MW gets it wrong I'm afraid. You see DS is being specific about the mystery in his music theater crime work. The work is designed to be incomprehensible, except for the title and the editorial back story--this is about a "true" story. The criminals motivation is the mystery and expressed in an incomprehensible way. Rather fitting actually. So in that case it means there is no ambiguity at all but very specific mystery pertaining to crime stories. The annoying thing is that DS does not mention this at all. He frames his post to make the most obvious and mundane things seem incredible.
“..but the exact idea being expressed can only be conveyed through the supplied text…” Phil Fried says: June 21, 2011
A consideration in such an enterprise is this; do you present experimentalist works by musical examples or by the composers? Why I ask is this: what was the composers commitment to experimental music over their life time? There seems a wide range on this. Were they consistent? Did they compose a work or two in the genre yet mostly compose mainstream work? How did that work? What was their motivation for their experiments? Did they codify the work of others, did they invent or did they have an idea that caused others to listen?
By the way I wonder if Virgil Thomson’s opera fit in here. Phil Fried says: June 23, 2011
Phil Fried says: June 16, 2011
“What if… revolutionary creators of theater and music worked together to create new performance works outside of the traditional rules of “musical theater” and “opera”?
But David these folks believe that this is exactly what they are doing right now. Further the focus on musical accessibility even among folks like Nautilus Music-Theatre means that one tradition merely replaces another. say Phil Fried: June 16, 2011
Phil Fried, no sonic prejudice
“Boy, you guys are all sunshine and light.” Phil Fried says: June 17, 2011
David. There are those who accept the system as it is and those who don’t. Just because I chose to struggle against the currents of today’s art does not mean I refuse sunshine and light.
Rather I see the breaking dawn ahead.
Lovely view
Phil Fried, no sonic prejudice