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	Comments on: Benjamin Zander: Classical music with shining eyes	</title>
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	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 16:48:20 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		By: themadlolscientist		</title>
		<link>https://gregladen.com/blog/2008/06/29/post-7/#comment-10545</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[themadlolscientist]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 16:48:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2008/06/29/post-7/#comment-10545</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[I love TED, I&#039;m crazy about classical music (used to be a professional choral singer until I got hijacked to the boonies), and this guy has got it SOOOOOOOOOOO right!Unfortunately, the classical world has done an awful lot to give itself the reputation of being a bunch of stuffy, nose-in-the-air elitists by enshrining the &quot;Greats&quot;  - I&#039;m reminded of a remark Mozart is said to have made about the Big Names of his day being &quot;so holy, they shit marble&quot; - and obscuring the flesh-and-blood humans who wrote the music. (I also used to write program notes. A lot of those guys were nuckin&#039;futs.)And God forbid that they recognize the humor in centuries-old music, or remember that just as Shakespeare was popular entertainment in his day, this was the popular music of its day, with everything that entails. Once I sang in a concert of secular madrigals by Josquin des Prez and his contemporaries. The lyrics were irreverent and even downright bawdy, but when I tried to put together translations that would reflect that, I caught all kinds of crap from my fellow singers! Fortunately our director agreed with me. ;-)Also, by giving short shrift to the &quot;lesser&quot; composers, they&#039;ve narrowed the scope of classical music even further, to the point of near-homogeneity. At that point it becomes boring, or simply high-class Muzak.I&#039;m in my mid-50s, and I remember hearing Antheil and Varï¿½se on the radio along with Bach and Beethoven. But aside from some very rare exceptions (such as WNYC2 24/7, which plays some WILD SHIT!), you won&#039;t hear that any more - not even at 3 am. There&#039;s so much amazing stuff out there that almost no one knows about! IMO it&#039;s tragic.Having said that, I pride myself on having gotten several people into classical. I dragged my ex out of the doldrums of Easy Listening (which I can&#039;t stand; it reminds me of going to the dentist) and into classical very early in our relationship. One of the first investments we made after we got married was a pair of season tickets to the orchestra. Our son grew up with classical and sang in a top-notch children&#039;s choir for several years. I&#039;m currently working to broaden a friend&#039;s musical horizons; he&#039;s been into Romantic for quite a while, but I&#039;m gradually introducing him to the whole classical spectrum. I&#039;m especially pleased to say he&#039;s getting more and more into choral music!Classical music tewtally RAWKS. We need a lot more evangelists like Ben Zander to spread the word!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I love TED, I&#8217;m crazy about classical music (used to be a professional choral singer until I got hijacked to the boonies), and this guy has got it SOOOOOOOOOOO right!Unfortunately, the classical world has done an awful lot to give itself the reputation of being a bunch of stuffy, nose-in-the-air elitists by enshrining the &#8220;Greats&#8221;  &#8211; I&#8217;m reminded of a remark Mozart is said to have made about the Big Names of his day being &#8220;so holy, they shit marble&#8221; &#8211; and obscuring the flesh-and-blood humans who wrote the music. (I also used to write program notes. A lot of those guys were nuckin&#8217;futs.)And God forbid that they recognize the humor in centuries-old music, or remember that just as Shakespeare was popular entertainment in his day, this was the popular music of its day, with everything that entails. Once I sang in a concert of secular madrigals by Josquin des Prez and his contemporaries. The lyrics were irreverent and even downright bawdy, but when I tried to put together translations that would reflect that, I caught all kinds of crap from my fellow singers! Fortunately our director agreed with me. ;-)Also, by giving short shrift to the &#8220;lesser&#8221; composers, they&#8217;ve narrowed the scope of classical music even further, to the point of near-homogeneity. At that point it becomes boring, or simply high-class Muzak.I&#8217;m in my mid-50s, and I remember hearing Antheil and Varï¿½se on the radio along with Bach and Beethoven. But aside from some very rare exceptions (such as WNYC2 24/7, which plays some WILD SHIT!), you won&#8217;t hear that any more &#8211; not even at 3 am. There&#8217;s so much amazing stuff out there that almost no one knows about! IMO it&#8217;s tragic.Having said that, I pride myself on having gotten several people into classical. I dragged my ex out of the doldrums of Easy Listening (which I can&#8217;t stand; it reminds me of going to the dentist) and into classical very early in our relationship. One of the first investments we made after we got married was a pair of season tickets to the orchestra. Our son grew up with classical and sang in a top-notch children&#8217;s choir for several years. I&#8217;m currently working to broaden a friend&#8217;s musical horizons; he&#8217;s been into Romantic for quite a while, but I&#8217;m gradually introducing him to the whole classical spectrum. I&#8217;m especially pleased to say he&#8217;s getting more and more into choral music!Classical music tewtally RAWKS. We need a lot more evangelists like Ben Zander to spread the word!</p>
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