Does Steve like " electronic" music?
Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 4:01 pm
I like some dance music, some electronic, etc.
I like Madonna's 'Ray of Light.' It makes me feel like I have velocity, like I have an answer to the confines of gravity. While I ahave no real interest or care for any of her other songs, save possibly 'Beautiful Stranger,' RoL gets me everytime. 'Dance' music that I like makes me feel that way. Some of it also makes me feel like a leopard, like a sweaty fuck machine, like an international man of learning and serial murder. Dance music transports me on occasion. This is one end of a spectrum of effects that music has on me, the commonality between all such effects being the production, re/discovery, or expression of deeply held feelings, for a lack of a more concise word.
When I look at a painting I ask only that it move me to continue looking. After that what I assume is the matrix of my own predilections will shape a response that drives any further viewing. From there I will say 'I like it' or not.
The same is true of music or film or dance, etc. Just keep me looking, just keep me listening and then I will say 'I like it' or not. In the end there is so much variety that I do not find having an affinity for something the be the most important part of the experience of art. I do not want to be bored or indifferent. In this way the creations of art that I do not like have done their job, as well.
I will naturally return to those centers of experience and expression that I enjoy and, in some instances, I have been ineluctably moved to produce some of my own.
The vacuity of the club/dance scene does not bother me in the least. It is not a realm that I frequent. The music that has been spawned by said scene belongs to me when I listen to it. It is no longer club music, it is no longer some functional pastiche of sounds and pulses arranged in the time frame of another. It is mine and I do with it what I like. And, in the process, I say 'I like it' or not.
The meaning that a song or genre has for its creators and the context in which it was produced are only one part of the equation that arises from an experience of art. The absence of a sense that I have an interest in said meanings and contexts does not inhibit my enjoyment of music or film or art, etc.
I like Madonna's 'Ray of Light.' It makes me feel like I have velocity, like I have an answer to the confines of gravity. While I ahave no real interest or care for any of her other songs, save possibly 'Beautiful Stranger,' RoL gets me everytime. 'Dance' music that I like makes me feel that way. Some of it also makes me feel like a leopard, like a sweaty fuck machine, like an international man of learning and serial murder. Dance music transports me on occasion. This is one end of a spectrum of effects that music has on me, the commonality between all such effects being the production, re/discovery, or expression of deeply held feelings, for a lack of a more concise word.
When I look at a painting I ask only that it move me to continue looking. After that what I assume is the matrix of my own predilections will shape a response that drives any further viewing. From there I will say 'I like it' or not.
The same is true of music or film or dance, etc. Just keep me looking, just keep me listening and then I will say 'I like it' or not. In the end there is so much variety that I do not find having an affinity for something the be the most important part of the experience of art. I do not want to be bored or indifferent. In this way the creations of art that I do not like have done their job, as well.
I will naturally return to those centers of experience and expression that I enjoy and, in some instances, I have been ineluctably moved to produce some of my own.
The vacuity of the club/dance scene does not bother me in the least. It is not a realm that I frequent. The music that has been spawned by said scene belongs to me when I listen to it. It is no longer club music, it is no longer some functional pastiche of sounds and pulses arranged in the time frame of another. It is mine and I do with it what I like. And, in the process, I say 'I like it' or not.
The meaning that a song or genre has for its creators and the context in which it was produced are only one part of the equation that arises from an experience of art. The absence of a sense that I have an interest in said meanings and contexts does not inhibit my enjoyment of music or film or art, etc.