worry, on 20 July 2015 - 09:53 PM, said:
That is why I called it minimalistic earlier, in the academic sense. If there is a climactic approach it is deliberately done in a minimalistic fashion, by small variations, dynamic increases, etc. The instrumental video you posted is a perfect example of that style. The instrumentation and coloring in academic music is different, but the basic idea is the same. It doesn't do anything for me either way.
worry, on 20 July 2015 - 09:53 PM, said:
I mentioned earlier that somewhere around the 12th century the Church (the only source of written music) started to experiment with polyphony, i.e. more than one voice at a time, which creates harmony. Polyphony and harmony are not the same thing, though; harmony is vertical (in terms of written music) and polyphony is horizontal. Each voice does its own thing which is coherent when the other voices are taken away.
Bach was kind of like the Isaac Newtown of musical counterpoint. I posted two examples earlier, one for organ which is a beautiful example of counterpoint, and the other for violin, an instrument which can barely manage polyphony. Sometimes, though, the counterpoint does get really thick and the voices interfere with each other.
This is one of my favorite fugues. It's got 4 voices and they're really busy, but every now and then you can hear one of the voices distinguish itself by contrary motion.
[Glenn Gould: this is what happens to you when you take too much valium and spend your life hunched over a piano (wait for it). Or as one guy said in the comments of the above video, "neurotyczny i genialny".]
Anyway, that is part of what I was talking about earlier when I said there's more to it than just "layers".
worry, on 20 July 2015 - 09:53 PM, said:
It's not bad for classical and "oldies" because they have a wide pool to choose from and by consequence about half of it is good. But I still tend to think that, as recently as 10 years ago, most genres had a better good/suck ratio than hip-hop stations. In the last 10 years or so minimalism has become the norm in pop music too. Pop music has really fallen in love with perfect 5ths, like the Church of old. That is the specific reason why so much pop music sounds the same these days. The vocals go back and forth between the root and the 5th a lot, and most of the melody falls within that 5th. That's...dumb. It's only like, half an octave. Mariah Carey has a 5-octave range. Or she did; I don't know if she can still hit the high notes but I bet she still has 3 octaves (which is an amazing range even for an opera singer, not counting falsettists and castrati).