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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml to c/comradeship@lemmygrad.ml

I just need to do some venting because i have been trying to get more educated lately about various forms of art throughout history and the more i read the more angry i get with the way the entire subject is treated from such a Eurocentric and frankly often outright racist perspective.

And this is not just a problem in the West, throughout the world somehow Europeans have managed to brainwash the entire rest of the world into idolizing their art, their music, their culture and putting it on some kind of pedestal as this sort of gold standard. Why the fuck do parents in Asia for instance so often send their kids to learn to play European classical music instead of the music of their own countries? Why is it that when you read about the "greatest composers of all time" they are all some pasty Euro fuckers, most of them making art primarily for the consumption of wealthy aristocrat patrons?

As if other cultures weren't also making various forms of art for thousands of years - and many of them were no less sophisticated. (And mind you even in Europe the representation exludes the art of the lower classes, who certainly had their own music and culture that was distinct from that of the upper classes.) For once i'd like to see an African, Middle Eastern or Asian painter, writer, or composer of music traditional to their own regions get praised and elevated to the same level of respect, admiration and universal recognition as the European "classics". Why do we constantly have to put up with this big circlejerk about how "great" some toffs in wigs were for writing music that in large part only the rich could afford to have played for them because it required an entire orchestra with an absurd amount of performers?

Of course i know the answer to these rhetorical questions, it's because the dominant culture in any society tends to be the culture of the ruling class. I understand this but it still pisses me off how inescapable European upper class culture is. One of the tasks ahead of us when the revolution comes will have to be the dismantling of the centuries of accumulated cultural hegemony of the Euro bourgeoisie. The Soviets were right to encourage socialist realism as a radical departure with the bourgeois culture of the capitalist system. We need a global cultural revolution.

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[-] UlyssesT@hexbear.net 10 points 1 year ago

RETVRN to tacky statues that were commissioned by rich assholes centuries ago that were tacky when they were commissioned. lmayo

[-] AssortedBiscuits@hexbear.net 7 points 1 year ago

Imagine soyfacing over this overrated crap instead of this

[-] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 1 year ago

Most of "Western" culture only exists because it was preserved by Arabs throughout the Middle Ages when most of the ancient Greek and Roman texts that remained in Europe were destroyed.

[-] AlbigensianGhoul@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Even the byzantines hated their "fellow westerners" who came over, took their capital and declared themselves the "actual Roman empire" in Latin while the actual Romans resisted their occupation. On side note even studying the story of Math you get this fun phenomenon where a bunch of Mediterranean mathematicians develop a lot of cool stuff, then a 1000 years of silence (because Europe did nothing of value) and then suddenly after the Crusades they mysteriously "discover" a whole lot more math that sounds awfully similar to Arabic and Indian concepts. It usually goes Pytagoras -> Zeno -> Archymedes -> ?????? -> Euler

[-] WageSlave@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 1 year ago

Thanks for mentioning this. Though I think it is well known that Arabic and Indian societies were ahead of Europe with regards to mathematics for a long time, I have never thought about the lack of famous mathematicians outside of Europe. That being said, any serious mathematician would say that being a great mathematician is just as much as being at the right place at the right time as a being a genius. It is sad that these names are, if not lost to history, at least not well known, but praising any name of a discipline that builds on previous works in the way mathematics does is a little wrong in the first place. Even the dickhead Newton admitted as much with the "shoulders of giants" comment with regards to himself.

[-] urshanabi@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 year ago

Islamic Golden Era!

[-] bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 1 year ago

I especially hate how regional culture is denigrated as "corriente" (common but as an insult), or even worse as "no culture". While someone that consumes european/american stuff is a "cultured" person, so fucking stupid.

[-] Pseudoplatanus22@hexbear.net 4 points 1 year ago

You are correct to be angry. Most cultures have their own musical canon, but years of European colonialism (and the racist mindset that was born from it) convinced basically the entire world that Western classical music was the only shit that mattered. Vid rel.

[-] cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 1 year ago

It's one thing for Europeans to think that way, i expect it of them, the racism and the cultural superiority complex, but what makes me really mad is when non-Europeans internalize that shit, looking down on and denigrating their own cultures while idolizing and worshiping the culture of the colonizers. And it's not just the arts, i mean worshiping in the literal sense too. So many colonized peoples have literally adopted even the religion of the colonizers, and now hold on to it as an integral part of their own identity even though it was forced on their ancestors by the sword, with mass genocide, torture and brainwashing camps (the so called "mission schools"). I mean just think about how twisted it is that in the US the overwhelming majority of the descendants of slaves abducted from Africa now worship the god of the slavers...

[-] ksdhf@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 year ago

This got me thinking about 2 videos related to western eurocentrism in art:

Microtones: the lost art of western music

The white washing of Greek and Roman statues

[-] swiftessay@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 1 year ago

There are two areas that make me very angry in this debate: music and African art.

In music there’s this completely ridiculous myth that popular music is based and influenced primarily by the harmonic and melodic language of Western Classical music(*). That it is somehow a popularization and bastardization of this “highest peak” of achievement of that extended Europe.

This is completely absurd!!!

First of all, even if you consider only the music traditionally produced in Western Europe and its area of cultural hegemony, what we call Western Classical music is a ridiculously thin and restricted strip even of this whole.

Western Classical Music is a tradition that encompass the techniques, conceptualizations, rules, styles, etc, etc, that governed how musicians produced the music for the use of the European elites at first and then the elites of the areas were European culture was transplanted to through colonialism. It started as the music for the Church and Nobility, that tradition was adopted for the music of the Bourgeoisie and later was adopted for the music of the bourgeois intellectual and cultural elites.

This elitist tradition is not representative AT ALL of the whole of the music produced even within Europe!!! Popular and folk music within Europe have their own traditions that are independent of and conversant with the music of the elites. There is a dialogue between the two, but they are not confused traditions. There are things that are valid, good and acceptable for one that is out of character and dislocated in the other in both directions.

To give a single example, Common Practice music (the Tonal period, lets say, from Monteverdi to Tchaikovsky), counter-melodies moving in parallel intervals, specially in fifths, were considered very bad practice (**). For the specific style of counterpoint they wanted to make it causes lines to blend too much instead of creating the effect of polyphony, of simultaneous and independent voices. But it was tremendously common in European folk music where that specific thing about counterpoint wasn't a concern!!!! See? A cardinal, very important rule in one tradition was regularly broken in a concurrent tradition that was used by other people in the same place!

Second of all our current contemporary popular music has an overwhelmingly bigger influence from sources that are not European and sources that are not the music of the European elite. Most music that is listened by young people in the USA/Europe/so-called Western sphere of cultural influence has three sources:

  1. The harmony and melody of European popular music. Yes, this have interplayed and dialogued with the so-called classical musical, but it's not identical with it. And it have, beyond it's own particular traditions, the influence of surrounding areas, since popular music tend to be less insular about that. See for example how much of Iberian, French and Italian popular musics were influenced by Northern African, West Asian music and Mediterranean sources in general.

  2. The harmony and melody of Blues and the Jazz, and with them a whole host of harmonic and melodic traditions both from African origin and indigenously developed in the Americas by the enslaved Africans and their descendants.

  3. The harmony and melody of the indigenous cultures of America, which is an understudied and incredibly neglected part of the mix, which is there if you know were to look.

But you noticed there's one thing I haven't mentioned so far which is fucking RHYTHM? Which is that one thing that we all know that Europeans simply don't have? Hahahahah. I'm kidding, of course, but this is super important.

I've been repeatedly using the term "harmony and melody" above because that's what "Western Classical Music" is all about. It's very little about rhythm. But our popular music is incredibly rhythmic! Where does it come from? It comes from all over the place, including even Europe, but the most important rhythmic influence in a lot of our popular music is West African drums. Rock, Jazz, Blues, Funk, Hip Hop, Drum & Bass, R&B, Soul, Latin music, etc, etc, I could list a thousand genres.

Whenever you see a Metal drummer do a cool drumroll, he's drinking from this source. Whenever you move your body to the "bop bopbop-bop bopbop-bop bopbop-bop" in Shape Of You by freaking Ed Sheeran, you're listening to something that was brought to our shared culture by enslaved African people.

Of course it's not the only source. The boring "one-two-THREE-four boom-BOP-boom-BOP-boom-BOP" you hear below the cool stuff is kind of European. Hahahaha. But the rich rhythmic layer on the music we REALLY spend most of our time listening too definitely didn't come from freaking Bach or Mozart.

And it doesn't stop there. Have you ever listened to popular harmonies? They are completely outside the language of classical music! It owes a lot more to other traditions. Hell, the most basic rock-and-roll harmony template sometimes resolves a dominant chord to another dominant chord!!! Common Practice theoreticians would be absolutely flabbergasted with that.

That ridiculous myth of Western Classical Music as the pinnacle of music achievement from which all our current music flows from as corruption and degeneration is simply cultural colonialism. It's bullshit. It's wrong and pernicious.

I say: long live the Africans who didn't forget how to play their drums and beautiful harmonies even after being kidnapped, enslaved and brutalized, and forcefully transplanted from their home. Long live the indigenous peoples of America, who didn't forget how to play their flutes and drums even after being murdered, decimated, raped and brutally expropriated. Long live the working class who came from all over the world to the Americas, frequently forced by economic oppression, war and exploitation, and brought with them their horns, guitars and voices. And long live the working people's of the whole world who everyday contribute their voices to complex tapestry of musical culture who persists despite cultural colonialism. The people who instead of passively consuming the colonial culture, ingest what's available, digest it, mix with what they know and out spits back something of their own.

(*) Or “concert music”, “art music”, “erudite music”, “common practice music” or whatever other ridiculous and pompous name we give to that thing. You know what I’m talking about – that shared musical tradition that includes from late medieval European church music up until the New Music movement passing through the Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Modern, etc, etc. I know people complain when we call it Classical Music, because the classical period is a specific period, but if you force me I will call it “Music of the European Ruling Class”.

(**) That changed later, but only in the late Romantic and early Modern period.

[-] swiftessay@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I invite you all to challenge your ears with this: https://youtu.be/u1rul1oK6VA?t=540 (specifically this part starting at 9:00 and ending 10:30). See how foreign yet how familiar it sounds.

[-] ksdhf@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 1 year ago

This is just my opinion but I find ballet boring. I'd rather watch Indian dances in bollywood movies. It looks way more difficult and interesting, I wish I realised this earlier.

[-] DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 year ago

Ballet is still quite difficult too, but I agree. Bollywood dancers at least look like they're having a good time.

[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 2 points 1 year ago

I get so sick of "orchestral soundtrack" being like the apparent goal of all media too.

[-] bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Damn im a cringe hans zimmer enjoyer 😔 but it really is weird how "science" movies only use classical/orchestral music

[-] Shrike502@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

What would you replace it with?

[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago

With whatever musical style suited the artistic vision of the product.

[-] Shrike502@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Which one would you personally pick? Any movie with an orchestral soundtrack, your choice

[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 5 points 1 year ago

All the Michael Bay Transformers movies should have had a rad 90s rave ost party-blob

[-] cayde6ml@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 1 year ago

The Michael Bay Transformers movies are a guilty pleasure of my Girl and I

[-] Beam@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 year ago

BRO THAT WOULD HONESTLY BE SO COOL

[-] cayde6ml@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Would have been sick AF

[-] ChrisLicht@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago

I once read Tom Shales comment that aliens always seem to travel with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

[-] polskilumalo@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

All of the brown nosing for western european culture drives me nuts, I hate it and if you were living in Poland you would completely understand.

We try to equate our artists, poets, writers, composers and painters who were either great on their own, or mediocre mimics of western artists, with those same western artists themselves.

We like to think of ourselves as "part of the gang" but really we're just that "extra friend" that wasn't invited, gets constantly bullied and for some fucking reason still sticks around.

Give me a name of Polish artist and one of their works from the 19th or 20th century. Before PRL of course. Please do.

No one outside of Poland knows or cares to know them.

And nowadays Socialist Realism gets demonized to hell and back, called a "state mandated totalitarianism" or "russification".

Yeah and no one bats an eye or cries for Americanization the racist fucks. Recently I've heard on the radio of a system called "Child Alert", and I'm not translating anything here. That's what it was called, not "Alarm dziecięcy". "Child alert".

If that was written in russian they would be flinging shit, pissing their pants and crying about the death of Polish culture and language.

I hate this shithole, it's culture of being a western brownnoser must be bulldozed and ruthlessly suppresed. Sociailist Poland must be it's own thing, seperate from this bullshit, and for that to happen...

America must fall.

EDIT: Okay. So maybe I was a bit wrong. As the comments replying to me seem to be contradictory to the statement that no one knows Polish artists lmao

I should have [he/him/debil] pronouns to be honest xD

[-] muad_dibber@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Poland does have the greatest piano composer of all-time: Chopin.

edit: oops I see he was mentioned below.

[-] Pseudoplatanus22@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Henryk Górecki, Symphony of Sorrowful Songs

Krzysztof Penderecki, Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima

Chopin, various

[-] polskilumalo@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

ANO KURWA JEGO MAĆ, JA NAWET ICH NIE ZNAM XDDDDDDDD

Except for Chopin of course xdd

[-] urshanabi@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Zdzislaw Beksinski would count? His work is intoxicating, it places me into a trance whenever I look at it. I would love to go to Poland and see his works in person!

[-] Shrike502@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Give me a name of Polish artist and one of their works from the 19th or 20th century. Before PRL of course

Do writers count?

[-] ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Jan Matejko?

His painting “Stańczyk” is very famous among western art circles. He is commonly listed alongside Rembrandt as both being masters of shadows and emotional oil scenes.

[-] polskilumalo@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Ah fuck I'm getting disproven by more comments. Okay, yeah I forgot about Matejko and the Stańczyk. His paintings are beatiful and his imaginings of our Kings have been the bases for how they are portrayed on currency.

And yes, the stańczyk is quite the meme nowadays. We should turn it into an emote.

[-] Shrike502@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

I actually didn't know/forgot the name of the fellow, but instantly recognized some of the paintings upon looking up

[-] polskilumalo@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, go ahead. If you have one good for you, makes me happy anyone gets recognized outside of here.

[-] ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Stanisław Lem Is a more contemporary author, but his work with Sci-Fi and futurism has been legendary and has influenced the entire genre significantly.

He anticipated things such as of virtual reality, artificial intelligence, and created ideas such as human autoevolution, and the creation of artificial worlds.

[-] muad_dibber@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 year ago

Absolutely incredible writer. Solaris is especially fantastic, but the invincible is also good.

[-] urshanabi@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

He's legendary. I'm reading Summa Technologiae atm, wholeheartedly recommend it. Here's a cool quote:

"This would suggest that there is no such thing as transhistorical morality. Phenomena differ when it comes to the scale of their duration, but eventually even mountain ranges collapse and turn into sand because this is the way the world is. Man, a transient creature, keenly uses the concept of eternity. Certain spiritual goods, great artworks, or moral systems are depicted as eternal. Yet let us not delude ourselves: they are all mortal. We are not talking about replacing order with chaos or inner necessity with randomness. Morality changes slowly, but it does change, which is why the greater the temporal separation between two moral codes is, the more difficult it is to compare them. We are close to the Sumerians, yet the morality of the people from the Levallois culture would terrify us." - Chapter 2, Summa Technologiae

Another...

"And thus a Monte Carlo–type hypothesis of the cosmic roulette—which is a naïve methodological extension of thinking based on the knowledge of extremely simple mechanisms—is replaced by a theory of “cosmic panevolutionism.” The latter transforms us from beings condemned to wait passively for an arrival of some extremely rare circumstances into designers capable of making choices from among the staggering overabundance of possibilities. Those possibilities are contained in the so far rather general instructions for building self-organizing systems of ever increasing degrees of complexity. What the frequency of the cosmic occurrence of these “parabiological evolutions” postulated previously is, and whether they actually culminate in the emergence of what our human understanding calls “psyche,” is a different matter. But this is a subject for a separate discussion, one that would require us to draw on an extensive assembly of facts from the field of astrophysical observation.” - Chapter 2, Summa Technologiae

[-] Che_Donkey@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Ooooo! A place to put my favorite painting!

The Reply of the Zaporozhian Cossacks to Sultan Mahmoud IV

https://www.wikiart.org/en/ilya-repin/the-reply-of-the-zaporozhian-cossacks-to-sultan-mahmoud-iv-1891

[-] Che_Donkey@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

"O Sultan, Turkish devil and damned devil’s kith and kin, assistant to Lucifer himself. What the Devil kind of knight are thou, that canst not slay a hedgehog with your naked arse? The devil shits, and your army eats. Thou shalt not, thou son of a removed, make subjects of Christian sons; we have no fear of your army, by land and by sea we will battle with thee. Fuck thy mother.

Thou Babylonian scullion, Macedonian wheelwright, brewer of Jerusalem, goat-fucker of Alexandria, swineherd of Greater and Lesser Egypt, pig of Armenia, Podolian thief, catamite of Tartary, hangman of Kamyanets, and fool of all the world and underworld, an idiot before God, grandson of the Serpent, and the crick in our dick. Pig’s snout, mare’s arse, slaughterhouse cur, unchristened brow, screw thine own mother!

So the Zaporozhians declare you to be a lowlife. You won’t even be herding pigs for Christians. Now we’ll conclude, for we don’t know the date and don’t own a calendar; the moon’s in the sky, the year with the Lord, the day’s the same over here as it is over there; for this kiss our arse!"

– Koshovyi otaman Ivan Sirko, and the entire Zaporozhian Host.

[-] bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 1 year ago

i love realism especially this kind where there are lots of people in the picture chilling.

this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2023
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