Ugh, I had a whole huge thing to post in reply to that, but even if it is how I really feel it sounds incredibly pretentious to say it all. I can't help but want to use what I've learned in music school every time I listen to music, but spouting it off all the time in front of you guys must get annoying.
I was going to go in to some spiel about how TDH writes good music, but when you confine yourself to a 6 minute format it doesn't matter how much artsy noodling you throw in between your chorus and verse, you're still writing "songs." And then I was going to say how much I still absolutely love that kind of music. And then I was going to say that I still wouldn't call it a "piece of music" compared to something, say, Beethoven would write. And then, even though I believed what I just said to be true, I still rolled my eyes at myself. And then I was going to mention how I love to listen to "songs" all day long because they're easier to listen to, and don't waste time getting their ideas out, and how I love patterns and knowing that the chorus is coming up again and wondering how it'll be a little different this time, and oh god my head is a complete mess sometimes.
I did have one coherent point to add, though, and it's this:
I'm of the belief that limitations are what truly bring creativity forward. I've experienced that first hand. I always find myself more creative when I just have my laptop and some cheap MIDI-based program like TabIt, as compared to when I have my entire music library and a MIDI keyboard at my fingertips. Something about actually having to use my imagination to hear what it's supposed to sound like, and/or battling against the program itself (being used to something being easier, and having to try harder to achieve similar results i.e.
CHALLENGING myself ) makes me more creative as a whole. Which makes perfect sense, right? Activating a part of the brain, and then tapping in to it. But yeah, limitations breed creativity, which is why I ... I guess "sympathized" with the Color Spectrum. I appreciated the challenge they put before themselves, to write 32 tracks in those confines.
But now for the obligatory, and somewhat vague theoretical nonsense to accompany it:
Spoiler for metaphorical theory psycho bable :
And also, you know, with all that music theory and history, and classical composers bending the rules, but doing so SLOWLY, always just slightly pushing the envelope but always constraining themselves to the social norms of music at the time whether they knew they were or not etc etc. You know, all that stuff about how music history as a whole is a story about filling up a box with ideas until it was full, and then trying to stuff MORE in, and then eventually getting a bigger box, filling THAT one up, and trying to stuff EVEN MORE in, and then getting a BIGGER box and repeating, and eventually saying "fuck the box" and all that. But even 12 tone music, which sounds like it has no rules, in fact has incredibly strict rules to follow. Creativity comes from being challenged, and you need limitations to be challenged.
I'm done here. I'm gonna go play Skyrim for the next 4 hours.