721915
9780771070013
In the early seventeenth century, the English religious scholar Thomas Draxe said, "Music is the eye of the ear." The link to sight or the visual has been something music has wrestled with for generations. Today we tend to use our hearing as a way of confirming our sight, so Draxe's claim could easily be turned around to read, "Music is the ear of the eye." Manufactured images today are everywhere, in films, on television and computer screens, on billboards, and in the print media. We are now very visually oriented, relying on our sight to learn, experience, and entertain, and on our hearing to enhance what we see. Since the development of radio and the gramophone in the twentieth century, music has lost ground to the visual in its power to arrest our attention. Music is in our homes and offices, and is as easily accessible as turning on the tap or the light switch. It's in elevators, dentist's offices, and shopping malls. Workers in factories often have music piped in to accompany their labours, but the music can't be too good, because then it can be distracting, and production targets fall. This ease of accessibility has caused us to take music for granted. We hear music constantly today, but we don't listen to it. It's used to fill a void, or a perceived void. Yet music can still draw pictures and images for us. The great German Romantic writer Goethe is reported to have described architecture as frozen music. It's a powerful language that can communicate concepts and ideas non-visually and non-verbally, and it can also convey deep emotion and feeling. This book is intended as a guide for both those who are just starting to explore the rich world of classical music and those who already have a serious cd collection but want to explore other performances. It is, above all, for those who want to expand their aural senses and awareness who want to increase their understanding and enjoyment of the highly useful and expressive language of music. All forms of music are valid and worthy, from folk songs to pop, jazz, rock, and hip hop. They can all express ideas and emotions. But this book deals with classical music the ageold form that has experienced many rises and falls over hundreds of years, and still manages to survive. How we use music is up to each individual, but this book deals with music that was intended to be listened to, not just heard foreground listening, not background. Today, we hear about the demise of the compact disc the format of recorded music that's been with us now for almost thirty years. Downloads, MP3s, and soundfiles are the way of the future, but, as always, the medium is not as important as the music. Regardless of how we access it, it's the music itself that will survive. Many of the classical music recordings recommended in this book are "classic," and will always be available in one format or another. Record companies are always reissuing recordings. Every few years, they remaster the original tapes using the latest technology, repackage them with new art, graphics, and jacket notes, and re-release them. As a result, the serial numbers of the recordings can change. But the music, artists, ensembles, and conductors remain the same, and usually the record label, so that's what to look for. And remember that any list produced is obsolete the minute it's printed. New recordings of classical music are always coming out, but the recommendations in this book are recordings that I think have a lasting shelf life. Although there are 101 recommended recordings, you do not have to acquire all of them to truly enjoy classical music. Used as a guide, the book can steer you to furthering your own personal musical tastes. IPhillips, Rick is the author of 'Essential Classical Collection 101 CDS' with ISBN 9780771070013 and ISBN 0771070012.
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