This year, I've already talked about record primacy, structural paradigms, allusions, musical impressionism, and studio effects. While I am still noticing a lot of instruments that I had failed to notice previously, I'm also thinking about stuff that's way more complex than just instrumentation.
The thing is... I'm not sure what I should attribute this to. Last year, I gave myself a lot of musical prescriptions in which I would listen to particular albums or pieces daily, weekly, or monthly. That certainly made me more familiar with particular works, which would allow me not only to think about those pieces more deeply but also to compare elements of those particular pieces to other works. The post I recently wrote about Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 is an example of this. I noticed that it uses the same sort of parallel opening and ending as does the Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed (except, of course, that Beethoven used it earlier). Because I listened to Days of Future Passed every week last year, I noticed what the Moody Blues had done, so it was easier to see that once I encountered it somewhere else. I was already cognizant of that sort of paradigm.
Aside from all of that, I've been thinking about musical structures and studio effects and such without any referent because I've been putting more effort into making my own music. Because I've been thinking about how I should structure my songs and what sort of instrumentation I want to use and what sort of effect I want to have (both in the sense of what I want the listener to experience and what sort of studio techniques I want to use in order to achieve that), I've been paying more attention to how other musicians have done it so that I have something on which I can base my own ideas. I wrote a post about the stereo effects in Jefferson Airplane's After Bathing at Baxter's around the same time that I was thinking about how I could use stereo in different ways. I was predisposed to notice stereo effects because I'd been thinking about them before listening to that album.
Regardless of why I'm having more thoughts (and more in-depth thoughts) about music, I'm glad that I am. Not only is it an-other reason to love the music I already love, but it also has me thinking about music a lot more, which will hopefully make me a better musician.
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