On 18 December 2012 08:48, Lorenzo Sutton <lorenzofsutton@email-addr-hidden> wrote:
> Cultural heritage is going to pieces in many places due to the fact that in
> the current (bank-driven) ultra-utilitarian society where culture and
> humanities are considered 'ephemeral',
If only that was true. Ephemeral things are not that easy to
monetize. And cultural heritage is such a spurious notion anyway - it
is about objects (by which I include musical scores) devoid of
context, and rather too much like taxidermy. It's also rather a new
concept. A favourite quote of mine from an article by Simon Emmerson
-
"We should not forget that the phrase avant-garde was first used by
Henri de Saint-Simon in
France (1825) at almost exactly the same time as Mendelssohn's
inauguration of the museum
culture in western concert music with the revival of Bach's Matthew
Passion (1829) - the past
and the future at once, western civilisation's triumphal claim to
conquest over all time, let
alone all space."
Best wishes,
Neil
-- Neil C Smith Artist : Technologist : Adviser http://neilcsmith.net Praxis LIVE - open-source, graphical environment for rapid development of intermedia performance tools, projections and interactive spaces - http://code.google.com/p/praxis OpenEye - specialist web solutions for the cultural, education, charitable and local government sectors - http://openeye.info _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Tue Dec 18 16:15:01 2012
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