and yet, you can still pick apart good and bad music
Right, and it is the you that is picking apart good and bad music. Without the you - the perceiver of the music - there is no one to judge the music. What is the meaning of beauty if there's no one to perceive it? In fact, how can anyone say it is beautiful without witnessing its beauty for themselves?
Bruh again, of course, we perceive the world with out senses no shit. But concerning quality of music, that's about the most meaningless statement you can make, it has no moral or any other implications. Let me ask you this, what is the meaning of beauty when it's so fickle anyone can define it how they want? Isn't it meaningless then? You didn't exactly help there yourself if that's what you claim
That's why I see this as the most sad, defeatist perspective, why would anyone care then? What is the point of music, if you cannot ensure quality anyway?
Then, how is it there seems to a well established general idea of beauty in the world, that even beasts can perceive it, not just man? You know these fish drawing mandalas in the sand to attract mates, any bird sporting over the top colorful plumage, songbirds increasing their repertoire with age and experience - and the way they rank quality of these features to choose said mates mirrors our perception of beauty (the purpose of these is to be beautiful quite apparently, they can have little no practicality otherwise)? Could it be that there is something
universal at play here? Hmmm?
Even if there is no one to judge the music, the music hasn't changed! Its quality, its nature is not locked within one's perception, it does not come of it, but of the object itself! Perception just means you're the one observing something existing, something that is established. You can judge it however you see fit, but the innate qualities stand for other observers, just as they did for you, the song itself doesn't change between listeners. And since the nature of the object is to be shared between people, because it is universal, it doesn't change, whereas your standards do, your tastes do, songs can be made objectively better or worse.
If the listener truly in their heart of hearts enjoys this "idea", then it can't be argued that there's something to it that is appealing. Essentially, perception of beauty is the only real clue we have to it. There's no ultimate divine arbiter who decides whether something is good or not, other than the instrument of our perception.
Oh shit you did actually validate my two tones wtf xD I mean it does sound like the kind of thing modern art critics would praise as "challenging and bold", but those are the last people I want to listen to any music, as they deny any general idea of soundness. What do you mean can't be argued, of course it can! Let me demonstrate: "This 'truly immaculately beautiful' work of art suffers from intense lack of imagination, harmony, depth, intricacy and talent, for it undeniably consists solely of the same tone repeated twice and nothing more.
It also plagiarize off everything ever When compared to others works, contemporary or historical, it's absence of said features makes it immensely un-worthwhile endeavor, perhaps only save in comparison to some of the atrocities carried out by post-world war modernism, both to be composed and listen to." See if there's some universal quality, which there is, you don't need a judge, you don't need an arbiter, the song stands on its own, and doesn't need to be validated. I don't care then how it is praised or deriled, the arrangement is provable. Undisputable. And we have ways to make it sound good, regardless of who listens to it. We're that powerful, and we should use our gift to better ourself, our craft, and make good use of it.
It seems that it is the "paying off in the end", which is essentially the thing finally appealing to your senses, that redeems the process. If it had never paid off, would you still have valued it? Why would you still have valued it? Also I would venture to guess that the thing had always appealed to you, you simply did not have the experience/proficiency at your initial stage to execute it in the proper way.
This the thing, it wasn't about
my or anyone's perception, demonstrated by how that
changes every so often. It is not essential that it appeals to my senses, hell no, if that was the dealbreaker for me, why would I ever pursue anything that would
sound off at the moment? The reason I tried it because I knew that others would enjoy it, and, because it is a proven method, that others will enjoy it. Before I did, it took a moment, but that doesn't change the fact I made the song better for it. Hell, even if I didn't actually to appreciate it ever, that doesn't have an effect on its quality. I suppose you are quite opposed to the idea of composing something the author wouldn't enjoy himself, but if others will, wouldn't that be a sacrifice then, i. e. a noble thing to do?
The fact that someone says "I like it" and the thing being of objective quality do not need to coexist, and given how ignorant the general populus is, while I do not blame them, we all having our own trouble, I say it is quite a widespread phenomenon these days. That is the subjective part. But the declaration of appreciation isn't what makes something good. Same as say when you have a piece of solid yellow cheese, and I say "I don't like this cheese.". That statement didn't change the fact that the cheese is solid or yellow, these are facts and from them you can deduce other perks and qualities.
Look, I listen to
Bok van Blerk. I love the man, and
I am really fond of his songs, I do like them a lot. But that's mostly because of his performance as a singer and the power behind the patriotic lyrics.
The music itself isn't anything to write home about, it is as basic as you can get. Each repeating about four chords, it's your standard folk/pop/rock fare I suppose, while again, technically sound, it doesn't sound revolting,
the composition is nothing to be praised. The quality then would stem not from the arrangement, but from the handling of the language - the poetry present in the texts, and his personal output, as well as the other performers. I won't stand here and say, just because I like it, it tops Bach.
I really hate to bring the good name of cheese ino this but I guess we're at the point that's how I have to explain it xD