Ferocious Aardvark wrote:Nice swerve. But no cigar. What you actually posited was that
"Andrew Lloyd Webber is not credible if you actually like musical theatre and consider it a credible art form."
Yes.
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:If all he could actually manage was one great tune per show, he'd still be writing great tunes, and so your claim that he has no credibility for anyone who likes musical theatre is seemingly based on nothing at all...
His influence and the manner in which he is hailed is out of all proportion to his talent and what he has written. I mentioned previously assorted composers who are not bad, but who are nowhere near as well known as the likes of Gershwin or R&H – partly because they might have penned a few good songs, but nowhere the numbers of many of R&H or others we've mentioned.
Take Jule Styne, for instance: there are a couple of stonkingly great show tunes in
Gypsy – but most of us, even if we knew them and knew who'd composed them (and even if we knew who the lyricist was), would be hard pressed to think of more from that show – let alone any other Styne vehicle.
Same with Meredith Wilson and
The Music Man, which probably has one stand-out tune that many people will know even without knowing where it came from (
Seventy-six Trombones).
But none of these got the equivalent of the state recognition that LW has received.
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:I have just taken a straw poll of three teen/early twenties who work here with some of the most outstanding tunes of R&H, Gershwin etc and sadly they've never heard of either most of the tunes or the composers. Maybe you meant they have entered the consciousness of old or ageing people? Oh and I doubt that sad state of affairs is limited to veterans like R&H, today's youth largely have no clue about any great music of the past, even references to the likes of Neil Young, Led Zeppelin, Lou Reed, John Lee Hooker, Leadbelly or Aretha Franklin are like as not to be met with "Who?" and those who've heard the name could never name a tune...
I also noted earlier, of the accusation of "snobbery": "... it will simply indicate just how far down the path of mediocrity and dross we have gone."
Dross and mediocrity – and an education system in which few young people are introduced to anything that's actually culturally demanding because it doesn't suit league tables and exams that are based on multiple choice.
I don't think it's remotely a question of something entering "the consciousness of old or ageing people" – there's not a person alive, and hasn't been for quite some time, who can remember Mozart when he was a mere child starting out (or even when he died), but the passing of something like 21 generations since his flesh-and-bone demise has not meant that his music has passed from consciousness.
And that hasn't meant that people listening to that music have not listened to and enjoyed (or not!) other music too; different types of music and bang-up-to-date music.
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:But I digress. ALW is no Gershwin, but your put-down that he is not credible for anyone who likes musical theatre is just plain wrong.
The way in which he is hailed and has been lauded and rewarded by the state is out of all proportion to his abilities. And it is not credible – or it certainly shouldn't be.