#musicbrainz

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      • CallerNo6
        I see "genres" on the summit agenda. There's your funding. A "get genres done" pledge drive.
      • 2012-10-01 27544, 2012

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      • hawke_
        what are genres? ;-)
      • 2012-10-01 27543, 2012

      • hawke_
        CallerNo6: speaking of genres: What is it that you’re trying to figure out with the CSG thread?
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      • CallerNo6
        hawke_: when I started the thread, I didn't really have a destination in mind. But I was hoping people would respond more directly to http://musicbrainz.1054305.n4.nabble.com/pre-RFC-… (which you more or less did)
      • 2012-10-01 27529, 2012

      • hawke_
        Sure, but what’s the purpose of finding the grey areas?
      • 2012-10-01 27511, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        That's not my primary purpose.
      • 2012-10-01 27557, 2012

      • hawke_
        ?
      • 2012-10-01 27557, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        I'm going to reboot the thread with a more clear goal in mind.
      • 2012-10-01 27508, 2012

      • hawke_
        But what *is* your purpose?
      • 2012-10-01 27500, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        In a nutshell, people keep talking about whether the works are classical. I don't really care about the works (unless the question is "does 'CSG-for-Works' apply?"
      • 2012-10-01 27530, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        For everything else (release artist and title, track artist, recording artist and title) I'd rather ask "is this release /performed/ within a classical context?" or "idiom". or whatever word you want.
      • 2012-10-01 27515, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        So e.g. a Hendrix tune on a classical release should be track_artist:composer, while a Bach tune on a metal release should be track_artist:performer (generally speaking).
      • 2012-10-01 27544, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        We don't need a definition of "classical music".
      • 2012-10-01 27552, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        We just need a feel for when something is being performed/presented in the classical idiom.
      • 2012-10-01 27513, 2012

      • hawke_
        Hmm. I’m much more towards “as on cover” than that. Of course, “as on cover” more or less follows what you said
      • 2012-10-01 27525, 2012

      • hawke_
        and as in the grey areas, is open to interpretation.
      • 2012-10-01 27554, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        Which is fine.
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      • CallerNo6
        A second step would be maybe identifying some grey areas (like classical/metal cross-over) but that's secondary.
      • 2012-10-01 27543, 2012

      • hawke_
        Kind of, but what do we do in those cases if we can only have it one way or the other?
      • 2012-10-01 27552, 2012

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      • CallerNo6
        That's why I say it's like porn. We might not be able to define it, but we probably know it when we see it.
      • 2012-10-01 27542, 2012

      • hawke_
        But there are basic (unresolvable?) disagreements in the grey areas.
      • 2012-10-01 27500, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        If you're wondering why I asked you specifically to weigh in, it's because you're good at picking my ideas apart :-)
      • 2012-10-01 27547, 2012

      • hawke_
        I’m wondering if you’re trying to compile an objective standard for deciding whether something is classical, or whether you want a list of grey-area releases so you can then ask people to classify them and see what the majority says and maybe build something from that data, or…?
      • 2012-10-01 27511, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        Right. I think what I need to do (like I said) is reboot the thread in a more structured way. Like pbryan's works threads.
      • 2012-10-01 27520, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        I don't think there will be an objective standard. I am interested in testing the basic premise (look at the performance, not the works).
      • 2012-10-01 27549, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        A list of releases with an up/down vote for "classicalness" would be one way.
      • 2012-10-01 27504, 2012

      • reosarevok
        That sounds dangerously like genres :p
      • 2012-10-01 27522, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        If "genre" means "what area of the music store should I look in?"
      • 2012-10-01 27514, 2012

      • reosarevok
        What's a music store? :)
      • 2012-10-01 27538, 2012

      • reosarevok
        (partially joking)
      • 2012-10-01 27536, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        A maze of twisty passages, all alike except for genre?
      • 2012-10-01 27554, 2012

      • reosarevok
        Sounds like some RPG
      • 2012-10-01 27501, 2012

      • reosarevok
        Or a text adventure
      • 2012-10-01 27502, 2012

      • reosarevok
        I know!
      • 2012-10-01 27504, 2012

      • reosarevok
        Go north!
      • 2012-10-01 27521, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        you used "know" in a way that I don't understand
      • 2012-10-01 27556, 2012

      • hawke_
        CallerNo6: I think looking at the performance is a must, for sure.
      • 2012-10-01 27504, 2012

      • hawke_
        and even the release
      • 2012-10-01 27545, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        that's a start. I'm sure it's what we all do, but it's never been talked about before (that I know of)
      • 2012-10-01 27550, 2012

      • hawke_
        (I’d love to see a case where the same exact performance was presented in a “classical context” (still not sure what that is, exactly) and also in a “non-classical context” on different releases.
      • 2012-10-01 27517, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        In a sense, the performance is part of the presentation.
      • 2012-10-01 27544, 2012

      • CallerNo6 knows that doesn't help
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      • hawke_
        SwissChris said “With "Classical context" [I] mean: Does the performer consider himself, "classical" (as opposed to popular, jazz, folk etc.), does he have a "classical" training, does he play "classical" instruments, does he give concerts in concert halls or other places and contexts usually dedicated to "classical", would a CD be stored in a "classical" rack or in a "pop" rack…”
      • 2012-10-01 27557, 2012

      • hawke_
        That makes me think of classical artists performing together with pop/rock artists.
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      • hawke_
        Metallica, Moody Blues…
      • 2012-10-01 27505, 2012

      • hawke_
        probably many others
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      • CallerNo6
        yeah, I was thinking the same thing. So a hypothetical:
      • 2012-10-01 27510, 2012

      • hawke_
        In every case I know of, that’s been a case of “classical artist as backing band for pop artist” though
      • 2012-10-01 27514, 2012

      • hawke_
        (essentially)
      • 2012-10-01 27536, 2012

      • CallerNo6
      • 2012-10-01 27544, 2012

      • hawke_
        Excellent.
      • 2012-10-01 27548, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        I can imagine a classical release or this concert, where Jon Lord is the track artist (composer).
      • 2012-10-01 27540, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        I can also imagine a Deep Purple compilation that includes one movement, or an exerpt or something, in which case it might make more sense for the track artist to be the perfomers.
      • 2012-10-01 27500, 2012

      • hawke_
        Yep.
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      • hawke_
        So you can’t just look at the performance
      • 2012-10-01 27516, 2012

      • hawke_
        You need to look at the release.
      • 2012-10-01 27518, 2012

      • hawke_
        right?
      • 2012-10-01 27548, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        Yeah, both.
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      • CallerNo6
        Part of that is my reluctance to mix CSG and non-CSG track artists on the same release.
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      • CallerNo6
        It might be unavoidable, but I think it's confusing.
      • 2012-10-01 27553, 2012

      • hawke_
        Agreed.
      • 2012-10-01 27555, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        So in another hypothetical, where a film soundtrack was half score-based classical-ish, and the other half was pop tunes, I don't know what to do.
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      • hawke_
        Pretty sure that exists.
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      • CallerNo6
        No doubt.
      • 2012-10-01 27537, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        If I had to define "classical context", hmm. There's an elevated formality. Higher fidelity to a score. A tendency to emphasize composers or traditions.
      • 2012-10-01 27537, 2012

      • noobie is listening to: "James Brown" - "The Boss" (3:15) from "The Godfather: The Very Best of James Brown" genre: "Funk" style: "Soul" (192kbps)
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      • CallerNo6
        In a way it's like what Zappa used to say. "The most important thing in art is the frame"
      • 2012-10-01 27551, 2012

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      • hawke_
        CallerNo6: Right, but you have fundamental disagreement about the degree: how formal must it be, how faithful to the score, how much (and in what way) would the composer be elevated for it to be considered “classical”.
      • 2012-10-01 27500, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        Then I'll make the call. Just ask me. :-)
      • 2012-10-01 27515, 2012

      • noobie
        search is leeading to internal SE
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      • noobie
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      • hawke_
        OK: The Shirley Rumsey releases. :-)
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      • hawke_
        My estimates: formality 4/5; fidelity 3/5, composer elevation 2/5
      • 2012-10-01 27516, 2012

      • hawke_
        or maybe 3/5, 3/5, 2/5
      • 2012-10-01 27535, 2012

      • reosarevok
        That's over 2.5!
      • 2012-10-01 27538, 2012

      • reosarevok
        Classical! :p
      • 2012-10-01 27508, 2012

      • hawke_
        Do each of those elements have equal weight? :-p
      • 2012-10-01 27513, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        Is fidelity really that low? Are these interpretations, or is there a score?
      • 2012-10-01 27545, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        (just for reference, you /do/ know porn when you see it, don't you?)
      • 2012-10-01 27545, 2012

      • hawke_
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_music — "any music for which a historically appropriate style of performance must be reconstructed on the basis of surviving scores, treatises, instruments and other contemporary evidence."
      • 2012-10-01 27549, 2012

      • hawke_
        Yes. :-p
      • 2012-10-01 27513, 2012

      • hawke_
        IMO “historically appropriate style” refers to fidelity
      • 2012-10-01 27520, 2012

      • hawke_
        So within that genre I’m sure it varies considerably.
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      • CallerNo6
        The tradition of formality is different between a black-tie symphony and a spanish guitarist.
      • 2012-10-01 27558, 2012

      • hawke_
        Indeed.
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      • hawke_
        So is that ‘adherence to tradition of formality’ or “actual objective(hah!) formality”
      • 2012-10-01 27534, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        So part of the question in my mind is "does this performance/presentation honor the tradition?"
      • 2012-10-01 27534, 2012

      • hawke_
        ?
      • 2012-10-01 27523, 2012

      • reosarevok
        heh
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      • CallerNo6
        I mean, I assume CSG could apply to non-Western music as well.
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      • reosarevok
        Is it black metal if they don't wear corpsepaint?
      • 2012-10-01 27539, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        So black tie not required.
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      • CallerNo6
        On that I defer to Manowar.
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      • CallerNo6
        "true metal people like to rock, not pose, wearing jeans and leather, not cracker-jack clothes"
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      • CallerNo6 goes to look that up. memory might be off a bit.
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      • reosarevok
        Say the ones that pose covered in oil :)
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      • omgyja
        ♫♪.ılılıll|̲̅̅●̲̅̅|̲̅̅=̲̅̅|̲̅̅●̲̅̅|llılılı.♫♪ - William Basinski - The River, Part 1
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      • _5moufl
        :o
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      • reosarevok
        :)
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      • reosarevok
        Basinski
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      • hawke_
        CallerNo6: Obviously ‘black tie’ is a specific type of very-formal clothing, and would have to be adjusted for context somewhat (mostly for various cultures) — but if you can say that “spanish guitar” is objectively less formal than “symphony orchestra” but more so than “60s rock band” which is more so than “90s grunge band”…
      • 2012-10-01 27559, 2012

      • hawke_
        I’m not entirely sure that it makes sense to measure the performance based on what clothes the performer wears anyway, though.
      • 2012-10-01 27504, 2012

      • hawke_
        even if we knew what they were wearing at the time.
      • 2012-10-01 27510, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        Or you could say that "formal" means an adherence to tradition.
      • 2012-10-01 27559, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        (I was looking at http://www.allmusic.com/album/music-of-the-italia… and trying to guess how you scored the formality)
      • 2012-10-01 27543, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        You're probably right. I don't want to guess what performers were wearing. http://www.larastjohn.com/images/coverbachworks.j…
      • 2012-10-01 27554, 2012

      • hawke_
        fidelity could be a problem too. What do you get when you play very faithfully an arrangement written on the basis of “what some early/ancient music might have sounded like
      • 2012-10-01 27525, 2012

      • hawke_
        >"
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      • hawke_
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      • hawke_
        CallerNo6: hahah, so that lara st. john release would count as “very informal”. :-D
      • 2012-10-01 27507, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        I wonder if everybody would concede that there /is/ a classical idiom, even if we can't come up with an objective test. We'd be no worse off than we are now.
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      • hawke_
        I think that’s agreed — it’s the whole basis of having a CSG at all, right?
      • 2012-10-01 27520, 2012

      • hawke_
        people agree that there *is* classical music.
      • 2012-10-01 27528, 2012

      • CallerNo6
        but the only conversations I've seen have been about the work or the composer being "classical". that's what I'm tryng to change.
      • 2012-10-01 27545, 2012

      • warp
        CallerNo6: can a release be classical and an equivalent release (audio is exactly the same) not be classical? i.e. the only change between the two is how the cover/backcover/booklet/etc.. present the release?
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      • warp
        :)
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      • hawke_
        CallerNo6: I think that’s because there are so few cases where the performer matters for this purpose.
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      • Krystof
        I can certainly imagine some grey areas between "classical" and "not classical"
      • 2012-10-01 27531, 2012

      • Krystof
        e.g. some Philip Glass soundtracks, or Frank Zappa
      • 2012-10-01 27542, 2012

      • hawke_
        You rarely see it even coming down to the performer, because performers are almost always so clearly one or the other
      • 2012-10-01 27553, 2012

      • Krystof
        and that grey area can be viewed as black or white by different people
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      • hawke_
        it’s “rock band performing classical music” or “classical orchestra performing rock music”
      • 2012-10-01 27547, 2012

      • Krystof
        oh, hey, you've already given those examples. OK, how about "Hooked on Classics"
      • 2012-10-01 27530, 2012

      • Krystof
        they call it crossover for a reason. "Adiemus". "Officium".
      • 2012-10-01 27547, 2012

      • Krystof
        Sting's lute songs disc
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      • Krystof
        I have a recording of Airs de Cour, one of which is by Georges Brassens
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      • Krystof
        which side am I arguing on? Tell me later, won't you?
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      • CallerNo6
        "hooked on classics" seems low on the fidelity scale.
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      • hawke_
        low-formality, low-fidelity, high composer elevation?
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      • CallerNo6
        I'll have to think about that one
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      • CallerNo6
        hawke_: yeah, true
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      • CallerNo6 goes to work for a while
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      • hawke_
        Not sure about the formality actually
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      • Krystof
        fwiw, I think "classical music" is a hangover from the 19th century germanic retelling of the history of Art Music