in and around Ann Arbor of 
several thousand at least.  Not all of that audience is resident *in* Ann 
Arbor, however.  

There is a hardcore audience of early music enthusiasts of at least a 
couple of thousand, though the same consideration applies.

U-M is home to a very highly regarded school of music, with a strong -- 
but not exclusive -- focus on classical musics.  The upshot of that is 
that people from around the nation, if not the world, seek out the 
University of Michigan to attend this school of music.  

These are undisputed facts, not somebody's ego-driven, unsupported 
opinions.

National statistics on classical record sales and online vs. OTC sales 
will both likely under-reflect applicable stats in Ann Arbor, due in part 
to the highly developed technological infrastructure and community and 
also in part to the average educational level, which *does* correlate to 
awareness and appreciation of classical music.
mdw
response 83 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 06:12 UTC 2001

I wonder if Ann Arbor's difficulties in sustaining a classical musical
CD store is not as much related to the high cost of retail space, and
inept marketing, as anything else.
bru
response 84 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 13:22 UTC 2001

WEll, I think borders carries a wide selection of classical music, so I doubt
any independent store would do better sales wise.  I just don't think the
market is there.  

That is, there are times when one needs to buy a selection of the classical
variety, but once you have The New World Symphony in your collection, you are
not going to have to replace it very often.

I prefered to shop at Borders for its selection and conveinience as opposed
to any of the several other stores in town.     
slynne
response 85 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 15:26 UTC 2001

I think that is the problem, Bruce. Well not a problem for you but a 
problem for folks who would rather have a different retail experience. I 
mean, the folks who like to shop at places like Borders and Walmart 
certainly are getting what they want. Unfortunately, it seems clear that 
the big chains *are* what most people want since they are the stores 
that are still in business and nice little retail outlets with the 
helpful and oddly dedicated staff are going out of business left and 
right. 

The fact is though that for some items, price is the number one concern 
to me. I dont care how charming a record store or book store is, if I 
can get the same book across the street at a big chain, I am going to 
the big chain. Since I work for Borders and get a rather nice discount, 
I havent bought a book or cd anyplace else since I started working here. 
I like charming little stores but I guess I dont value them enough to 
pay the extra money to shop there. 
danr
response 86 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 17:29 UTC 2001

bingo!
brighn
response 87 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 22:15 UTC 2001

McNally> I would dispute that the diversity of music is diminishing. If you
compared the diversity of music available today to that available 20, then
40, then 60, then 80, then 100 years ago, I doubt you could make that claim
easily. Music styles change. Sometimes we don't happen to like the changes.
That doesn't mean that it's less diverse, it means that the portion of it that
we happen to like is smaller.

As for the elitist thing, why is there anything WRONG about being elitist?
I just want John to admit as much. =} I'm an elitist about things other than
music, and actually, I'm something of a pop music elitist. 

DBratman> It's not splitting hairs to point out that "appalling" carries a
value judgment. It does. Refer to the last paragraph.

If the general claim is, classical music aside, it's sad that the will of the
masses overpowers that of the music lover, fine -- that's an elitist statement
that says that the masses wouldn't know good music if it bit them on the butt.
Given that Backstreet Boys, Dixie Chicks, and Britney Spears all went diamond
last year (and Kid Rock nearly did), it's true. It's still elitist. =}

(And I *like* Kid Rock.)
keesan
response 88 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 00:39 UTC 2001

Ann Arbor also no longer has a classical music radio station.  Is this also
because the classical music lovers here all have computers and are listening
online instead?  Just like they are said to be ordering online?
brighn
response 89 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 04:23 UTC 2001

No, that's because everyone who used to listen to classical music in their
car fell asleep at the wheel. ;}
gull
response 90 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 04:36 UTC 2001

Most NPR stations seem to play classical music for most of the day, here...
scg
response 91 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 06:05 UTC 2001

The Ann Arbor NPR station switched from classical music to talk a few years
ago.  Last I checked (which has admittedly been at least seven months), there
were still three classical stations that could be gotten in Ann Arbor:  WGTE
in Toledo, WKAR in East Lansing, and CBET in Windsor.  Detroit had only one:
CBET.
davel
response 92 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 14:38 UTC 2001

That's still correct, AFAIK.  We (in Milan, near A2) listen to all 3 of those.
md
response 93 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 16:40 UTC 2001

The elitist thing is a problem.  One side contends that pop music 
appeals to listeners with crappy taste.  People who wear expensive 
understated clothes and live in tastefully decorated houses will listen 
to the musical equivalent of a polyester leisure suit in a trailer 
park.  People who pride themselves on dining on gourmet food will do so 
while listening to the musical equivalent of a Big Mac.  If there's 
good and bad this, why not good and bad that?  As soon as you admit 
that one kind of *anything* is better than another, you've enabled me 
to say the classical music is better than pop music.  If you disagree, 
it's because you literally don't know any better.

The other side contends that it's all just a matter of taste, and that 
one kind of music can't possibly be intrinsically better than another.  
How can it?  It's all just notes on a page.  Are you seriously saying 
that the notes on a page of classical music are somehow more moral or 
more politically correct than the notes on a page of pop music?  That 
sitting through a Bach cantata makes me a better person that listening 
to a Beatles song?

The flaw in the first ("absolutist") position is that if you can say 
classical is better than pop, then I can say that pop is better than 
classical.  I assure you, my reasons for believing so are every bit as 
valid as yours.  Try me and see.  The flaw in the relativist position 
is that no one is really a relativist when it comes to their own likes 
and dislikes.  The same people who say that classical music is no 
better than pop music because no one kind of music can be intrinsically 
superior to another will also say, often in the next breath, that (for 
example) Britney Spears' music is inferior to Tori Amos' music.  
Sometimes they'll even react like, "Oh please.  This is a completely 
different matter."  In other words, the relativists tend to be flaming 
hypocrites.
krj
response 94 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 17:02 UTC 2001

I feel like I've just been deconstructed.
brighn
response 95 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 17:07 UTC 2001

There are non-aesthetic grounds for classifying neurological stimuli,
actually, so there's an objective scale for qualifying music, but (a) that's
very rarely what anyone means when they say "this music is good"; (b)
neurological stimuli effects are most likely fairly minor when compared to
environmentally-learned effects; and (c) I'm not aware of many studies on the
innate human neurological effects of music. Oh yeah, and (d), such effects
would mostly likely apply more to performance (tempo, type of instruments,
agressiveness of play) than to composition. [most>most] I do recall reading
of one study where various genres of music were played to groups to see what
the effects would be, and C&W yieled more aggressive behavior than any other
genre, but I rather suspect that's environemtally learned behavior.

Beyond that, aesthetics ARE socially determined. What's interesting about
aesthetic sensibilities, though, is that they rarely match what the masses
enjoy. Is it the case that the masses eat Big Macs instead of filet mignon
because they can't afford the latter, or because they honestly prefer the
former (on a hedonist, is not aesthetic, level)? Surely much of it is expense,
butI daresay many McDonald's haunters would stick with their Big Macs, even
if given a choice. If this is so -- and if Britney Spears sells more albums
than [insert folk/classical musician here] -- then why do the BRITNEY SPEARS
fans, by and large, think of classical music as being "higher" in intrinisic
quality than what they listen to (and many of them do)? That's what I see as
an interesting social effect, and one that's been around for a long while
(centuries, if not longer) -- it's not surprising that DSO fans would see
Spears as being poor quality, but it's surprising (to me) that many Spears
fans would rank Spears as low quality, aesthetically...

"... oh yeah, it's ham, but she means every word in a ten minute ballad of
despair ... " (Soft Cell, L'Esqualita) 

If you THINK it's crap, why consume it? Either you don't think you yourself
deserve any better (which explains the popularity of the Dummies and Complete
Idiots books), or you don't really think it's crap but you don't have the
verbal concepts to debate with someone who does, and you're learned not to
even bother. After all, the aesthetes have a lengthy dialogue about what makes
art good or bad; how can you, the lowly pubescent who still interjects "like"
five times in every sentence, hope to compete with that?
brighn
response 96 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 17:09 UTC 2001

(as if Ken wasn't feeling deconstructed enough... he slipped in).
katie
response 97 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 23:43 UTC 2001

I like both kinds of music...country *and* western!
keesan
response 98 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 23:47 UTC 2001

Some of the Dummies books are well written and are aimed not at stupid people
but at ignorant people.  Maybe classical music requires more training to
appreciate it.  I have heard lots of bad classical music and some good pop
music.
janc
response 99 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 06:13 UTC 2001

People are capable of recognizing more than one kind of "better".  Lots of
people who personally enjoy listening to Britney Spears (and generally bathing
in her aura and associating with other fans) may still recognize that in terms
of impressing people in society in general presenting yourself as a Britney
Spears fan is not going to win you as much prestige as presenting yourself
as a classical fan, or afficiado of Neo-Sino-Jamacian Elbow Jazz Septets. And
awful lot of "better" is "more prestigious" and I think that that is much more
strongly culturally determined than "it makes me happy when I hear it" and
much more widely agreed upon.  Music assoicated with disadvantaged social
groups (teenagers and hicks, for two) is broadly disdained.  (On the other
hand, its fashionable for the elite to like black music, so jazz has been
co-opted and blacks had to invent a whole new kind of music (rap) to make sure
they wouldn't be mistaken for rich white socialites.)
dbratman
response 100 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 07:36 UTC 2001

Paul Kershaw #87 wrote: "It's not splitting hairs to point out 
that "appalling" carries a value judgment. It does."

And "disappointing" also carries a value judgment.  The hair-splitting 
criticism of John was for saying "appalling" rather 
than "disappointing" (actual example offered in the critique).

Bruce #84 wrote: "once you have The New World Symphony in your 
collection, you are not going to have to replace it very often."

That depends on what kind of classical collector you are.  I know 
people who really do insist on getting all the recordings, though 
they're considered a little odd.  A large part of the late 80s-90s 
classical boom consisted of people replacing their LPs with CDs.  Both 
of which examples rather prove the point.

McNally #80 wrote: "It's clearly apparent to anyone who cares about 
music that the diversity of music being recorded is declining 
substantially in conjunction with modern music marketing and retail 
trends."

That depends entirely on where you shop.  (And on what you define as 
the golden age of diverse music, I suppose.)

Michael Delizia #93 wrote: "The other side contends that it's all just 
a matter of taste, and that one kind of music can't possibly be 
intrinsically better than another.  How can it?  It's all just notes on 
a page.  Are you seriously saying that the notes on a page of classical 
music are somehow more moral or more politically correct than the notes 
on a page of pop music?  That sitting through a Bach cantata makes me a 
better person that listening to a Beatles song?"

The flaw in that argument is not that nobody is a perfect relativist, 
it's that those are really anemic and comically utilitarian ways of 
judging the relative value of art.  More aesthetically valid methods 
should not be hard to think of.
md
response 101 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 12:16 UTC 2001

You wouldn't think so.
orinoco
response 102 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 17:13 UTC 2001

There's a third alternative to the two that Michael Deliza mentions in
#93.  It's possible to be an absolutist when discussing two examples of
the same genre, but a relativist when discussing two different genres. 
This lets you say things like "The Beatles are a great pop band" and
"Johnny Cash is a great country singer." and even "Garth Brooks is a
decent pop singer, but a terrible country musician" without needing to
have an opinion about whether pop is _better_ than country.

The idea here would be something like this: a genre of music is
essentially a _set of criteria_ for what makes good music.  So rather than
saying "classical music is music with lots of violins" and "punk is loud
fast music with drums and guitars" [both too simple], you say "good
classical music should have an interesting structure and be performed with
clean tone" and "good punk should be simple and catchy, with a solid beat
and lots of energy" [still both too simple].

The catch is, these criteria are almost all unconscious, especially in
non-classical music.  So-called "simple" music, like punk or blues, often
has very subtle criteria that aren't easy to explain.  

After all, if blues really was as simple as people who don't like it
claim, you'd expect anybody with a year of guitar lessons behind them to
be able to play good blues.  Instead, it takes years and years of careful
listening and practice to get beyond "godawful" and into "mediocre," and
even the so-called simple blues fans will know right away when a musician
doesn't have it.  (Same thing with punk, actually -- most of the punk fans
I know think most of the punk bands out there are terrible, and only
really respect the top few).
tpryan
response 103 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 17:33 UTC 2001

        In the age of vinyl, I can see where a classical music fan would
replace the same work in their collection with a newer album.  Some from
the skill of musicianship improved.  Most from the improved fidelity and
recording techniques.  That, and the fact that a vinyl LP played for
5 years does wear out, where a CD can stay in near new condition when
the collector puts very little effort into it.
gull
response 104 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 18:55 UTC 2001

Read some of the audio newsgroups on USENET and you'll get the 
impression that many classical fans don't believe in CDs...
danr
response 105 of 194: Mark Unseen   Jan 27 00:30 UTC 2001

Yeah, and some people still think equipment with tubes sound better. 
Right, Scott? :)
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