Grex Classical Conference

Item 42: Non-classical music for people who like classical music - suggestions please

Entered by keesan on Sun Dec 6 18:31:09 1998:

Can anyone suggest genres of recently-composed music that people who only
listen to classical and a bit of ethnic folk music might enjoy?  And/or list
the different genres of nonclassical music currently being listened to, with
a brief characterization of them - types of instruments, harmony, rhythm,
subject matter if vocal, history.  I would appreciate having this item linked
to music.  We are pretty ignorant and expect that there is some music out
there we would like, but don't know where to look for it (not on KOOL 107!).
122 responses total.

#1 of 122 by remmers on Mon Dec 7 10:29:05 1998:

(Did you intend to post this in the Houseplants and Gardens
conference?)


#2 of 122 by keesan on Wed Dec 9 04:15:19 1998:

No, of course not, I wondered where it had gone.  How to erase it here?
Kill 37 - 'you can't do that!'.


#3 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 9 07:57:37 1998:

(( Gardening #37  :)  now linked as Music #161. ))


#4 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 9 10:00:52 1998:

My first inclination is to point you at some of the recent deluge of 
Celtic folk albums, and some of the more acoustic side of the Scandinavian
stuff.  I'm guessing that Hedningarna and Hoven Droven are probably more
rock-influenced for your tastes, but you might like the Swedish band 
Vasen (all instrumental, heavy on the fiddles) or Triakel (mostly 
harmonium and voice).
 
To try out some Irish and Scottish music for free, listen to the 
Thistle and Shamrock program on NPR.  WUOM in Ann Arbor has picked 
it up recently, but I forget when they are airing it.


#5 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 9 10:06:41 1998:

Ah, apparently I linked too soon.  keesan started another copy of this 
item, which is now music #162, after losing this one.  I'm going to 
freeze this.  I hope.


#6 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 9 10:08:23 1998:

And apparently now that it is linked, I can't freeze/retire it,, 
and 'unlink' isn't a legal command.  Help...


#7 of 122 by md on Wed Dec 9 11:49:55 1998:

Okay, here's a copy of the (my) one response to the item in the
Classical Music cf.  I will now kill the item in that conference
and then there'll only be this item in Houseplants and Music.
*Or will there*?

#1 of 2 by Michael Delizia (md) on Sun Dec 6 22:40:55 1998:

Well, I love classical music.  The non-classical music I currently
listen to includes:

Grover Washington Junior: Reed Seed.  An album dating from around 1980.
Jazz, saxophones, small ensemble, very cool.

The Byrds: The Byrds' Greatest Hits.  1960s folk rock.  Now-legendary
covers of a couple of Bob Dylan songs included.

The Rolling Stones: Beggars Banquet.  Album dating from around 1970.
Includes three of the greatest rock 'n' roll songs of all time:
Sympathy for the Devil, Street-Fighting Man, and Stray Cat Blues.

Lauryn Hill: The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.  Recent release.
Female member of The Fugees solo album.  Brainy rap, as rap goes.

Various artists: Rain Forest.  A compliation of songs by performers
from tropical areas of the planet.  Sold at Caribou Coffee as promo
for their new "Rainforest Blend."  I bought it on a whim and got
hooked on the very first track, a song by an African group so upbeat
it makes the Spice Girls sound like Rachmaninov.

Various Artists: Swing Time.  Another promo album,  I picked it up
at Bed Bath & Beyond.  Glen Miller, Benny Goodman, et al.  My
favorite is "Leap Frog" by Les Brown and his Band of Reknown.  The
reason I bought this was for a dance at the local highschool, where
swing music and swing dancing have inexplicably come into vogue.
I almost didn't get it back.

That's it currently.  A few months ago it would've been all different.
I don't think the above have much in common.  I don't think there is
necessarily one kind of non-classical music that's more likely to
appeal to classical music lovers than another kind.


#8 of 122 by md on Wed Dec 9 11:55:16 1998:

Okay, it's gone from the Classical Music cf, but it still exists
here as Item 162.  It should be killed before someone else responds
to it.  Hurry!


#9 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 9 16:56:07 1998:

I retired the copy which was item #162 in Music.  Now, if md can link this back
 to classicalmusic, then I think we will have what keesan  originally intended.


#10 of 122 by keesan on Wed Dec 9 20:02:39 1998:

Thanks to both of you for your efforts, what I was hoping to end up with was
an item in Classicalmusic which was linked to Music, is that what we ended
up with?  How does one retire a copy, I need to do that to some listings in
Classifieds that sold (or went into the dumpster).
Next time I go to the library I will look for your suggestions on CD.


#11 of 122 by md on Wed Dec 9 20:35:43 1998:

This is now linked to Classical as Item 42.  


#12 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 9 20:53:22 1998:

Sindi, I'll pull together some CDs to loan to you, if you'd like.


#13 of 122 by keesan on Thu Dec 10 02:02:45 1998:

That is awfully nice of you, but maybe the library also has them, let me know
a few suggested titles to look for.  I went to Scandinavian dancing for a
while and like the fiddle music, but am curious as to what good new music is
around that is not designed mainly to be loud, or too easy listening.
I have heard some interesting stuff on the Ypsi station, recently composed
in the style of Indian classical music, by Germans.


#14 of 122 by davel on Thu Dec 10 03:48:43 1998:

Sindi, I play (a bit of) hammered dulcimer, so I'm seeing quite a lot
of stuff built around that; & there are a lot of people out there with
recordings you might like.  The largest bulk falls into traditional &
modern folk genres, but there's a fair amount of classical- based stuff
that I (at least) enjoy.  (Some of this is commercially available;
a lot is more-or-less self-distributed.)


#15 of 122 by keesan on Fri Dec 11 20:02:44 1998:

I liked Bolling's classical jazz.  Where would I look for other
classical-based stuff for other instruments?  Are there particular composers
to look for?  I will check the library's folk section.


#16 of 122 by e4808mc on Fri Dec 11 22:08:24 1998:

Oops.  Someone linked it again before it got killed in Plants.


#17 of 122 by orinoco on Fri Dec 11 22:22:24 1998:

Another direction to look in... there's a decent number of bands with a big
big classical influence who often get lumped into the Goth category for some
reason, probably 'cause nobody knows where to put them. Off the top of my head
I'm thinking of Dead Can Dance and Never The Bride, and maybe Rasputina.
Dead Can Dance has influences from all over the place; mostly ethnic folk and
medaeval music is what it sounds like to me. I haven't heard very much Never
The Bride, but what I've heard sounds pretty classical - Piano, vocals, and
cello.
I honestly don't know whether you'd like Rasputina or not, but I have to plug
them 'cause they're one of my favorite bands right now. They're an electric
cello trio, and their sound drifts quite a bit - their first album, _Thanks
For the Ether_ was more acoustic, and their second, _How We Quit the Forest_
is much 'harder' and more electric-sounding. They also act more like a typical
Goth band, and can be a little offensive at times, but... okay, I'm just going
to stop making disclaimers. They're really, really good, and with a distinct
classical influence, and...yeah. Listen to _Thanks For the Ether_, I'm
guessing you'll like it.

I'll ask Liza the Resident Goth Expert for some more reccomendations.


#18 of 122 by keesan on Sat Dec 12 01:04:35 1998:

Thanks again, can you define what Goth music is, if that is possible?  I had
not heard of it until now.
        I find that the New Age music played just before midnight on the radio
puts me to sleep (is that intentional)?  It all seems rather repetitious, but
is some of it better than other parts?  Our neighbor has been trying to point
out why some jazz is better than others.


#19 of 122 by davel on Sat Dec 12 13:32:08 1998:

Some of it is indeed quite good, but ... most of it puts me to sleep, too.
Possibly it's no accident that they play it late at night.


#20 of 122 by cloud on Sun Dec 13 05:20:59 1998:

Some jazz is better than others.  Simply put, almost any jazz is better than
Kenny G...  At least, that's my not-so-humble opinion.


#21 of 122 by keesan on Sun Dec 13 14:09:34 1998:

My neighbor has the same opinion of Kenny G, who I only heard of because we
were given a free copy of him at Kiwanis, which we use to test CD players,
and then someone who bought a player said he was her favorite.  He apparently
sings one note for 45 minutes (a bit boring in my opinion).  Can you recommend
any good jazz music that is less random-sounding than average?


#22 of 122 by orinoco on Mon Dec 14 02:28:17 1998:

Re defining goth: I was afraid you were going to ask something like that:)
The only thing goth bands really have in common with each other is their
generally dark mood. The bands I reccomended in #17 are all an etheral, kinda'
melancholy sort of dark. There are also goth bands who are loud, angry, and
obnoxious sorts of dark. It really depends. 
Meaning "go get some goth music" was probably not a good reccomendation. :)


#23 of 122 by mcnally on Mon Dec 14 17:39:37 1998:

  No, but the pointer to Dead Can Dance was probably a good one..
  Perhaps Cocteau Twins might also fit the bill -- I'm trying to think
  of music that's lush, layered, and atmospheric..


#24 of 122 by keesan on Mon Dec 14 18:05:15 1998:

Would Borders have anything in this category that I could listen to?
I should go take a look, with a list of the above suggestions.


#25 of 122 by coyote on Mon Dec 14 23:39:14 1998:

Yes, I'd highly recommend Dead Can Dance as well.  They have a very broad
range of styles, however, so just picking up one album might not show you what
all they do.  My two personal favorite albums are probably "Into the
Labyrinth" and "Aion", which both have very different characters, but I like
all of their albums (at least the ones that I own).


#26 of 122 by keesan on Tue Dec 15 02:52:22 1998:

Do they play traditional instruments or electronic ones? Or both?


#27 of 122 by mcnally on Tue Dec 15 07:21:45 1998:

  Virtually all traditional instruments.  From a pretty wide variety
  of traditions, too..


#28 of 122 by anderyn on Tue Dec 15 13:53:17 1998:

I'll re-endorse the Dead Can Dance recommendations. Even Bruce (my 
husband who doesn't like much *modern* music) liked them. They're a very
lush sound, very layered....


#29 of 122 by keesan on Tue Dec 15 18:42:28 1998:

I just copied down the suggestions and will check for them at Borders and/or
the library and report back.  Celtic, folk-rock and folk, hammered dulcimer,
and Goth (did I miss any?).  krj, I appreciate your offer of lending CDs but
would be afraid to damage them (somehow I don't worry about library stuff).
We have some library books due today, so will be going into town.


#30 of 122 by mcnally on Tue Dec 15 22:28:08 1998:

  Judging from the condition of many discs I've checked out of the 
  Ann Arbor public library you're not the only one who doesn't worry
  about scratching them..


#31 of 122 by bruin on Wed Dec 16 00:07:53 1998:

RE #30 I had the same problem as you with library CD's, mcnally -- they have
been notorious for skipping parts of songs and sometimes getting stuck and
sounding like something from a science fiction movie.  Guess there are a lot
of library patrons who don't treat library property with TLC.  (Same goes for
all the library books and magazines which have pictures of naked people ripped
out of them.)


#32 of 122 by albaugh on Wed Dec 16 06:49:39 1998:

Call me an old fogey, but I'd highly recommend the "classic" Blood, Sweat,
and Tears and Chicago albums.  The Moody Blues did some nice stuff also.


#33 of 122 by krj on Wed Dec 16 15:16:01 1998:

OK, you're an old fogey.  :)   For albaugh: if you like the old BS&T and 
Chicago stuff, as my wife and I do, you might want to look for another
jazz-rock band from the same period called Chase, named for its leader
Bill Chase.   http://www.great-music.com/chase/chase.htm


#34 of 122 by keesan on Wed Dec 16 16:00:03 1998:

Well, we got to the library ten minutes before closing, and I tried looking
in the electronic catalog for the various suggested categories and titles.
Found Never a Bride but nothing else except for some plain dulcimer Christmas
music, and they were closing before I figured out how to locate Never a Bride
on the shelf, so I got out some classical music from Iran and some harpsichord
music and some other folk and classical music and went to Borders.  First time
I ever actually walked into their music dept.  I figured out how to use their
touch screen after a while, and after several tries realized that Rasputina
is a performer and Never a Bride an album (you have to do three separate
searches for song, album, and performer) and guessed at the category (I think
it was rock).  They had Rasputina and Dead Can Dance but not Never a Bride
(no longer published, since 1995) and lots of folk music but not the
recommended Scandinavian stuff (only the nonrecommended band).  I then figured
out how to use the listening areas (first two were apparently broken) but
could not hear much over the loud and insistent background music.  Listened
to a few things randomly in a few categories until the noise drove me away.
Does anyone actually go to Borders to buy classical music?  They don't seem
to play anything that is not mainly loud percussion.
        I will look for Never a Bride at the library, and perhaps Ken would
not mind taping me a few things, and the library might want to order some
Scandinavian folk music.
        We have a book out currently with several pages cut out of it, all of
them seem to be scantily clad women (judging from the smaller BW versions of
the same things near the end).  You would think they could have just bought
a Playboy magazine rather than cutting up a photography book.


#35 of 122 by bruin on Thu Dec 17 00:29:06 1998:

BTW, the 1970's group Chase had only one major hit ("Get It On"), and three
years later Bill Chase and other members of the band were killed in a plane
crash.


#36 of 122 by md on Thu Dec 17 03:41:17 1998:

Many classical music lovers also love movie music.  Bernard
Hermann, John Williams, Jerry Goldsmith.  Did you know that
Rudolph Steiner, who composed the famous Gone with the Wind 
theme, also composed the famous theme to A Summer Place two 
decades later?  Did you know that the music for Our Town, 
The Red Pony, and Something Wild was all composed by Aaron 
Copland?  Or that the music to the movie Scott of the Antarctic 
was made into a symphony (Sinfonia Antartica) by its composer, 
Ralph Vaughn Williams?  Leonard Bernstein wrote the music for 
On the Waterfront, but *Elmer* Berstein wrote the celebrated 
jazz-influenced score to The Man with the Golden Arm (among 
many others).


#37 of 122 by remmers on Thu Dec 17 10:09:54 1998:

(Are you sure it isn't Max Steiner, rather than Rudolph Steiner?)

In point of fact, I'm a classical music lover who also loves
movie music. My favorite film score composers are probably
Bernard Hermann and Nino Rota. Hermann did the scores for
"Citizen Kane", various Hitchcock films ("Vertigo", "Psycho",
"Marnie", etc.), Truffaut's "Fahrenheit 451", Scorsese's
"Taxi Driver". Rota is most famous for "The Godfather" and
his scores for numerous Fellini films.

One of my favorite film scores of all time is Prokofiev's
score for "Alexander Nevsky", later arranged as a suite for
orchestra and chorus.


#38 of 122 by davel on Thu Dec 17 11:19:36 1998:

Prokofiev also wrote movie music.  The one that comes to mind (in the
suite drawn from the score) is _Lieutenant_Kije_.  (I've never heard the
original score played, just the suite in various arrangements ...
starting with *playing* it in jr. high school band.)


#39 of 122 by md on Thu Dec 17 11:31:48 1998:

Yes, Max Steiner is definitely the film composer.  Rudolf Steiner,
I believe, was an anarchist theorist.  Probably composed atonal
music on the side.  Speaking of which, the first atonal score used
in a popular feature film was the one for Fantastic Voyage.


#40 of 122 by md on Thu Dec 17 12:02:13 1998:

...which, according to IMDB, was composed by Leonard Rosenman, who
also did the music for Rebel without a Cause, Star Trek IV: the
Voyage Home, and many other movies.  His most famous scrap of music,
however, is the "doo-doo-doo-doo" Twilight Zone theme.


#41 of 122 by albaugh on Thu Dec 17 19:26:10 1998:

Well, might as well admit that John Williams' Star Wars scores are heavily
classical in style while blaring out catchy themes.


#42 of 122 by md on Thu Dec 17 21:02:42 1998:

Not only Star Wars, but also Superman, Raiders of the Lost Ark,
Jaws, ET, Close Encounters, Jurassic Park, and many other
blockbusters I've forgotten, I'm sure.  Williams' style always
sounds British to me, like a more tuneful Malcolm Arnold.  Even
his earliest "Cowboys" music, when he was still Johnnie Williams,
has this quality.


#43 of 122 by coyote on Thu Dec 17 23:09:04 1998:

Re 36:
        To add even more to the list, the minimalist Michael Nyman has created
"The Piano Concerto" out of the theme from the movie "The Piano".  Aram
Khatchaturian also composed some music for movies, such as "The Battle of
Stalingrad" (Russian, I'm guessing around the same time as Alexander Nevsky,
but I've never seen it.  The music is great, though, if you like
Khatchaturian.)


#44 of 122 by md on Fri Dec 18 01:43:33 1998:

This is drifty, but I just found out that Margaret Hamilton was
in *two* of the three Copland-scored movies mentioned above.
(She wasn't in Something Wild, not surprisingly.)  She looked
a little bit like Aaron Copland.  Hmmm....


#45 of 122 by remmers on Fri Dec 18 13:07:41 1998:

Add Ennio Morricone to my list of favorite film composers. He did
the score for Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time in the West" and
other spaghetti westerns. More recently he's been working with
David Lynch, most notably the wonderful music for the "Twin Peaks"
TV series.


#46 of 122 by remmers on Fri Dec 18 21:39:33 1998:

Oops, faulty memory again - I'm merging two different people into one.
The "Twin Peaks" composer isn't Morricone, it's Angelo Badelemati 
(spelling probably mangled). So count both of those dudes as among my 
favorites.


#47 of 122 by mcnally on Fri Dec 18 23:40:30 1998:

  Badalamenti, I think..


#48 of 122 by lumen on Sat Dec 19 04:57:50 1998:

Don't forget to check out the TV/movie soundtracks item while you're on this
thread.

Nino Rota is nice.  I learned "Love Theme From The Godfather" for classical
guitar and fell in love with it before I heard the actual recording, which
features a mandolin instrumentation.  A mandolin has to be played
differently-- the strings fade away quickly when strummed or plucked, and
therefore must be played repeatedly to compensate for lack of reverb.  So the
piece had a slightly different flavor on a classical guitar-- I have to use
an occasional vibrato, especially on long notes, instead of the trill-like
manner in which the mandolin is played.  It's still nice.

Speaking of classical guitars and classical music and rock n' roll, the
former leader of the band Deep Purple plays classical guitar now (but no
lute.)


#49 of 122 by davel on Sat Dec 19 12:04:49 1998:

(One of Deep Purple's early albums had rock versions of parts of Tchaikovsky's
Romeo & Juliet and of a Beethoven symphony.)


#50 of 122 by cyklone on Sat Dec 19 14:35:38 1998:

Ritchie Blackmore was into classical music even during Deep Purple's early
days. I remember reading an interview in which he pointed out that one of the
chord progressions used in a DP song was lifted from Bach.


#51 of 122 by tpryan on Sat Dec 19 19:16:22 1998:

re 49:          ?"Music for two unfreindly groups of instruments"?


#52 of 122 by jmm on Sun Dec 20 23:21:01 1998:

Try Loreena McKennet. Contemporary folk, magical stuff. I got hooked on her
background music for "The Burning Times." She has a new tape out. Canadian,
based in Stratford.


#53 of 122 by mcnally on Mon Dec 21 04:43:43 1998:

A lot of people seem to like her but at least the singles I've heard
have really turned me off.  Judging by the bland magicky-fantasy lyrics
I've heard I expect her to start singing about hobbits at any minute..
Given that that's my big reservation, should I steer clear or have I
formed an incorrect impression based on the few songs one might hear
on the radio (in particular the dance re-mix of "The Mummer's Dance",
which gets played most often, really turns me off (not necessarily the
music or vocals but mostly the lyrics, though the music doesn't do much
for me either..) 


#54 of 122 by katie on Mon Dec 21 06:04:28 1998:

Her traditional music is good.


#55 of 122 by anderyn on Mon Dec 21 13:32:05 1998:

Yah, her traditional music is good, and I rather like her version
of the "Highwayman". She does tend to get off into a Celtic fae mood
a bit often, but on the other hand, I happen to *like* Celtic fae stuff
when I'm in the mood for it, and her music is just right for those 
moods, being not too New Age-y and mushy.


#56 of 122 by remmers on Mon Dec 21 17:06:24 1998:

Sindi specifically mentioned recently-composed music in #0, so
I've been holding off bringing up ragtime, most of which was
written between 1895 and 1920. Nonetheless, there is contemporary
music in the ragtime style that a classical music lover might
enjoy, e.g. the compositions of William Bolcolm, Glenn Jenks,
Frank French, Peter Lundberg, Bob Milne, and others.

I'll provide more detail later when I have more time, if there's
interest.


#57 of 122 by steve on Sun Dec 27 04:23:38 1998:

  Sindi, great item.  I'm just coming to the music conference finally,
after not having been able to make the time for a while.

  The following are all things I've given to friends who are classical
music people who've frowned on other forms of music.  Not all liked
all the things I loaned out, but at least I've never received any
gagging motions from them upon getting the CD's back.

  For jazz, I'd say look at Jean Luc Ponty, from Canada.  He is still
making music today, and has been for about 20 years now, I think.  A
german group which has disbanded is Passport, headed by Klaus
Doldinger.  Very good stuff there.

  For rock, listen to the early music of Yes.  Their offerings from
the 70's such as "Going for the One", "Fragile" and "Tormato" are
wonderful.  They are my all time favorite 'rock' music, but that
doesn't do them justice.  Among Yes fanatics there is a strong
coorelation with a liking of classical, myself included.

  Also called Rock, but more like folk are three albumns by Jethro
Tull.  Called "Songs from the Wood", "Heavy horses" and the last
one whose title escapes me but talks of north sea oil.  I can only
think that Ian Anderson meant to do this, which was a trilogy of
songs about nature, man/nature, and man/technology.  The first two
even my mother loves--Ian writes beautifully, and I have used the
song "Velvet Green" to shut up more than one music snob who said
that no popular music could be 'good'.


#58 of 122 by cloud on Sun Dec 27 17:10:03 1998:

I keep meaning to get something by "Yes,"  I'll keep an eye out.  Would you
recomend any one album over another?  Any I should steer clear of?


#59 of 122 by steve on Sun Dec 27 18:35:46 1998:

   I think their later works (Talk, 90125, Big Generator coming to mind)
aren't as good as the odler ones.  If there was one specific CD to get...
Hmm...  I'd say either Going for the One or Fragile.  (thats hard to
think of, just one of them to get)


#60 of 122 by keesan on Sun Dec 27 19:25:34 1998:

Thanks STeve, I figured if people who did not think they liked classical music
could try to be broad-minded about it, I should be willing to reciprocate.
I will try the library and Borders again with more suggestions.
(The Finnish and Karelian folk music were not something I would want to hear
frequently, maybe okay for dancing to in very cold weather).
Thanks for letting me know whether to look for a performer or a group or a
particular piece instead of trying all three categories.


#61 of 122 by steve on Sun Dec 27 21:09:38 1998:

   Yes, it's frustrating, being told that you might like Albainin music
and then not get any more pointers.
   Another two rock groups which might bear some listening to are Emerson
Lake and Palmer (they did a version of Pictures at an Exibition), and the
far more obsure group Camel (I belive the title 'snowgoose' comes to mind).


#62 of 122 by keesan on Mon Dec 28 00:17:59 1998:

Are these all vocal?  I tend to listen to music while translating and get too
distracted if there are words.
        Other people looking for good non-classical music should also feel free
to ask for something specific in this item.  I meant it to be of general
relevance.
        I am wondering if the sorts of people who would have written good
classical music in previous centuries are steering away from a genre that is
not very attunedd to public taste any more, and composing in other genres.
Such as musicals and movies.


#63 of 122 by steve on Mon Dec 28 00:36:35 1998:

   The Ponty and Passport (jazz) are non-vocal but all the rock is vocal.


#64 of 122 by cloud on Tue Dec 29 01:20:27 1998:

All rock is _not_ vocal.  I'll admit that I have yet to come a across a band
which has _no_ vocal, but that certainly doesn't mean that it's all vocal.
Many of my favorite bands have cut instrumental tracks, some of them, such
as Porcupine Tree, have more instrumental tracks than vocal!  

<'Cloud smooths his bristles>



#65 of 122 by steve on Tue Dec 29 02:45:21 1998:

   Sorry to have helped raise 'em.  You are right of course, but there
isn't much rock that is even 10% non-vocal, I don't think.


#66 of 122 by orinoco on Tue Dec 29 05:25:35 1998:

Non-vocal rock:
the Steve Morse Band, one of my favorites, is definitely rock and definitely
non-vocal. 
Adrian Belew has also made at least one non-vocal album, _Desire Caught by
the Tail_ - or so I've heard, never having had a chance to listen to the whole
thing.
And, if you're willing to accept a wider definition of what counts as 'rock',
I'll add Ashley McIsaac (rock-inflected Celtic), the California Guitar Trio
(like the name says, three guitarists), and Poignant Plecostomus (local
jazz-rock band).

I'll admit I'm reaching here, but I'm sure there are more than these few...

Oh, and Medeski, Martin, and Wood - another jazz-rock band, but more rock than
jazz to my ears.


#67 of 122 by cloud on Tue Dec 29 16:44:57 1998:

I'd count Ashley McIsaac as rock--at least his first album seems to be.



#68 of 122 by keesan on Tue Dec 29 16:53:06 1998:

How many kinds of rock are there?  What do they have in common?  How do they
differ from other kinds of music (or are the edges of categories fuzzy)?
I have heard a bit of techno music, which was nonvocalic.  It was very well
done, complex rhythm but I don't recall any melody.
        Are some kinds of rock intended to be louder than others?  Is rock sort
of a catchall term for non-classical non-jazz now?  How is rock different from
pop?


#69 of 122 by steve on Tue Dec 29 17:58:35 1998:

   Like any other genre of music, I think its far to say there are lots
of different kinds.  Rock evolved from blues and jazz it seems to me, 
based on listening to stuff from the early 50's.  Name a form of music
and you can probably point to some rock that has that as an influence.
It would seem to me that what some call acid rock is supposed to be 
played loud, but given that I'm not a fan of noise, but of music, I'm
not the right one to talk.  I do know that there is a type of Rock
(MArilyn Manson comes to mind) which seems like pure noise to me and
not at all worthwhile.  But thats me.
   Your question of how pop and rock differ is an interesting one.  Maybe
pop is often times 'immature' rock?  I don't really know.


#70 of 122 by tpryan on Wed Dec 30 01:21:56 1998:

        Gary Hoey and Joe Satriani are two Rock Guitarists who put out
non-vocal works.


#71 of 122 by keesan on Wed Dec 30 03:02:41 1998:

Is there any rock music intended as background music in the sense that it does
not try to grab your attention with a strong beat?
I still have not figured out what 'rock' music includes.


#72 of 122 by steve on Wed Dec 30 03:39:20 1998:

   It might be easier to gather a list of 'well known' rock groups
and use that as a boundary.  Rock encompasses a lot of stuff.

   I'm not there there is any "muzak" rock.  It may be an oxymoron.


#73 of 122 by keesan on Wed Dec 30 04:04:34 1998:

I can listen to Mozart while working (Mozart is not muzak), I meant something
like that.  Lots of classical music was meant to be listened to while doing
something else (walking around the gardens or at a party).
        How would you categorize the stuff played on the Ypsi student station
(not counting their Indian and Turkish folk music)?


#74 of 122 by steve on Wed Dec 30 04:38:08 1998:

   Interesting? ;-)

   I'm not very good as classifying music, for probably a couple of
reasons.  The most important one is that I don't really care what
people call it as long as it holds my interest.  Most people don't
have that view I think, which is why my entire grade shcool thought
I was crazy for my bringing Kabuki music to school.  All I know is
that I like good things and shun noise.


#75 of 122 by cyklone on Wed Dec 30 13:53:21 1998:

Re #73: Anything can be Muzak, even Mozart. Muzak, IMNSHO, is a "dumbing
down" of a preexisting piece of music, whereby the soul and originality of
the work is removed, leaving only a homogenized sound, usually featuring
strings . . . .


#76 of 122 by scott on Wed Dec 30 14:56:28 1998:

Devo did a whole Muzak album of their various songs.  According to one
interview, it's the one album they all really like still.

("Muzak" is the name of a commercial service.  They record their own special
versions of recent hits to add to the collection.  Supposedly they have people
employed full time doing this, just to keep up)


#77 of 122 by tpryan on Thu Dec 31 05:37:56 1998:

        particulary when the likes of Henry Mancini have become 
decomposing composers.


#78 of 122 by krj on Mon Jan 4 19:38:01 1999:

resp:60 :: Sindi, which Finnish & Karelian folk music recording did you 
try out?


#79 of 122 by keesan on Tue Jan 5 02:28:25 1999:

I don't recall, but I doubt that the library had more than one.
I found YES at the library, not bad but too much beat for my taste, but I will
give it more of a listen.  I like my rhythm a bit more varied.  But this is
certainly above the run of the mill rock music.  Track 2 is Cans and Brahms,
with electric piano and synthesizer.  I prefer the original arrangment but
this is interesting and certainly classical-based.  The album is Fragile Yes.
Jim also liked the Brahms and wondered 'how did they both get on the same CD'?
(I guess he does not like the third track).
        Maybe I had better stick to classical and folk (original and
imitation).  The rock is just too repetitive.  (Not that a lot of folk is not
awfully repetitive).  Boom (next track).  Sounds like a howling wind, and too
much percussion for my taste.  Does all rock music have a lot f beat?


#80 of 122 by steve on Tue Jan 5 02:45:18 1999:

   I don't know quite how to classify this one, but Anthony Phillips,
once of Genesis, has a series of wonderful things called "Private
Parts and Pieces", perhaps seven albumns now, of various little things
he'd written over the years but didn't use.  I have several on vinyl
and just one on CD, but apparently they are available on CD now.


#81 of 122 by krj on Sun Jan 10 01:16:37 1999:

I was at the library today and I took a quick look over the folk CDs.
The ones I would suggest for Sindi, if she hasn't tried them already, 
were:
    the Irish band Altan, any CD
    the Irish band Clannad, IN CONCERT  (the other Clannad discs the 
                        library owns are from their New Age period)
    the finnish accordeon player Maria Kalaniemi, IHO is the title to try 1st
    the Swedish band Vasen, SPIRIT  (all instrumental, I think)
    the Scottish harp duo Sileas, BEATING HARPS
 
I didn't have time to scan the jazz section, I'll try that next time.
 
resp:79 ::  I suppose there are exceptions here and there, but in 
general rock music is characterized by its Big Beat.


#82 of 122 by cloud on Sun Jan 10 04:20:12 1999:

Yeah, I think the beat is what really puts it appart from other types of
music.  It does not nessessarilly mean that the beat has to be simple.  I was
reading up on Gentle Giant yesterday, and I came accross this interesting
snippet...

"In the middle section of Cogs in Cogs, the two vocal parts are in very
different meters. The first part to enter ("The circle
     turns around, the changing voices calling...") is in 6/4, but the second
one ("Circle turns around the changing voices") is in
     15/8. This means that the two melodies "line up" differently in 6
different ways. The phrases "meet" every 60 eighth notes."

I've listened to the song, and really is a neat effect.  Maybe we should make
a new item called "Rock Music for Classical Lovers"  it seems to be the way
this one's drifting... Oh well, I guess that the two are simaler.  


#83 of 122 by cyklone on Sun Jan 10 13:47:08 1999:

Check out Genesis' "Suppers Ready" where the rhythmic figure is in 9/4 and
the keyboard solos in 4/4.


#84 of 122 by cloud on Sun Jan 10 17:17:28 1999:

which album is that on?  I've already got "Lamb Lies Down on Broadway," and
"Selling England by the Pound"


#85 of 122 by cyklone on Mon Jan 11 13:37:22 1999:

Its on Nursery Crime or Foxtrot (it may also be on one of their live albums).


#86 of 122 by keesan on Mon Jan 11 16:49:03 1999:

Beats like 9/4 or 7/4 are common in Balkan music and farther east.  I think
that a lot of recent composers are borrowing from other folk and classical
traditions now.  Will check out the Irish, Finnish, etc. folk-based stuff,
thanks Ken.  (If it ever gets a bit warmer).


#87 of 122 by keesan on Mon Jan 11 21:20:34 1999:

We may get to the library this evening so I made a list:  Ken's Irish band
Altan, Irish band Clennad, Finnish accordion Maria Kalaneni 'IHO', Swedish
band Vasen 'Spirit', Scottish harp by Sileas 'Beating Harps'.  Maybe some
interesting rhythm stuff by Genesis, Jean Luc Ponty's jazz, Passport, and
Jethro Tull.  If nothing else, I will be more educated after listening. 
(Did I miss any recent suggestions?  Went back 30 responses).

Seems like the more unusual folk music was preserved on the fringes of Europe
- Celtic areas and Scandinavia - or else there is just more interest in folk
revival there.  I have a couple of folk-style tapes from Hungary, but from
the rest of E. Europe the folk music is mostly real folk, not folk-style. 
People still listen to it on the radio in Bulgaria or Serbia, and the pop
music is often folk-influenced  (the stuff you hear in bars).
An Italian friend made me a tape of Sicilian bagpipe music, bagpipes are also
on the fringes - Scotland, Sicily, Macedonia and Greece and Bulgaria.  Are
they used farther east of Bulgaria?  Or in any recently composed music?


#88 of 122 by e4808mc on Tue Jan 12 03:03:12 1999:

Scott would you unlink this from houseplants? Dunno how it got here.


#89 of 122 by davel on Tue Jan 12 03:22:52 1999:

Music to grow the plants by?


#90 of 122 by mcnally on Tue Jan 12 06:29:22 1999:

  The folkies seem to be dominating the suggestions so far.  
  I'd re-iterate the earlier suggestion to try Dead Can Dance
  and would add another album on the same record label (4AD),
  Cocteau Twins.  "Victorialand" might be a good album to start
  with..


#91 of 122 by scott on Tue Jan 12 12:07:43 1999:

OK, it is now unlinked.


#92 of 122 by keesan on Tue Jan 12 20:46:15 1999:

I found IHO (Maria Kalaniemi Finnish), the Best of Altan (Irish), Clannad in
Concert at the public library.  I somehow ended up there without my list and
will try other suggestions another time.  Also found in with the original and
newly composed folk music some non-Western classical music from North India
Inkuyo Music of the Andes, and Armenia: Sources (folk?).  For some reason
Asian classical music is classified as folk. 
        My apologies on the houseplant involvement, but I had accidentally
entered this item there, as you will realize if you start reading at the first
response.  Some helpful people got it moved to Music and Classical but could
not figure out how to unlink it from Garden.  Scott, how did you manage?
        I will try Dead Can Dance and the jazz suggestions next trip.


#93 of 122 by davel on Wed Jan 13 01:35:40 1999:

Unlinking has to be done either by fairwitness (in the cf where it's
incorrectly linked) or by cfadm.


#94 of 122 by davel on Wed Jan 13 01:38:33 1999:

Possibly the reason nonwestern classical music is included with folk is the
lack of written notation.  (This might not always apply, but does to some
things called "nonwestern classical", I think.)  I can think of a few other
speculations as well.


#95 of 122 by keesan on Wed Jan 13 05:36:04 1999:

What other types of music notation are used around the world besides European?
I am curious about Chinese and Japanese notation.  Indian, Iranian,
Egyptian...  Some of these musics have quarter tones.


#96 of 122 by scott on Wed Jan 13 22:10:25 1999:

(I unlinked it by going into the plants conf. and killing it.)


#97 of 122 by keesan on Fri Jan 15 19:43:03 1999:

The library has two CDs by Jethro Tull on order, and one three-CD set in a
large cardboard box that would not have fit into my backpack.  After the
library figured out that Dead Can Dance is an author, not a title, I found
three CDs and got out one, which I have not yet listened to.

Clannad was pleasant but only 30 minutes of concert, and no explanatory notes.
One piece sounded like jazz to me, the others probably folk based.  I have
not yet read the notes for Altan, which was nice contra-dance type music. 
I like Maria Kalaniemi (sp?) on the accordion best.  Again, no notes.  The
rhythms of several pieces were unusual:  2 2 3 or 3 2 2 beats.  One sound just
like Bulgarian dance music, not Finnish.  Where did she get her ideas?  I will
listen to them all again and maybe record Maria.
        I also got out some Iranian classical music from the folk section.

I notice that nobody has recommended anything from the library's categories
of gospel, blues, or country.  Are these all vocal?

Jim likes old musicals (old being 1940s and 50s).  Has anything been composed
since then on the level of Lerner and Loewe or Rodgers and Hammerstein?


#98 of 122 by anderyn on Fri Jan 15 22:44:06 1999:

Clannad in Concert is not their best, Keesan. One of hte pieces on there
is a jazz improv on a trad tune, and while it's interesting, it's not
what their "normal" pre-wallpaper music sounded like. Which Altan did
you get? I like them quite a bit.

I don't listen to the other categories of music, much. I don't like
gospel or blues or country, though some country is not too bad, sometimes.
I've heard a really good album or seven by Mary Chapin Carpenter, and 
I think it's Lyle Lovett who's had one played at the ARk while I was working
on cleanup that I thought was darn good, but I grew up with the twangy
country sound, and hate that with a passion. 

I really like Camelot, and many people tell me they adore the "new
musicals" such as Cats, but the only soundtracks that I have from musicals
are the ones to Godspell and JCSuperstar and *rummage rummage* movies
like "The Prince of Egypt". 

Of course, I am biased heavily in favour of voice, and I don't own that
many non-vocal albums. I have some drumming ones, and a really nice
instrumental thing from a PBS special, but that's about it.


#99 of 122 by isis on Sat Jan 16 01:40:19 1999:

Just found out that Dead Can Dance broke up.  maybe this is old news to some
people...but it makes me want to cry...  *sniff*


#100 of 122 by keesan on Sat Jan 16 03:10:55 1999:

Clannad in Concert was the one that was recommended.  The Best of Altan.
I am enjoying some Music of the Andes, to which Jim is tapping his foot.  The
Armenian folk music was interesting.  Are there any groups that do recently
composed Peruvian or Indian music, that the library might have?

Clannad was something I can listen to while working because I don't know a
word of Irish.  (Yet).  If anyone wants, I can tape for them a selection of
folk music from the Balkans (Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Romania) and E.
Europe (Serbian/Croatian, Czech/Slovak, Hungarian).

I have not yet listened to Dead Can Dance, it will have to be when Jim is not
listening, judging from his reaction to Yes.  While cooking?

Andes Music also has a beat but it is somewhat variable and is not louder than
the tune.  Are there other folk dance musics that I might like besides Balkan,
Scandinavian, and British Isles?  I like unusual beats, such as 7/8, 11/8.

What should I be listening to/for in Dead Can Dance?  (How long were they
together?).


#101 of 122 by krj on Sat Jan 16 04:57:10 1999:

CLANNAD IN CONCERT is so one of their best albums, is too is too is too.
 :)  More to the point, it is the only pre-new-age Clannad album I found
in the library's holdings.  It's a short recording because it dates
from about 1978, the LP era.
 
There are hardly ever good notes on CDs any more.  I may have an article
on Maria Kalaniemi in one of my folk music magazines which I could 
clone for keesan.  The library also had Kalaniemi's first American 
cd -- IHO, which you got, was her second.
(Now I'll have to pull out my copy of IHO to look for the Bulgarian-
sounding piece.)  As to where she got her ideas:  I'm pretty sure that 
Kalaniemi, like Varttina, the Hedningarna singers, and many of the 
current crop of Finnish performers, studied at the folk music school
of the Sibelius Academy.


#102 of 122 by anderyn on Sun Jan 17 04:05:07 1999:

Oh, okay, you like it. I'll give you that one. Ken. But I never did like
it much. But you know how much I don't like a lot of live recordings.


#103 of 122 by orinoco on Sun Jan 17 04:09:10 1999:

Re#97: Gospel is vocal pretty much by definition, AFAIK. I know there's plenty
of instrumental blues out there, but I don't know enough about blues to point
you in the right direction. I really have no idea about instrumental country:
I haven't heard any, but I barely listen to any country at all.


#104 of 122 by coyote on Sun Jan 17 05:20:15 1999:

Re #99:  Oh, no!  That's really too bad... I was looking forward to the next
time they came around on tour, too!
*sigh*  Probably about the only non-"classical" group I've really enjoyed...


#105 of 122 by krj on Sun Jan 17 05:43:11 1999:

One could probably find some instrumental bluegrass recordings filed in 
the country section.  But bluegrass is the only instrumental country 
which is coming into my mind.


#106 of 122 by happyboy on Sun Jan 17 06:44:18 1999:

mmmmm...lots of oldtimey stuff i have around here is
instrumental...it ain't bluegrass, pa... i also have some
pretty good instrumental stuff by bob wills and the texas
playboys.


#107 of 122 by keesan on Wed Jan 20 02:19:18 1999:

What genre would you call them?  I like bluegrass, it is not too different
from the Irish stuff.
I listened to Dead Can Dance.  It is a strange name for a group (do other
groups have a verb in their name) but quite appropriate.  A very marked and
repetitive rhythm, and sepulchral (at at least very bass) tunes.  The rhythm
seemed to repeat for four measures at a time, unlike new age music, which
repeats forever.  How would you classify Dead Can Dance?  What sorts of things
should I be listening for?  The words are not intelligible enough to interfere
with my work (which involves thinking in two languages at once).  What sort
of training did the group members have in music?
        I would bet Maria learned something about Balkan folk music, at least
the rhythms, and it sounded a lot like Bulgarian folkdance.  I will listen
again.  The library will not let me take out any more CDs until I return most
of what I have, 18 was way over the limit.  (I also got Bukhara Crossroads
of Asia, and some Corelli and Bach).  Have to decide what to record before
they are all overdue.  Maybe one piece from each of the recommended groups
for times that I feel like listening to something different, and probably most
or all of Maria and Bach.


#108 of 122 by anderyn on Wed Jan 20 14:52:34 1999:

Keesan,

I dug into my music collection and found something you might like.
It's a RealWorld CD of a group called Trisan, which consists of 
Joji Hirota (Japanese percussionist), Pol Brennan (Irish pianist, 
guitarist, flutist... from Clannad, originally), and Guo Yue (Chinese, 
plays bamboo flute) -- I got it out of the library originally, and fell 
in love with it -- all three musicians are classically trained in their 
own traditions, and they have written some neat songs that meld all
three -- mostly instrumental, though there are a few vocal tracks. I
ordered a copy from Schoolkids several years ago (it was put out in
1992, I think) and I can recommend it highly. Seems that no one else
has heard of it, though.


#109 of 122 by keesan on Wed Jan 20 17:19:40 1999:

San being the Japanese for something like 'honored sir'?  In Japanese class
I was Keesan-san.  Tri for three?  Thanks, will look for it after I get the
number of CDs that I have out back down to under six.  (I was going to record
them first but the tape player is not working, suddenly, or it could be the
receiver circuits, too much odd music?).  Small world in music now.


#110 of 122 by scott on Wed Jan 20 22:53:02 1999:

-san is like "Mr.", or "person".  It's pretty neutral.  "-sama" usually
translates to "lord", at least in old stuff (not sure about now).  "-chan"
is how you refer to your kids, and "-kun" is pretty intimate...


#111 of 122 by keesan on Mon Jan 25 00:57:07 1999:

Ken, I listened to Maria again and identified the track that sounded
Bulgarian.  It is number 7, Sofias flykt.  I did not read the list of tracks
to identify it.  Sofia is the capital of Bulgaria.  The rest sounds
Scandinavian.  Interesting rhythms in teh Bulgarian one and I think also in
a few of the others.  7/8, etc.  The Inca music has some pieces with 5 measure
repeated units.  Hungarian music repeats 6 measures.  Dvorak has some unusual
combinations of rhythms.  Most folk and classical W. European music is pretty
predictable as far as beats/measure or measures/phrase:  2/4 3/4  and 4
measures/phrase or some multiple.  Are there any folk traditions or other
classical or other composers who play/write in 5/8, 13/8, 5 measures/phrase,
etc?  I have not analyzed the Armenian or Indian or Iranian music yet.
Balkan music (Albanian, Macedonian, Bulgarian) has 5/8, 7/8, 9/8, 11/8, 13/8.
Fun to dance to.


#112 of 122 by orinoco on Mon Jan 25 19:31:34 1999:

Bartok uses some folk songs (Hungarian, I presume, but I may be wrong) in 5/8
and 7/8 as melodies in a few pieces.
From what I've heard about traditional Indian music, I think it tends to have
irregular groups of 2 and 3 beats; things like 3/8 - 3/8 - 2/8 - 2/8, which
adds up to 5/4 if you think of it as one big measure. On the other hand, most
of the recordings of Indian music I've heard sounded like they were in
straight 4/4 or 3/4, so I'm not so sure how common that sort of irregular
rhythm is.


#113 of 122 by omni on Tue Jan 26 09:18:10 1999:

  Go get "The Songs of India" by Ravi Shankar. He explains the different
rhythm patterns. Very informative. Even more is reading his autobio.


#114 of 122 by keesan on Wed Jan 27 18:34:26 1999:

I wonder whether the gypsy musicians, originally from India, helped spread
the 5/4 type of rhythm to the Balkans and Hungary, where it is common.


#115 of 122 by oddie on Fri May 28 16:59:32 1999:

Well, there hasn't been much activity in this item for a while and
I'm not sure if anyone is still interested in discussing it, but if you like
both folk music and classical music you might enjoy the Kronos Quartet CD
'Pieces of Africa.' It's a bunch of pieces by current African composers
for string quartet, but is influenced quite a lot by traditional African
music. I like it a lot. But then I like almost all of Kronos' CDs that I have
heard, especially _Short Stories_ and _White Man Sleeps_.

Just my thoughts on the matter...


#116 of 122 by cwb on Thu Aug 3 14:59:31 2000:

Here are some suggestions for the classical music lover wanting to widen
her tastes.

In the jazz realm, try Kurt Elling, a marvelous vocalist.  I would in
particular recommend his third album 'At the Green Mill' or something
very like that.  He plays with rhythm in a neat manner and his voice is
truly his instrument, as central as the content of his songs, both
original and cover.

Michael Hedges was definitely a guitarist who could appeal both
intellectually and spiritually through his music.  I'd recommend the
albums "Taproot" and "Aerial Boundaries" as most likely to appeal.

You could also try a group called Raphael with their two albums of
"music to disappear in."  This is probably classed as newage (rhymes
with sewage), but of style it is head and shoulders above the pack, with
an interesting translation of the "In Paradiso" from the Faure requiem
into newage synthe-pop.  I use this music frequently when doing massage;
I love it a lot, it's also fine meditation music.

The Jethrow Tull album with North Sea Oil on it is called Storm Watch,
and it is a neat album, though Songs From the Wood is still my favorite
Tull album.

Finally, I would disagree with denigrating Yes's 90125 album for those
looking for their classical influences.  It is true the complexity of
the music changed from earlier releases, but it is still rich, though
perhaps further removed from classical sources, one can still hear them.
 And for rhythmic interest the song Changes has a neat intro, as does
the song Leave It.  

I had several more, but 115 responses drove some of them out of my head.
 Oh wait, did anyone mention Ennya?


#117 of 122 by other on Thu Aug 3 18:12:38 2000:

How could you forget the Moody Blues?  Albums actually recorded with the
London Philharmonic, etc...?


#118 of 122 by brighn on Thu Aug 3 19:39:51 2000:

For that matter, Metallica recently released an album of hits with classical
backing (the closest heavy metal might ever come to "muzak metal").

And ELP did Pictures at an Exhibition, or somesuch...

Putting classical instruments in pop music seemed popular in early 80s "New
Wave." The obvious example is ABC's Lexicon of Love, but others include
Communards, Art of Noise, and Eurythmics, plus (later) Sundays and the genre
that followed from that.

Musak meets pop meets classical meets moog has St. Etienne as one of its finer
examples... the music is hopelessly vapid and confusingly complex at once,
one of my quirkier favorites.


#119 of 122 by tpryan on Fri Aug 4 03:25:32 2000:

        Deep Purple did something akin to "Music for two unfriendly groups
of instruments" with a classical orchestra.


#120 of 122 by lumen on Fri Aug 4 06:14:12 2000:

resp:118 classical meets Moog.. reminds me of Wendy Carlos.  Definitely 
a different instrumentation scheme.

In that vein, I would think even Kraftwerk would be worthy of 
consideration, although I have only _The Mix_ for observation.  Some 
music critics consider their form to be a bit more classical in 
structure than pop (i.e., folk), so I would make it a recommendation.

My father-in-law is a classical enthusiast and loves "Switched on 
Bach," so I am going to see what he thinks of this German programming 
band.


#121 of 122 by brighn on Fri Aug 4 14:39:50 2000:

St Etienne is more on the pop end, with those other influences in there.
A friend of mine loaned me a very rare Weird Al/Wendy Carlos rendition of
Peter and the Wolf, but it was fairly inaccessible to me... too weird.


#122 of 122 by orinoco on Fri Sep 8 16:16:39 2000:

ELP's version of "pictures at an exhibition, or somesuch" is definitely more
on the side of "somesuch."  They delete most of my favorite movements, add
new (fairly dreadful) sections, etc.  Given how faithful some of their
classical arrangements are, I was amazed at how much they butchered this one.


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