What is the difference between music and noise? [years-dead slappyfight revived]

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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an example of audience decison could be "this beethoven feller, i dont like him i think its just noise"
does that make beethoven noise? of course not.
its music he doesnt like.
:ud:

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robojam wrote:
eduardo_b wrote:
vurt wrote:the audience decides nothing.
other than whether they "enjoy" something.
other than that they are just, well, there.
So the artist doesn't need the audience?
You're not very good at words are you?

How does 'the audience decides nothing' translate to 'So the artist doesn't need an audience?'
I'm actually better with words than many. First, the audience decides everything. The artist, unless he or she is trying to write for the audience instead of them self, can't control what makes people want to see and hear an artist...and spend money to do so. Second, I posed the question of the artist actually needing an audience. Different concept.
We escape the trap of our own subjectivity by
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey

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eduardo_b wrote:unless the artist wants to make a living with his/her work.
so by 'artist' you mean 'talent show contestant?'
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."

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eduardo_b wrote:and spend money to do so.
why are you obsessed with "money"?
this is a theory thread, not a capitalism seminar.
:ud:

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eduardo_b wrote:I'm actually better with words than many.
So I guess you're being deliberately obtuse then?
eduardo_b wrote:First, the audience decides everything.
So the band members don't even make decisions on which notes to play? Interesting.
eduardo_b wrote:I posed the question of the artist actually needing an audience. Different concept.
That would be a different concept, but what you actually said was:
eduardo_b wrote: The audience is in control.

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vurt wrote:an example of audience decison could be "this beethoven feller, i dont like him i think its just noise"
does that make beethoven noise? of course not.
its music he doesnt like.
I sort of don't think classical music gets into the noise category with many people, but black metal might qualify. :)
We escape the trap of our own subjectivity by
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey

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eduardo_b wrote:I sort of don't think classical music gets into the noise category with many people
bzzzt. revisit the response to 'Rites of Spring,' why dont you?
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."

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eduardo_b wrote:
vurt wrote:an example of audience decison could be "this beethoven feller, i dont like him i think its just noise"
does that make beethoven noise? of course not.
its music he doesnt like.
I sort of don't think classical music gets into the noise category with many people, but black metal might qualify. :)
so some genres the audience dislike makes it noise in others its different, i see...
:ud:

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plus most "black metal" gigs ive been too, the audience seemed to be following and enjoying the musicality of said "audio output".
so im not sure your point makes sense.
:ud:

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robojam wrote:
eduardo_b wrote:I'm actually better with words than many.
So I guess you're being deliberately obtuse then?
eduardo_b wrote:First, the audience decides everything.
So the band members don't even make decisions on which notes to play? Interesting.
eduardo_b wrote:I posed the question of the artist actually needing an audience. Different concept.
That would be a different concept, but what you actually said was:
eduardo_b wrote: The audience is in control.
You're creating a false conflict. The artist can choose to do whatever they want and are capable of. The audience can choose to ignore it, or not...neither of which is within the control of the artist unless he or she attempts to cater to what the audience wants...and even that might not work.
We escape the trap of our own subjectivity by
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey

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whyterabbyt wrote:
eduardo_b wrote:I sort of don't think classical music gets into the noise category with many people
bzzzt. revisit the response to 'Rites of Spring,' why dont you?
Or actually listen to it before making generalizations that don't hold true.

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vurt wrote:plus most "black metal" gigs ive been too, the audience seemed to be following and enjoying the musicality of said "audio output".
so im not sure your point makes sense.
Let's put it this way. The further afield from mainstream that music is -- including experimental music -- the more likely that more people will consider it noise, not music...even though it's classified as music. It's an emotional reaction to what they don't understand or don't like.
We escape the trap of our own subjectivity by
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey

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eduardo_b wrote: The audience can choose to ignore it, or not
indeed, they dont however get to label it. thats the artists job.
:ud:

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vurt wrote:
eduardo_b wrote: The audience can choose to ignore it, or not
indeed, they dont however get to label it. thats the artists job.
Label it how? :?
We escape the trap of our own subjectivity by
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey

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eduardo_b wrote:
vurt wrote:plus most "black metal" gigs ive been too, the audience seemed to be following and enjoying the musicality of said "audio output".
so im not sure your point makes sense.
Let's put it this way. The further afield from mainstream that music is -- including experimental music -- the more likely that more people will consider it noise, not music...even though it's classified as music. It's an emotional reaction to what they don't understand or don't like.
but its still "music" if that was the artists intent.
i dont care if the majoity say red is blue, it doesnt make it so.
:ud:

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