Has education expanded your listening tastes?


This point recently came up in another thread: a member was of the opinion (if I am paraphrasing them correctly) that critical thinking plays little role in what our tastes in music might be. We like what we like and that's it. So that begs the question for me, how many of us feel that our reaction to music is primarily rooted in the emotional centers of the brain and that rational analysis of musical structure and language doesn't potentially expand our range of musical enjoyment? I ask because I am not a professional musician, but I did take a few college level music history classes, learn to play guitar in my forties (now sixty,) learn to read music on a rudimentary level of competence, study a little music theory, and enjoy reading historical biographies about composers and musicians. I can honestly say that the in the last fifteen years or so, I have greatly expanded what types of music I enjoy and that I can appreciate music I might not "love" in the emotional sense that used to dictate what I listen to. Take Berg, Schoenberg, and Webern for example. Their music doesn't sweep you away with the emotional majesty of earlier composers, but I find their intellectual rigor and organization to be fascinating and very enjoyable. Same with studying the history of American roots music, I learned a lot about our cultural history and enjoy listening to old blues and country music now. How do other's feel about this emotion vs. learning to appreciate thing?
photon46
Mathmatics is at the apex of human understanding. It offers insight to our place in the universe.
Photon,
There is nothing good about being a soldier, I used that example only to say we all can relate to things difficult as a basic trait of our humanity.
My sole point is that relativism is dry rot of the mind and soul.
Some things are better than other things, you do not have to like the best, or support the best ,but you need to know it is the best.

James Brown IS dumbing down .So is Van the man, though I listen to "Brown Eyed Girl" at times for reasons best not described on here, I'm aware its appealing to my baser side.
*****Some things are better than other things, you do not have to like the best, or support the best ,but you need to know it is the best.*******

How does a person determine what is the best musicaL genre? What methodology??

*****There is nothing good about being a soldier*****

You just better thank the Lord we have them!

*****James Brown IS dumbing down******

Nope. Brown just went places you could not follow.

And speaking of going places, I think the posters on this thread are going places they are not qualified to go.

Cheers.
Schubert, I think I understand your perspective, but just as relativism is the potential downfall of morality, so is absolutism of values the fossilization of aesthetic practice. In my mind, insisting that base emotions are unworthy inspirations for great art is to consign art to a place of precious near irrelevance. Without the base emotions that inspired Van's Brown Eyed Girl we wouldn't have much of Shakespeare and the plots in many great novels, the art of Egon von Schiele, many Japanese Ukiyo-e prints, some of Monet's paintings and many of the great operas and ballets that are part of our heritage. I don't agree that nothing good comes of being a soldier but I do agree that nothing good has made need of soldiers. Again, innumerable great works of literature, opera, painting, theatre, and film use that dark side of mankind as artistic inspiration.

Rok2id, nothing wrong with people having less than fully informed opinions about art forms they are a fan of. The survival of "elevated" forms of art depend entirely on the sustained interest of the dilettante. We just have to remember Moynihan's adage "everyone is entitled to his own opinions, just not his own facts."
******Rok2id, nothing wrong with people having less than fully informed opinions about art forms they are a fan of.*****

Whew! Am I glad to hear that. Now, please tell it to The Frogman and Learsfool!!!

Cheerrs