Creo que, como compositor de música, es un trabajo pésimo, estimada Musetta.
Me permito citar a Charles Wuorinen, que lo ha expresado mucho mejor que yo:
"I remember in the ‘70s, a—at the time—semi-well-known rock musician came to me because he couldn't read music, and he wanted to learn how to write down his songs. I said, "Well, do you know anything about harmony?" And he said no, he didn't. He just felt his way around, as I guess they all do. Anyway, I gave him something to read, and he went away. He then called me a little while later and said that he decided instead of studying to hire a secretary to notate his stuff, and I said, "You have made the right choice, because if you knew enough to write down what you're doing, you would find it unsatisfactory. If you had knowledge, you would be unable to continue with what you're doing." And this seems to me to be very much the case with popular music today and has been for a long time.
What's interesting about that is that it wasn't always so. In the earlier days of old-fashioned jazz, big bands, whatever it was—I'm not a historian in these things, I don't know the exact sequence—until sometime around the rise of rock ‘n' roll, I would guess in the ‘50s and early ‘60s, popular musicians recognized a hierarchy, and tended to look up, or else tended to be defensive about or to be angry with, classical musicians. Everything they did, of course, ultimately derived from classical practice. The harmonic language they used, and still use now, comes from the work of serious composers of an earlier time. Jazz is the same—it's grafting on via Baptist hymn tunes, diatonic harmony from Western music, and African elements and rhythms. In any case, just to finish this off, there wasn't necessarily a great profound knowledge on the part of pop musicians, although a lot more than now, you really had to be able to play, you really had to be able to do those arrangements, you had to know what you were doing, to have real instrumental skills, to be a good musician in those genres. They may not have known a hell of a lot, but they knew that there was something there which was worthy of respect. It wasn't their thing, and they did what they did.
Following that we had—don't forget—the pronouncements of the students of the late 1960s. In their colossal ignorance about everything, they pronounced themselves the best-educated generation in history; that attitude has continued since then. And you have now pop musicians who really don't know anything. They regard themselves as moral colossi who are going to tell the world how to live and what's wrong with everybody else via their immortal poetry, but their musical substance is very, very slim, and there is no recognition of any sort of higher forms of musical discourse or musical practice. That is a very a profound change, and it's something which, when you then see the pathetic spectacle of certain composers, you know who they are, aping pop behavior as a way of trying to grab an audience that expects not to be pandered to, but to be given entertainment that it can receive effortlessly, without paying very much attention to it. You see that we're in a very different place than we were at one time."
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