Much of what is in this blog is related (sometimes only tangentially) to art music. Occasionally I use insensitive language in referring to various arrogant or incompetent assholes who managed to get on my nerves. If you're squeamish about such language, then stay away from this blog. To contact me, use boomboomsky at gmail dot com.
November 24, 2019
Things to look forward to...
Kunst kann nicht nur in Bezug auf ihre Schönheit und Handwerkskunst wahrgenommen werden. Sie müssen es auch im Lichte seiner politischen Botschaften bewerten.
(Art cannot solely be perceived in regard to its beauty and craftsmanship. You also have to evaluate it in light of its political messages.)
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Nah... That wasn't Dr. Goebbels speaking. I just slapped his photo above the German translation of a statement made a few days ago by one Max Hollein, the new director of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.*
I now look forward to a book-burning rally to be organized by the the New York Public Library in the near future.
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* "At the Entrenched Met Museum, the New Director Shakes Things Up", New York Times, 20 November 2019.
November 15, 2019
THE TRUEST FACT OF ALL
Americans struggle to ID true facts
By NICHOLAS RICCARDI and HANNAH FINGERHUT
14 November 2019
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True facts??? But then why not? After all, the truest fact of all is that the once respectable news agencies now employ stupid imbeciles incapable of using their vocabularies of words in ways which avoid superfluously redundant adjectives.
Has there ever been a better time for human people with pathetically stunted mental minds?
November 13, 2019
How many words is a picture worth?
The familiar adage assures us that a picture is worth a thousand words. The one above, however, is worth only three:
October 28, 2019
Those were the days?
It is tempting to think that, as the saying goes, those were the days. But were they? Wasn't there an even earlier time when one's reading knowledge of Latin and Greek was a certificate of being a cultured person? Weren't there some old geezers still alive in 1981 who whined about the devolution of society in which supposedly cultured people are incapable of spicing up a conversation with a well-timed quote from Homer or Virgil?
Perhaps when I think that "those were the days," what I really mean is that "those were my days," while the earlier and the later days are always someone else's days which are either hopelessly antiquated or depressingly primitive and vulgar...
October 1, 2019
IT AIN'T OVER 'TIL IT'S OVER
The ability of good music to captivate the masses has been sacrificed to ... strained formalism and pretensions to originality... The composer apparently never made it his goal to pay attention to what the Soviet audience expects from music.
New music has to be music that people love.
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The first of the above quotes comes from the infamous 1936 review (written on Stalin's orders or with his approval) of Shostakovich's opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District.[1]
The second quote comes from a speech given by Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda. Well... not really. Goebbels probably said similar things about music (the Nazis were studious imitators of Soviet Communism), but he did not make the statement in question. That statement was made in 2010 by one Deborah Borda who at the time was the President and CEO of the Los Angeles Philharmonic.[2]
As a concise summary of her philistine Stalinist criteria for desirable new music, Borda's statement is of little if any interest. Totalitarian rhetoric and behavior are ubiquitous in today's America, where individuals and corporations grovel before Facebook lynching mobs and Twitter execution squads, where universities encourage students to think and behave like Brownshirts, and where art organizations have become eager servants of whatever ideology happened to be de jour.
September 8, 2019
Schadenfreude
So ist der Jazz-Nigger auch in das Haus des Figaro, des Fidelio, des Hans Sachs, des Tristan, der Ariadne eingezogen. ..... Der Nigger, der Bringer der Jazzkultur ... über das Europa Beethovens triumphiert? Man glaube nur ja nicht an eine satirische Pointe.
(So the Jazz-Nigger moved in the house of Figaro, Fidelio, Hans Sachs, Tristan, Ariadne. ..... The nigger, the bringer of jazz culture ... triumphs over Beethoven's Europe? Doesn't seem like a funny punch line.)
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The above image is a poster for the Nazi exhibition Entartete Musik (Degenerate Music) which took place in Düsseldorf in 1938. The saxophone-playing "Der Nigger"[1] is a reference to the cover page for the score of Ernst Krenek's 1927 opera Jonny spielt auf. (One of the opera's principal characters is an amoral and libidinous black jazz musician named 'Jonny'.) The quote below the poster also refers to Krenek's opera, but did not come from the program booklet for the Nazi exhibition. It came from a review of Krenek's opera published several years before the Nazis came to power.[2] The author of the review, Julius Korngold, was a powerful and influential Viennese music critic and the father of the composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold.
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