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"Uncertain Principles" features the miscellaneous ramblings of a physicist at a small liberal arts college. Physics, politics, pop culture, and occasional conversations with his dog.

Chad Orzel "Prof. Orzel gives the impression of an everyday guy who just happens to have a vast but hidden knowledge of physics." (anonymous student evaluation comment)

Emmy, the Queen of Niskayuna Emmy is a German Shepherd mix, and the Queen of Niskayuna. She likes treats, walks, chasing bunnies, and quantum physics.

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« Sizzle: A Global Warming Comedy, by Randy Olson | Main | Sizzle: No Such Thing As Bad Publicity? »

links for 2008-07-15

Category: Links Dump
Posted on: July 15, 2008 5:32 AM, by Chad Orzel

Comments

# 1 | Uncle Al | July 15, 2008 4:16 PM

Regarding the cracker,

http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/transub.htm

Roman Catholics die then suffer Eternity surrounded by Irish. Everybody else just dies.

# 2 | Eric Lund | July 20, 2008 4:46 PM

Having read through that Guardian piece on classical music and a few dozen posts on the thread responding to it, and as someone who has significant experience with classical music of the last 100 years (including performing some of it): Queenan is badly overstating his case.

Yes, there is a lot of recent classical music that is essentially unlistenable. There is also a huge volume of bad pop music out there. That doesn't mean that neither genre is worth listening to: there is plenty of good stuff out there. If the music speaks to you, keep listening. If it goes over your head, or falls short of your expectations, look for other composers.

From my own collection, here are some 20th century classical composers whose music I like: Copland, Holst, Vaughan Williams, Grainger, Milhaud, Gershwin, Britten, Shostakovich. Of these, Britten and Shostakovich come closest to a "pure" classical style; the rest are heavily influenced by folk or jazz music.

OTOH, one of the biggest mistakes in my CD collection is a Kronos Quartet recording called Black Angels. The title piece, by George Crumb, is unlistenable, and the album includes an even worse piece by Istvan Marta. Rounding out the album are a piece by Thomas Tallis (a Renaissance English composer--what's he doing here?) a piece by Charles Ives where the gimmick is that the performers are accompanying a recording of Ives singing a song he wrote about World War I, and a mediocre Bartok quartet. Both Tallis and Bartok wrote better pieces; I will admit that I just don't get Ives.

As for twelve-tone music, I don't like the genre for the same reason I don't like twelve-bar blues: the format is too formulaic. It's hard to write a twelve-tone piece that doesn't sound like the composer, trying to get all 48 versions of his row (the original sequence, its inversion, its retrograde, and its retrograde inversion, plus all transpositions thereof) into the piece, is playing mind games with the listener.

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