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I think that's right. It really IS a bit different for music, particularly vocal music. However, I still think that music, even music written from a hateful place IS music. The question is then, IS music always art? I don't know if I can really say.I don't think its particularly true in art (painting, sculpture) per se,
But I DO feel that it's very true for music.
"Music if it be the food of love then play on..."
I feel you get back what you put into it.
If your mental antenna is broadcasting hate & bad vibes, don't be shocked if hate and bad vibes get reflected back your way.
Conversely as well....
But then again, what's entertainment for one person could very well be art to another. And b0b's art vs craft idea is also very interesting. Another angle I hadn't considered before.I think one needs to distinguish between entertainment and art. Sometimes there's a large intersection, and sometimes there isn't.
Ben Jones wrote: But what about music? How bout a really faithful cover song? art? Is the art the performance? Is it the subtle difference if any added to the original?
I am sure there are much more extreme examples in music. I have a friend, a Julliard graduate and brilliant musician and composer...his last project was to take commerically available cd's from mainstream artists, copy the cd, faithfully reproduce the artwork, repackage and sell them. You buying the cd completed the artwork. This was his "music" and his "art"...he considered it a commentary on and a challenge to questions of ownership, distribution and more importantly a subverting of the music industries attempts to regulate those things (least i think that was his intent). I beleive he is now in the middle of some rather nasty lawsuits as you might imagine. I can no longer find his myspace page with the examples of his "work"...i think they pulled the plug on him.
And Segovia wasn't alone. There was a player of a more modern instrument who played alot of backup on other people's compositions and alot of cover stuff. Very few original compositions. His name was Jerry something or other.....It ain't what ya do. It's the way that ya do it.
Let's forbid the next generation to be kind, polite and generous.If you want anything done right, you either have to do it yourself or forbid your teenaged children to do it.
This is appropriation, a valid art form that has been around for a while and one that I personally despise. Some of the other examples are photographing another artist's photographs, reproducing them in large scale and selling them for large prices. If I was the original photographer, I would want to chop off their hands.I am sure there are much more extreme examples in music. I have a friend, a Julliard graduate and brilliant musician and composer...his last project was to take commerically available cd's from mainstream artists, copy the cd, faithfully reproduce the artwork, repackage and sell them. You buying the cd completed the artwork. This was his "music" and his "art"...he considered it a commentary on and a challenge to questions of ownership, distribution and more importantly a subverting of the music industries attempts to regulate those things (least i think that was his intent).
ALOT of modern art isnt actually made by the artist.
What is "good" motivation? Anger, fear, or personal validation all come to mind as effective motivators.Is good motivation required for art to be art.
PG. A picture of a kitchen utensil is supposed to be a work of art?P Gleespen wrote:
I really would like to hear more about what YOU think Bill. It was your idea that got me thinking about this in the first place.
Ben put it well that this topic if it drifts to 'what is art?' will be endless and only an interesting exercise in tortured rhetoric.Bill Hatcher wrote:Think of Buddy Emmons playing and then think of the worst beginner steel player you ever heard. Are both of them artists??
A hunger artist?Edward Meisse wrote:Bill, Duchamp was an artist. Just not the kind most people wanted to think he was.
That's just me being inarticulate. What I mean is "positive" motivation, or maybe more accurately "positive intent".What is "good" motivation?
I agree with you about the cover band, Jack, but I've always considered you to be one of my favorite artists.Jack Francis wrote:I play in a band doing mostly cover songs...I don't think that I've EVER considered it to be art...
I make a part of my living drawing T-Shirt designs for folks and selling them T-Shirts...I don't consider what I do artistic...it's merely a way to make a buck.
Not that I would ever dream of calling myself an artist, but I have done quite a few jobs for TV commercials, including stuff that I couldn't stand listening to myself. It's a job, nothing else, but it beats working at a gas station and has made me more money in a couple of days work than one month worth of teaching. Sometimes you just got to make a living and forget about the 'art' stuff......b0b wrote:Okay, let's look at it this way: If an artist betrays his own feelings and instincts to produce a work for hire, is that work still art?
I think this question needs to be more specific to be answered, if it can even be answered at all. But I will generalize and take a stab at it, from the point of view that the idea is more integral to the "art" than the form.b0b wrote:Okay, let's look at it this way: If an artist betrays his own feelings and instincts to produce a work for hire, is that work still art?