Yes, good point. Nearly everything is a little bit more interesting when you can step into the ears of the person who originally wrote it. Up till a few years ago I never really liked a lot of baroque music, but then I spent a month listening to nothing but baroque as a mental experiment. I listened to all the Baroque I could find, good and bad even some Baroque opera that I still don't get at all. Once I had that sound firmly in my ears, I could really hear why Bach and Vivaldi are so exciting to so many people, how much different they were.Ogg Vorbis wrote:Herr Haydn didn't study Rameau like you did. He studied counterpoint. Therefore I think if we are to make assumptions about how composers plied their wares, we should at least get the theory that THEY learned.
I can't tell if you think that's a bad outcome. Personally, I love me some Goedel, at least as far as I can understand it.Ogg Vorbis wrote:The other thing I still challenge is that ANY theory can be applied to the compositional process. It's like a Kurt Goerdle kind of theorum of music which states: "Any theory of music proposed is a analytical tool and is therefore reductive in nature thus rendering it permanently incapable of producing what it describes."
