CZ Talk:Music Workgroup: Difference between revisions

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:::Since there hasn't been much public discussion about music articles on CZ yet, it's probably good to open it up.  The most important point I see lacking in most WP articles on composers and especially individual pieces is discussion of style and analysis.  For most 20th c. composers, analysis will need to wait until Citizendium has a fair use policy in place for images (the images would likely be free creations, but the music depicted therein is still under copyright).  And in some cases, WP has misapplied their "no original research" policy to remove unpublished analyses which aren't really research at all.  (Saying that a certain passage is in G-minor or a certain chord is V7 is about as much research as looking at a sentence such as "Out damn spot!" and noting that "spot" is a noun and the sentence is an imperative). [[User:Michael Scott Cuthbert|Michael Scott Cuthbert]] 22:03, 7 August 2007 (CDT)
:::Since there hasn't been much public discussion about music articles on CZ yet, it's probably good to open it up.  The most important point I see lacking in most WP articles on composers and especially individual pieces is discussion of style and analysis.  For most 20th c. composers, analysis will need to wait until Citizendium has a fair use policy in place for images (the images would likely be free creations, but the music depicted therein is still under copyright).  And in some cases, WP has misapplied their "no original research" policy to remove unpublished analyses which aren't really research at all.  (Saying that a certain passage is in G-minor or a certain chord is V7 is about as much research as looking at a sentence such as "Out damn spot!" and noting that "spot" is a noun and the sentence is an imperative). [[User:Michael Scott Cuthbert|Michael Scott Cuthbert]] 22:03, 7 August 2007 (CDT)


I have no problem with separate groups but do wonder whether the present list of categories is the best we could have. How would an Indian, for example, react to seeing what s/he regards as high art music somewhere alongside Grunge? It might be better to have regions at the top level and sub-classify with as many levels as required to cover countries/ethnic groups/genres. This would leave much of the present classification as it is, but shift non-Western musics into categories of their own. [[User:Christopher Evans]] 15 November 2007
I have no problem with separate groups but do wonder whether the present list of categories is the best we could have. How would an Indian, for example, react to seeing what s/he regards as high art music somewhere alongside Grunge? It might be better to have regions at the top level and sub-classify with as many levels as required to cover countries/ethnic groups/genres. This would leave much of the present classification as it is, but shift non-Western musics into categories of their own. [[User:C Christopher Evans]] 15 November 2007


==Editorial guidelines?==
==Editorial guidelines?==

Revision as of 07:00, 15 November 2007

Based on the experience on WP and elsewhere, I think that one of the first things we should do is sub-divide the Music Workgroup's "to-do" list into at least popular and classical, or popular, classical, and world. There are few people who are experts in more than one of these fields. This would help us figure out better what the most needed articles are.

I also think that most of the articles we currently have on the list tend to have pretty good WP articles, so there is less incentive to write an article here. Where WP tends to have awful music articles are those that cover the history of a genre or style. Those tend to be the articles where every anonymous editor adds his or her two cents, where every obvious assertion needs to have a footnote (hypothetical Baroque Music ex.: "Bach was an important baroque composer, according to an article in Newsweek 2005"), and otherwise where Wikipedia's policies tend to lead to bad writing. So I'll suggest that those larger history sections be high on the to-do list. Michael Scott Cuthbert 09:19, 7 August 2007 (CDT)

Hey Myke! Welcome to CZ! :-) Yes, I totally agree with what you suggest. Let's split the Workgroup and focus on articles that cover genres or styles. Matthias Röder 10:00, 7 August 2007 (CDT)

This is entirely possible. Please be sure to put it in the list of suggested new workgroups, linkedfrom CZ:Workgroups. --Larry Sanger 10:33, 7 August 2007 (CDT)

But would they be new workgroups, or a different class of workgroup under the umbrella of the music workgroup? Clearly the biology workgroup will need to go this route too. Chris Day (talk) 10:39, 7 August 2007 (CDT)
I guess they would be sub workgroups. Matthias Röder 10:40, 7 August 2007 (CDT)
I don't think they need to be at this point -- there's not enough activity yet and there are few enough contributors and editors that I can still be of help on popular music articles, and vice-versa with popular music editors. But I've seen from WP and academia that the audiences for classical and popular music are so different that there's unlikely to be much overlap in policy (on terminology, use of notation, etc.) between the two. And trying to decide what's more important to work on, Beethoven or Bruce Springsteen is unlikely to build consensus or community.
Since there hasn't been much public discussion about music articles on CZ yet, it's probably good to open it up. The most important point I see lacking in most WP articles on composers and especially individual pieces is discussion of style and analysis. For most 20th c. composers, analysis will need to wait until Citizendium has a fair use policy in place for images (the images would likely be free creations, but the music depicted therein is still under copyright). And in some cases, WP has misapplied their "no original research" policy to remove unpublished analyses which aren't really research at all. (Saying that a certain passage is in G-minor or a certain chord is V7 is about as much research as looking at a sentence such as "Out damn spot!" and noting that "spot" is a noun and the sentence is an imperative). Michael Scott Cuthbert 22:03, 7 August 2007 (CDT)

I have no problem with separate groups but do wonder whether the present list of categories is the best we could have. How would an Indian, for example, react to seeing what s/he regards as high art music somewhere alongside Grunge? It might be better to have regions at the top level and sub-classify with as many levels as required to cover countries/ethnic groups/genres. This would leave much of the present classification as it is, but shift non-Western musics into categories of their own. User:C Christopher Evans 15 November 2007

Editorial guidelines?

Dear colleagues, I was wondering if we have set up any editorial guidelines for music articles yet? If we did, where can I find them? If not, where should I start a discussion about this important topic? In the forum? Or on the workgroup homepage? Thanks! Matthias Röder 10:48, 9 August 2007 (CDT)

Articles on topics 1900-1960 forthcoming

For the second year in a row, my M.I.T. students in the seminar on music 1900-1960 are writing Wiki encyclopedia articles on topics in music from that period (mostly pieces or composers). This year, I'm giving them the option of posting either to Wikipedia or Citizendium. We'll we working in a sandbox on Wikipedia: [1], but I hope that some of the students will choose to post here. I think CZ will be an especially attractive option for students writing about pieces which already have WP articles but which are not particularly well-written (no names mentioned here, but there are several on that list). I ask the Music Workgroup + CZ in general's patience as we work through any kinks in the process. Best, Michael Scott Cuthbert 15:21, 30 August 2007 (CDT)

Blues

Although I have no books on Blues music to help me out, I'm going to start an article on this today. Being somewhat of an amateur fan, I rely on podcasts as it is very difficult to get my hands on Blues music here in Ireland. So in other words, help from someone in the Blues article would be very welcome! Denis Cavanagh 09:15, 2 September 2007 (CDT)

Great start! If you could get a hold of a recent book on blues (or even a more general survey of African-American popular music) from a local library, I think it's important that the general narrative be backed up by recent studies. I know for instance that popular notions of ragtime history don't always square with what ragtime historians are finding these days, so it's good to have a few references to be sure that we're on the right track. Best, Michael Scott Cuthbert 12:18, 3 September 2007 (CDT)

Hi Michael:

Fully aware of that! I will take a look at the music section of my library in college when I get back (Thats not till October) but until then, I'll not add much to it! Denis Cavanagh 13:04, 3 September 2007 (CDT)

Classical music

I changed the post-renaissance stylistic periods into a very simple set of 3 levels of structural development: early, late and post. This terminology is often used to describe romantic and modernist music and can also be partially applied to baroque music, classical-era music being by my opinion only separated from something akin to the idea of post-baroque by it's name.

I decided to keep the name romantic music, because i do not believe that the nineteenth century had a completely uniform musical tradition. With the traditionalists (orientated towards classicism) and the progressives (orientated towards romanticism), any article about classical-era music will encompass a lot about the nineteenth century as well. it might be better to discuss the ideas and musical language of these different style periods in there native time and environments and how they influenced much later traditions and also look at the possibility that both romantic and classical-era music strongly influenced existing composers decades after a period ended (Brahms and Chopin or Strauss and Shostakovich)

This also gives use more then enough reasons to write articles about classical music by centuryMicha van den Berg 12:57, 13 November 2007 (CST)