And if this be a metric, you have yet to apply it eg., to the whole of what you receive from say, Lomax. You simply believe in the universality of the concepts, because they are precious concepts to you for whatever reason. You're going to beg the question all the time now.Musicologo wrote: Wed Feb 27, 2019 9:23 pm The problem is that is often starts with "ethic" concepts namely as "pitch", "tone", "key", etc.. as if they were universal and relevant and most often than not, that's not the case.
You aren't recognizing it in my criticisms of what you're writing.
I just went into it, you can't even sum up my culture to come up with my choices. At all. The only "behavior" I exhibit is the desire to know music, in order to *practice* the art.
There is nothing universal about these arguments you're making. They simply don't add up like that.
Pitch is pretty f**king universal in music. Key means what it means. You can't apply it to Balinese Gamelan, nor in the strict sense to Indian Classical Music. However, should I have a discussion of a raga with an Indian musician we are both saying 'per the tonic' a lot knowing what we mean.
"tone" in which sense of that word? I'm pretty sure any discussion is going to share terms, wherever you are.
WHY are you bullshitting? Seriously, at this point you can't stand the resistance to your notions, and in your world you need to be completely right, so, you're going to keep digging holes for yourself. No one is going to be persuaded by shit like this, who has a CLUE.
PS: that's not what the word 'ethic' does actually. I used it correctly, you want everyone to be ethically equal, extent of knowledge notwithstanding. IE: for you there is a certain conflict of Ethos (in the classical sense) between the person who obtains technique vs the person who doesn't care about those "values". Value system ≃ Ethos.