ALL YOU EVER NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MUSIC HISTORYBy Prof. Lawrence Margeld, DDS Beethoven. Brahms. Borscht. Bachman Turner Overdrive. Belarus. Bomb Squad. Blacula. Ooh - Barracuda. If you are like most Americans, you stopped reading the above words at "Be-" and are now crumpled into the fetal position, crying about how stupid you are because you don't know music history. You are smart enough to realize how important such knowledge is; if you ever want to be invited to smart cocktail parties and mingle with bright young things and eventually see the underwear of graduates from all-women's colleges with trendy haircuts and laughter like a spring brook, you have to be able to tell Satie from "Sexy Sadie." But, of course, as you vainly brush at your offal-encrusted snout and genuflect before the modern god "teevee," you realize this specialized knowledge is so far out of your reach as to seem as unlikely as the sun suddenly becoming habitable. Don't kill yourself just yet, however. While you will admittedly never attain the level of expertise required to hold a conversation with even the dumbest European, you can learn just enough about music history to adequately get your fingers beneath the brassiere of a Mount Holyoke alumnae with relatively little pain on your part. This brief monograph - dashed off while I was in the Newark airport, waiting to be flown to a deliver a lecture in Budapest on how to get rich using e-mail about penis enlargement - should put you on the road to an upwardly mobile demographic of vaginal intercourse. In the Beginning Was the LuteThe first thing you have to understand is that you will never be called upon to know anything about music that predates Protestantism, so forget about it. The Era of Composers The most important composers are Bach (pronounced Batch), Beethoven, and Mozart. They wrote songs from roughly the time it was shocking to be Protestant to the time when people started calling themselves Americans. They were all Germans, and frustratingly most of their songs are written in German. You don't listen to classical music for the words, though, which are pretty dumb. Here are some words from Beethoven's 9th Symphony to illustrate my point: "Joy all creatures drink / At nature's bosoms / All, Just and Unjust / Follow her rose-petalled path / Kisses she gave, and Wine / That's right / I'm talking 'bout kisses sweeter than wi-hine." Pretty bad, and worse when you consider that it's actually supposed to be in German.
Classical Music, From Then to When This era is known as the "golden age" of music. It was when such important works as Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, and Rock Me Amadeus were written (or "composed"). The primary form of music was the symphony, which was a long piece written for many instruments. Music historians have today established beyond a doubt that these were crude attempts to keep down the unemployment rate, as there is no earthly reason to have three harpsichordists playing at once. Eventually, though (and by "eventually," I mean "during the 19th century"), this happy time came to an end, as more and more margraves were being killed by peasants, and the Industrial Revolution eliminated the need for massive orchestras. A new breed of composer arose, consisting of Russians, Italians and even Frenchmen. They wrote loud, crude, simplistic symphonies that were ideally to suited to be played while one country's army was fighting another country's army. Out went the harpsichordists and in came the kettle drum players. These new composers also invented opera, a perverse form of musical acting where people stand around and sing about sex but never take their clothes off. The greatest operas were written by Italians, including Puccini and Vivaldi. They tended to write operas about sad clowns and peasants who commit suicide. Le Musique Moderne End - End of Music * Ladies do not write or play music, you fool. |
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
History of Music
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**and I am no lady.
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