tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8514964.post110305041598999322..comments2024-03-24T03:14:07.639-04:00Comments on [listen]: SandowAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12939881701345686354noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8514964.post-1103338385298861972004-12-17T21:53:00.000-05:002004-12-17T21:53:00.000-05:00We often hear such negative terms as "populist" or...We often hear such negative terms as "populist" or "pro-establishment" appointed to the general idea of conservatism in the arts. Why are those, who wish to build on the traditions of the past, continually regarded with such hostility? The difference between a conservative and a "progressive," is that a progressive is one who insists that great, single leaps should be made across chasms of undeveloped potential. The conservative would rather build a bridge. The most typical fate of those who identify as progressives, is the fall into the oblivion of the chasm which they catastrophically attempted to ignore.<br />Walter Ramsey<br />ramseytheii@hotmail.comAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8514964.post-1103053525436847412004-12-14T14:45:00.000-05:002004-12-14T14:45:00.000-05:00What constitutes "conservatism" in music today? F...What constitutes "conservatism" in music today? For starters, anyone who thinks there's still a debate to be waged between "tonality" and "atonality" is already operating within a conservative mindset. "Conservative" and "progressive" works have been composed within the frame-work of both harmonic idealogies. The very idea that it's an either/or proposition is in itself a conservative position. <br /><br />Conservative composition today comes in at least two flavors: (1) Pro-establishment and (2) Populist. The first kind lives in the tight provincialism of Pulitzer Prize committees and walled-in grant commission societies. It's in the music that adopts the aesthetic flavor most likey to gain institutional favor or align with the "correct" position between east-coast and west-coast cliques/prejudice. The populist strain of conservatism is the consciously retro-neoromantic orchestration used in mainstream feature films. In this respect, Danny Elfman stands to be a misunderstood composer by contemporary critics. (Misunderstood all the way to the bank).<br /><br />The more interesting question is: what constitutes "radicalism" in composition in a post-Cage environment?Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13718580945177110637noreply@blogger.com