José Bowen: Beethoven the businessman
José Bowen is an accomplished musician and teacher who explores how technology has shaped the history of music. Full bio
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I thought of for this talk,
I am going to tell you the story,
for yourselves.
was that I would tell the story
literally from the beginning,
the first 10,000 years just sailed by.
if you want to make music,
instruments, those sorts of things.
we start to get a performing class,
who were really good at pounding rocks.
we're still basically doing this.
for the most part,
complicated instruments,
in the 18th century,
you had to go to a civic event,
making music live.
social interaction.
there was no record player.
you had to get out of the house.
no music in your house.
from the beginning,
together, these two disruptions.
in the 18th century,
that you could mass-produce cheaply.
that's not too expensive,
if the second disruption hadn't happened
how to do cheap music printing.
and the other kind of printing?
to distribute sheet music?
of the American Revolution,
the first time this happened,
when, all of a sudden,
I've got to go hear Mozart."
to actually go hear Mozart.
you didn't download Mozart.
at least not easily or cheaply.
in fact, there's a new market.
to actually go to London.
and mass-distributed,
and everybody else will play my music."
of music for everybody.
changes the global pyramid,
of composers and performers --
you're starting to see a theme.
for music delivery;
player, the gramophone, the player piano.
Rachmaninoff sheet music,
to the concert hall.
of recording device.
you're Doc Ross in Texas,
market, you've got it nailed.
there's this new thing called "radio."
and Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman.
has gone global,
and digital files and Garage Band,
all over again.
about these two guys.
are entrepreneurs.
are software designers.
on that piece of hardware over there.
if you have my piece of paper.
does it sound good?
they weren't very useful.
are software designers.
they also both live at a time
is changing very quickly.
old enough to remember,
back to Windows whatever,
and your love of Bill Gates,
software package came out,
he had this instrument up on top,
he doesn't have a piano that can do this.
do you want to get that piano?
have to adopt your technology.
your fastest, latest computer,
all the memory.
Beethoven a new piano.
he writes a piece that can do that.
Beethoven piano sonata,
and you've got a five-octave piano
latest technology last year.
piano sonata, and what happens?
the same relationship with his audience
smarter than Bill Gates.
his new Érard piano,
and he and uses all those extra notes.
and gives the concert?
he has in Vienna
on the piano. It's great.
has one of these latest things.
publishes piano sonatas
about Beethoven -- basically wrong.
for the popular market --
himself, but the piano sonatas --
in some part of Southern Italy,
disruptions in music technology?
and they really all worked the same way.
and the piano.
is: it redefines the product.
that you can then take home.
it becomes a digital file.
you've got to go listen to Bach;
and we've got composers,
manipulate music like you just saw.
Count Basie and Benny Goodman,
with your local band as much anymore.
listen to Benny Goodman some more."
that you didn't use to hear.
we take away some social interaction.
play Beethoven at home.
the sheet music, you can go home,
that do the same thing.
of social interaction.
experience each time.
I can play it slower.
the experience now.
the marketplace gets bigger.
in those music stores goes up.
you can't always tell what you want.
How do you pick?
that's not on the list:
to write fake Chopin
comforted by the fact,
who buy fake Chopin
you know what he does?
France, Germany and England
international copyright,
published on the same day.
are different on purpose,
to track who was a pirate.
that Sony thought of.
it makes it more global,
to have a marketing filter.
that's not always direct.
of disruptions in music technology
is the same as we see
because of these things called books.
novels without books.
in the record business.
only because that was the technology
gas or buying food;
points all over the place.
a different distribution system.
about what we're selling.
interaction is not going to go away.
here, as we've demonstrated today,
to know each other.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
José Bowen - Professor of musicJosé Bowen is an accomplished musician and teacher who explores how technology has shaped the history of music.
Why you should listen
In his over thirty-year career in music, José Bowen has appeared internationally with artists like Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, and Bobby McFerrin, written over one hundred scholarly articles, and composed a Pulitzer Prize nominated symphony. He began teaching at Stanford University in 1982 before moving on to University of Southampton, Georgetown University, Miami University, and Southern Methodist University -- where he now resides as Dean of the Meadows School of the Arts, and Algur H. Meadows Chair and Professor of Music.
José Bowen | Speaker | TED.com