Re: ASCAP Assails Free-Culture, Digital-Rights Groups

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david wrote:
Joep L. Blom wrote:
david wrote:
drew Roberts wrote:
On Thursday 01 July 2010 17:51:18 Joep L. Blom wrote:
drew Roberts wrote:
Someone else having some thoughts on jazz and copyright:

Are Bad Copyright Laws Killing Jazz And Harming Jazz Musicians?
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100615/0255059823.shtml

Joep
all the best,

And here I thought jazz was dying because most of it is boring and ingrown, and the vast majority of players have become indistinguishable from each other? ;-)

Note the winking smiley. I like traditional New Orleans jazz. I like some jazz performers, but think that most could be replaced with no one noticing.

David!
Don't tempt me. Either you have never heard a good jazz performance or you simply don't like it (that's possible).

I've heard good jazz performances. And as I mentioned above, I like some jazz performers.

But boring!! You know what is boring or, better monotonous and repetitive, the endless lookalike pulp which is called pop-music that's presented as the main music and nothing else exist thanks to the big companies and their slaves (i.e. the radio and television companies).

Or (to me) the endless soundalike lookalike stuff that passes for way too much jazz these days? Sorry, to my ears, the days of jazz performers that actually sound like themselves seems to have passed. Too many players now seem to be trying only to sound like someone else.
David,
I like your opinions (especially the last sentence of your mail!).
What you write is essentially that any musician must be sincere in his approach to the music he performs and must not try to mimic others.

(BTW, I find that very disappointing in any musician or artist, regardless of style of music or art. Be yourself, not someone else!)

Moreover, boring is a quality in the mind of the person and has nothing to do with the music (or literature, or dance to give other fields).

I would say that "boring" is something that is perceived by the mind of a person. It is, after all, just an opinion. I doubt that there's any "objective" measure that defines "boring".
Agreed. I wrote that also in another mail.
I have heard a lot of nonsense about jazz but not that performers could be exchanges without notice.
I didn't mean your remark as nonsense, I meant that I heard in general a lot of nonsense about jazz.

Not nonsense, just my opinion.

Yes, pop-singers OK, but that is a completely  different league.

Yes, singers are a special case compared to instrumentalists. No two human voices are alike to the degree that instruments are.
Well, you had me fooled. Pop-singers - in my opinion - are pressed into "voice-casts" to sound as much alike as possible, I agree when you talk about others (classical, Jazz even folk).
Again (particularly about pop singers), while I may think well of a singer who can successfully sound like someone else, I'm still disappointed that they don't put the same effort into sounding like themselves.

There's a Christian band I know of called Apologetx. They are skilled enough to sound note-for-note like practically any other band in existence, and specialize in redoing other band's secular songs with Christian lyrics. They play skillfully, but someday I'd actually like them to write and play their own music instead! I'd like to know what their own sound is!
That depends. Some bands like to sound exactly as others. You have in America a competition for Glenn Miller Bands who try to sound like the old Glenn Miller orchestra from the forties, using the original arrangements. We sometimes also play these arrangements ('In the Mood' is on of the most famous pieces) but your remark is right. They should let you hear " the way they really play".

The beauty of jazz is that you can play the same tunes every night but each time it is completely different

Really? Hmm, haven't noticed that. (Well, I've heard a number of jazz performances where NO ONE was playing the "tune", if there actually was one.)

(And it has nothing to do with presence or absence of improvisation. During my own piano studies, I studied improvisation, enjoy it and value it highly. So you'd think I'd like the improvisational aspect of jazz, yes?
I'm curious to know where you studied the piano as in classical education improvising is currently strictly forbidden (in contrast to the practice 150 years ago). Did you followed lessons in jazz piano?

and playing the same tune with different personnel makes a great difference. Last Friday and Saturday I played with my Big band but we had some difference in personnel. Although we played the same tunes the sound was completely different.

If you say so.

The only problem with jazz is that it is no easy music (just as classical music, especially from the 20th century).

Some of which I do enjoy.
Yes, I do too.

You have to be prepared to follow the sometimes very convoluted harmonic and melodic ways that are played (listen e.g. to John Coltrane and the great difference with Coleman Hawkins, or Errol Garner and Art Tatum).

Those are past-days jazz greats, not their modern descendants. I like Coltrane and Tatum, don't know the other two.
I'm amazed you haven't heard from Coleman Hawkins. He was on of the giant saxophone-players and played with many bands from the 50ies and later. The same goes for Erroll Garner, a pianist from the 50ies with his own very distinctive style (you can look him up on Youtube).

I could go on but I stop.

I think that any kind of music that has wrapped itself up so much in its own internals and demands that others change to accommodate it is just a self-absorbed niche. That's OK if that's what one is interested in. But if one is trying to make money from music, I think one is intentionally limiting one's financial success, and really has no right to complain that people aren't buying enough music to support one in the way one would like to be accustomed to.

IOW, if you want money for your music, offer music that people with money are willing to give you money for. Don't complain that they're "ignorant" or "don't know better" or that the music they like and PAY FOR is "boring" (it isn't to them) or they're being held prisoner by big-media music distributors.
About this, although I'm retired I still get paid for performing, moreover, I will not play if no financial reward (the amount is irrelevant) is given as, simply stated, if people don't want to pay they don't appreciate your music (exceptions are of course beneficial and promotional performances).

I'm also not a fan of visual arts (painting, sculpture, etc) that require you to read a multipage statement about the item to get any communication from it. What my artist daughter calls "spot on the wall" art, some of which is by famous artists, hangs on walls in world-famous museums, and (in America, typically) is USUALLY supported by Arts Grants or one sort or another. (Music of any sort doesn't suffer from that problem, perhaps because sound has inherently more power and effect than a brush stroke on canvas. Assuming one isn't deaf, of course.)

I like visual art, too, but find Andy Warhol's art boring. At Pompidou Center in Paris one year, I saw a Japanese painter who "painted" by slashing his bare feet with razor blades, then hanging in a bosen's chair over the canvas spread on the floor and painting on the canvas with with his own blood. Found that more a sign of mental illness than art. (Must be something wrong with me, I'm sure, couldn't possibly be anything wrong with the artists.)
I agree completely with that. What is called "The main stream" is a cunning system of greedy people selling air to people with way to much money and no erudition or taste whatsoever. The tragic reality with that is that many really talented painters are in the same position as many musicians. We buy more or less regularly paintings from talented artists in Europe (mainly the Netherlands) not needing the "explanation" thought of by a skilled "art-specialist" who tries to speak and write with sentences using many neologisms with the intention to let you feel a stupid ignoramus when you don't understand the art he wants to sell.

I hope I made your error in judgement clear.

I've been through it with jazz folk before - been insulted, called names, etc. Been told by some jazz players that the ONLY REAL MUSIC IS JAZZ (usually their particular idea of what JAZZ is, played the way they do it), that if you're not playing jazz, YOU'RE NOT A MUSICIAN!
Agreed. Jazz musicians are only people and narrow-mindedness is as common as in other groups. The "you're not a musician" is one of the most stupid remarks I know to say to a listener of course!
 Heard that most recently three years ago, from a man, BTW, who is a very
skilled, well-trained, experienced and deeply-disturbed (in the clinical psychological sense) musician. Perhaps jazz is his way to deal with the severe childhood abuse he suffered that left him so disturbed?

Although he has so much rage inside that I could picture him as a first-generation punk rocker, before punk went commercial. ;-)

No "error" - just different opinion. I have all sorts of music in my personal collection, including jazz, lest you think I'm an "it's gotta be popular music" person. My parents have jazz records in their collection dating back a good long ways, like early Louie Armstrong recordings. Someday they'll probably end up in my collection.

(I will admit that I have ONE song each from Britney Spears and Madonna. My only complaint about Michael Jackson's death is that he didn't take them with him.)


What I wonder is how you think about classcial music where a performer plays exactly the music that's written. If I understand you correctly you think that not interesting (boring?) as the performer plays exactly what the composer wrote. (I myself like it very much, visiting regularly concerts, but will never perform in public although I play regularly for myself, from Bach to Milhaud with much of the french impressionists in between).
To come back to the original topic: that music is not copyrighted any more.
Joep
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