This is an issue I’ve been thinking about for a long time. Can we actually justify saying one kind of music is better than any other, or that one piece is better than another? (more…)
Now that the Arditti residency is over and I have finished the numerous grants/applications/papers that were due over the course of Feb, I have made some long-overdue updates. Cleaned up my MySpace page too. I’ll post some new recordings there over the next couple of months. More information to come on various projects in the works.
High Art Music Without Cultural Highness: Reflections on the effects of twenty-first-century musical culture on the values and behaviour of avant-garde composers
Changes in Western attitudes toward high art music and developments in internet music technology in the twenty-first century have challenged the traditional values of avant-garde composers; they will therefore need to adapt accordingly. I examine these adaptations by tracing the development of one common avant-garde belief: the belief that certain kinds of music have unique cultural value that others lack.
I begin by looking at the ways in which avant-garde composers during the Cold War were able to gain political support for the idea that their music possessed an inherent superiority (cultural highness). I then discuss the failure of this model in the early 1990s, as well as alternative strategies developed to fill the gap left by the end of the Cold War and changing cultural attitudes toward high art. I propose that these new strategies ultimately fail as well, because internet music technology has destroyed any possibility for unique cultural value within music and re-situated this value in the individual listener’s perspective. Ideas of cultural highness therefore become untenable, and I end with several examples of how composers today are adapting their values and behaviour as a result.



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