More important than Pierre Schaeffer (and his fellow Pierre Henry), and even more than John Cage, is Iannis Xenakis. His music is the epitome of a kind of music where melody and harmony are foreign concepts, and where the guidelines reside somewhere else (mathematics and physics, mainly). Not only in electro-acoustic works (which he also created) but also in his instrumental works.Delta Sign wrote: Sun Feb 24, 2019 10:36 pm Just to offer my take on the original question:
Yes, melody is an important part of a lot of music, but definitely not for all of it.
During the past ~100 years, with the advent of recording technology and the possibility of manipulating sound in interesting ways, there has been a lot of music that focuses on sound itself, instead of the notes it is playing.
Pierre Schaeffer and John Cage certainly weren't focusing on melodies for a lot of their music, for example, and neither do a lot of more modern electronic artists, and that's perfectly fine.
Music is a lot more then just a linear succession of pitches in time. Since we gained access to recording technology, the performance of said notes and the sound itself became equally as important. For example, lots of modern ambient and drone music can't even be really transcribed in a classical way, it would basically just be one long note, but that doesn't mean there can't be just as much "theory" involved, it just hasn't been studied nearly as much as functional harmony (for example) yet.
WHAT? Do you realize that you contradict yourself? First, you quoted two "academic musicians", and following that you say that academic music is very slow at adapting to new movements?Delta Sign wrote: Sun Feb 24, 2019 10:36 pm Academic music has always been very slow at adapting to new developments. It always takes a lot of time until something is taken seriously (as can be observed in this very subforum all the time).
Dang kids and their stupid Jazz "music".
If something, academic music PRECLUDES anything else. Academic musicians started concrete music in late 40s and early 50s, and electronic music in the second half of 50s too, and never stopped evolving since then.
Jazz stays basically where it was 50 years ago.