Quote:
Originally Posted by in rainbows 109
To those kids bashing Brahms, you'll appreciate him when you get older and realize that he's a lot better than Mahler and Holst.... Well, Holst at least, I think a lot of people are better than Holst. A lot of people on this site write better music than Holst.... Not that he didn't provide great music for the orchestral rep, not so much for band though, but isn't that the story of band anyway?
Anyway, judging from what I've been reading on this board, people bash on John Cage because they don't understand him, and I've seen bashing on Brahms because he's "boring" (I guess he doesn't have enough blatty trombone solis like Mahler and Tchaikovsky?) I really don't understand how one of the greats can just bashed like that with no real intelligent base. Christ, have you heard the piano concertos??? INCREDIBLE! Brahms symphonies are great as well.
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No, see, the main problem with people bashing composers is they don't have enough information to even properly conduct a critique on them. Nevermind, of course, the fact that saying "When you grow older--" means absolutely nothing. I can as well say "When you grow older, you'll appreciate Jimi Hendrix and ditch all classical music" or "When you grow older, you'll know X and Y composers are the best, so now you're just a young ignorant fool."
I personally find Brahms to be rather stale sometimes, though I like some of his pieces, I'd much rather listen to Schumann (for example) or Hugo Wolf. The thing is, I've studied Brahms enough to get a good taste of what his music sounds like (to me) and so I think it's fine if I have an opinion about it. Likewise, because I've studied, I also know that there are a bunch of things he wrote that I really thought were cool.
No proper or well-studied opinion is black an white. It has nothing to do with "Growing older" unless that means actually studying composers and music altogether. People are generally happy to grow old listening to the same things their entire lives unless they feel it's simply not enough for them. I mean, it's not like its hard to find examples of people who die thinking Mozart is the greatest thing ever and thus they only listened to his music.
But the difference is, a composer shouldn't, can't, and must NOT be like that. A composer's opinion of something in the musical world should be one of the more complex and well-elaborated, because if you can't describe and elaborate on music then what the hell are you doing writing it?
And THAT surely comes with training and studying (which take time), but the attitude of responsibility probably should be there first or no matter how much studying goes on the person may still end up backwards.