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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous Ingemar said...

I sympathize.

Have you ever heard of Chris from Dark Brightness blog? He's a New Zealot (what I call people from New Zealand). Also a physician btw and one of the few conservative Christians there.

He makes a similar point, but WRT the sports rather than the arts.

I guess the shift from the masses doing art/sport to watching the same is a part of the mass media's tentacled grip on society.

17 December 2013 at 08:27

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@I - Yes, the argument works for sports too. I find it hard to understand why most people want to watch most professional sports - considering the dourness, bad temper, cheating, gamesmanship and consistent mediocrity of so much of it.

17 December 2013 at 09:50

Anonymous Luqman said...

I cant tell you how many times I wished this was the case. Especially for music, which is close to my heart when it comes to the arts. Sometimes it seems like whatever training these `virtuous` professional musicians go through completely deadens their musicality. As a side effect, the ability to appreciate music as language, as expression, and to add beauty, elegance and above all gravitas to it (with proper phrasing etc.) has faded away from the public consciousness. Perhaps it was never there, not for the vast majority, but I find that difficult to believe when I listen to the best of the Baroque, Classical and Romantic eras.

There is actually some recent modern music which had that spark, but it is reactionary, offensive, nihilistic (albeit heroic and virile) and is impenetrable even for the seasoned listener because of its nature; especially for Christians.

17 December 2013 at 10:11

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@L - I remember how crashingly disappointing it was to meet professional classical musicians from major orchestras. Their attitude to music, to life! was appallingly deadened, cynical, lazy and grasping. They had not in the slightest degree been ennobled by their contact with great art.

But a great musician is another matter - I met Dennis Matthews

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denis_Matthews

who was the best British pianist of his generation in the classical era repertoire - and *he* lived and breathed MUSIC.

17 December 2013 at 10:31

Anonymous Nicholas Fulford said...

I don't think professional performers are necessarily the problem, accept as they do not persuade the rest of us to discover, explore and develop our appreciation for art in general, and the art form which they are presenting.

Awaken in a person first a strong emotional connection - Do that first. Once that is there they will, almost completely of their own accord, develop a passion for the art which will lead them into a desire to appreciate and create art. And that is what the aim of a great artist is, to propagate meaning through art to inspire others to do the same.

No better example comes to mind than what Benjamin Zandler exhibits in his TED lecture http://www.ted.com/talks/benjamin_zander_on_music_and_passion.html

17 December 2013 at 17:20