On Sat, Mar 24, 2018 at 6:03 AM, Vaughan McAlley <vaug...@mcalley.net.au>
wrote:

 If it isn’t hard, you can probably do better.

+1

>From my own (admittedly pretty out-there) view on how and what one
composes, I can also say that *not* having immediate acoustic feedback of
the work you're doing also serves a benefit. Two examples, from very
different cases:

I work with Lily occasionally on contract for a client whose musical skills
are amateur at best, and whose working process is exactly the process
Kieran and David alluded to above: he picks out tunes on piano, and then
writes down what he likes. This effectively limits his composition to 1)
what he can play (which is basically overly-sentimental pop music), and 2)
what his prior experience contains (which is the same, plus late-70s
academic modernism comprising essentially a rigid dodecaphony). In this
case, all he can do with composing is rehash what he already has, and it
makes for very uninteresting music.

Secondly, from my own experience as a composer, I stopped using any kind of
auditory aid or notation software to compose some 20 years ago, early in my
schooling. After that, it would very frequently occur that I would hear
results in performance that weren't at all what I had imagined when
writing. The instrumentation, the acoustics, the different ways living
musicians approach various techniques, etc., all contributed to my often
being confronted with "my" composition that turned out to sound completely
new to me. That learning experience was invaluable, as I gained knowledge
of how to write sounds I *hadn't* heard in advance.

For those who want to get really abstract about this, there's an excellent
book on æsthetics (as a branch of philosophy) by Christoph Menke, called
"Force" (in German as "Kraft") that explores the idea that we expand as
people, more specifically as artists,  through the direct encounter with
the unknown and unknowable, broadening our minds to incorporate
possibilities we hadn't anticipated. Very worthwhile reading.

For those reasons, I'd agree with the others here, that it's fundamentally
important that you spend the extra effort to separate the creation of the
music from its presentation. You need both skills, and you can't really
exercise the first one to its fullest if it's constrained by the latter.

(another personal anecdote from my schooling: I once had a fellow student
at music school who blithely declared, "I just don't write anything that I
can't notate easily in Finale." This was in the 90s, when Finale came on
floppies, and my horror at that statement has put me off using notation
software for my own scores ever since)

Cheers,

A
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