- Joined
- Mar 7, 2015
I am a classical musician. Trust me, I know all too well that one cannot arbitrarily label a style only with a timeline... For instance, Rachmaninoff, (1873-1943). Aesthetically, it is romantic music. The phrasing, the emotional content, the form, the genre, even most of the harmonic language. His music is closer to 19th century music than 20th century music... So that's one example for "anachronism". But there are also other examples : for instance, people say that Baroque really ends with Bach's death in 1750. I am sure i don't need to defend the concept that not all baroque composers stopped writing music after Bach's passing. Third, there are all these composers that are in-betweenersI'm not complaining because I want those songs, I am saying it doesn't make sense to me. To say a cover is never original is... well, a position. Like saying Francis Bacon's Innocence X is not originally 20th century.
Okay, it's not Bacon or Velázquez, it's pop music. Still, as a position on art - I don't agree.
I don't like the whole theme. Making a decade a topic, as if there was actually an essence of 10 years, that can be found and limited by exact (actually random, just numbers) dates - it's a narrative, nothing else. Chernobyl is pretty 80s for me, a defining event, but I'm sure that's no what they meant or want to see. They brought themselves into a weird position with this idea, no wonder the concrete questions bring weird answers.
Edit: in the end I don't think it's important, we will see some nice programs I am sure. I just think it can't be too difficult to make a slightly stronger effort to find a good theme and pattern.
some composers even have different phases.... For instance, Scriabin with an early Chopin like period. His mid period is very virtuoso, more like his contemporary Rachmaninoff, and then, his late works are mystical. His harmonic and melodic languages are deeply transformed over the years.So I get what you are saying of course. But I think that with decades like 70s, 80s and 90s we can easily pinpoint not only music but styles evocative of this period... I have been invited to parties on themes from these decades and pretty much everyone could dress up in the right style ... there are even iconic drinks associated with each one... it's supposed to be fun. I think the ISU peeps think that skaters will easily connect with these themes and so will the general public. They certainly do not write rules for us, GS members
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Is it 1980 to 1989, or 1981 to 1990? (Personally, I go with the latter). With this confusion, if I was an Ice Dancer or a member of their team, I would avoid any music from either 1980 or 1990, just to be on the safe side.


