hadespussercats wrote:orpheus wrote:part of the definition of a work of art is that it rewards repeated investigation.
That's interesting. Is that part of your personal definition, or is it a quote you agree with so strongly you made it your own?
I wonder about the nature of these repeat investigations, because most of the art I've worked on in my life is ephemeral. If you weren't there when it happened, you missed it. So how do you come back to it?
(There are possibilities that come to mind-- curious what you or others would say.)
(Also, pretty clearly derail. But I think it's ok-- we're pretty friendly to winding conversations in these parts!)
I think I first heard it from my mentor, Michael Tilson Thomas. It struck me so strongly that I've repeated it a lot. I think it's especially valuable in differentiating art from entertainment. These are not mutually exclusive by any means. But to the extent that they are, this is, I think, a valid difference.
I'm curious about the ephemeral art you've worked on. The art I mean is - I suppose - not ephemeral: the written word, composed notes, painting, sculpture, photography, film. Now, you could say that performed art is ephemeral: if you're not there for a performance of a Beethoven symphony, then you've missed it. That's true, but performances are
instantiations of the work; any performance of a complex work is like one reading of a book: it will reveal some facets and not others. Another performance will be different. No one performance will reveal all there is. So performing works repeatedly is in itself one way of coming back to it. Each time I conduct a piece I learn new things about it.
It's harder for those who don't perform to do this exploration. It's even harder if you don't read music, since you have no way of examining the work itself and must always rely on listening to different performances by others (which, admittedly, is gloriously enjoyable; and music is meant to be performed
and listened to). On the other hand, there's a lot to be gained by comparing different performances. This is something surprisingly few people do. They get one recording of Beethoven 7, or whatever, and think that's the piece itself. They're depriving themselves of riches.
I think this was something better understood by people in the days before recordings (we know this from letters and other documents), or in the very early days of recordings, when records were not widely disseminated and travel was harder. Musicians couldn't hear their colleagues around the world so easily, and were forced to gold-mine the works themselves. This is why I find early recordings of classical pieces so fascinating - the interpretive range is much, much wider than in modern performances. I mean
radically wider. Modern performances sound pretty homogenous by comparison - everybody hears everybody else, and a kind of sameness sets in, a largely unconscious consensus about how certain things go. But listen to recordings from the great musicians of the 30s and 40s and you'll hear such a wide range of interpretive choices, revealing so many truly different aspects of the same music - it can sometimes sound almost like you're hearing a different piece entirely. If you can listen past the sound problems of early recording technology, this stuff is very exciting.