|
Eclectic Bands
Articles, Stories, Reports, from the web:
Last updated 04 08 11
Eclectic Bands
Cape Town, Eclectic Bands Durban, Eclectic Bands
Pretoria, Eclectic Bands Johannesburg, Eclectic
Bands Gauteng, Eclectic Bands South Africa
What are Eclectic Bands:
The term 'eclectic' in the context of progressive
rock describes a summation of elements from various
musical sources, and the influences and career paths
of bands that take from a wide range of genres or
styles. While progressive music can be, in a larger
sense, eclectic, the 'Eclectic Prog' term is
specially meant to reference bands that trespass the
boundaries of established Progressive Rock genres or
that blend many influences.
Eclectic Prog combines hybrids of style and
diversity of theme, promoting many elements from
different sources. The Eclectic category recognizes
bands that evolved markedly over their career (in a
progressive, evolutionary way), or have a plural
style without a clear referential core.
The basic features lie within the music's variety,
rich influences, art tendencies and classic prog
rock elements.
Eclectic Bands
Even
from a musicological point of view, any account of
rock has to start with its eclecticism. Beginning
with the mix of country and blues that comprised
rock and roll (rock’s first incarnation), rock has
been essentially a hybrid form. African American
musics were at the centre of this mix, but rock
resulted from what white musicians, with their own
folk histories and pop conventions, did with African
American music—and with issues of race and race
relations.
Today’s
musical eclecticism has acquired a standard
explanation that goes something like this: through
recordings, today’s composers are exposed from the
time they are young to an extraordinarily wide
variety of music; as grown-ups, they naturally
compose music inspired by the music they have
enjoyed—regardless of the genre. But that
explanation isn’t entirely satisfactory. After all,
recordings may provide access, but why would they
confer the confidence to compose in an unfamiliar
genre?
A fuller explanation requires understanding that
recordings do not just provide listeners with
expanded access to music: they confer
“classicalness” onto whatever music they contain.
Any documentation of a work of art allows it to be
experienced outside the environment from which it
came. We refer to this artistic autonomy whenever we
call something a “classic” or “classical.”
Arguably the most distinctive characteristic of
western classical music is its having long been
documented through musical notation. For centuries
it has had a claim on artistic autonomy, and this
claim allowed the music to become a model, something
one should (broadly speaking) imitate. In the
twentieth century, recording technology gave non- or
semi-notated music the means to become documented.
Acquiring the prestige of artistic autonomy became a
possibility. Popular and world musics seemed more
classical, more legitimate.
Eclectic Bands

This has made it easier for individuals and
institutions of musical authority to embrace musical
diversity. In the United States, no non-specialized
primary or secondary school drills its students in
classical music, and colleges increasingly look for
faculty with experience in popular and world music.
(This year, Yale University Press published The
Anthology of Rap and two biographies of Bob Dylan.)
In addition, younger classical composers have been
influenced by various international strands of
electronica and American minimalism, a movement that
began as a reaction to the atonal current of
classical music and took inspiration from world
music and modal jazz. When Elvis Costello can get a
commission from the Danish Royal Opera, and
musicians specializing in everything from
traditional Japanese music to Weimar-era cabaret
take the stages of Carnegie Hall, western classical
music clearly has less of a grip on high culture
than it once had.
Today’s musical eclecticism also stems from the
enormous impact of the computer. Whether they’re
writing a song, symphony, or string quartet,
composers now hear their music as electronic music,
thanks to playback features. Naturally, this
experience influences taste. Surely the fact that
computers can barely reproduce vibrato reinforces
contemporary composers’ significant (though
certainly not total) prejudice against vibrato. As
for rhythm, a computer doesn’t lose count or run out
of breath, and this has clearly encouraged
contemporary composers’ love for prolonged, driving
rhythmic phrases called ostinatos. Vibrato-less
singing style and rhythmic ostinatos are in fact two
hallmarks of much music outside the western
classical tradition.
Eclectic Bands
But the
use of computers goes beyond notation. Composers
from classical backgrounds have been finding it
easier to “plug in” and manipulate live signals
electronically. More classical composers are making
the same crossing their mainstream popular peers
took decades ago: the transition from acoustic to
electronic sound production. The wide availability
of such programs as GarageBand and music schools’
growing attention to electronic music have created
an era where electronic music techniques are now
part of a composer’s toolkit.
Unsurprisingly, today’s music scene features
amplified new music ensembles that sometimes even
call themselves “bands.” New York-based groups like
Zs, Anti-Social Music, Fireworks, and Victoire are
the brainchildren of classically trained composers
who have embraced popular music and fused it with
twentieth-century classical techniques. They have a
lot in common with groups like the Kronos Quartet.
While the educational background of the musicians in
the quartet is classical, their musical endeavors
have led them to collaborate with musicians from
Azerbaijan, Romania, and Pakistan, creating hybrid
forms that challenge the notion of a ghettoized
“world music” genre.
Indeed, the more one dives into today’s music scene,
the more uncomfortable one finds oneself with
distinctions like “classical,” “popular,” and so
forth. Generic labels seem to apply to less and less
music, and easily-labeled sounds risk being
perceived as anachronistic or obscure.
Multi-movement symphonies and arena rock risk the
former, just as atonal string quartets and insular
traditional music the word over risk the latter.
Eclectic Bands

|
|


|