
Satie's Music Will Always Be Popular. But Will We Ever Understand It?
Most likely, you will have heard his 'Gymnopédie No. 1': a swaying foundation of chords that seem to step forward yet stay in place, somehow both independent of and supporting an instantly alluring melody.
This piece's popularity transcends genre, exemplifying the composer Virgil Thomson's idea that Satie is the only composer 'whose works can be enjoyed and appreciated without any knowledge of the history of music.'
But Satie, while one of the most popular composers, is also one of the most enigmatic. He was a mystery to many during his lifetime and, a century after his death, remains elusive: a house of mirrors full of tricks, distortions and dead ends.
The more you try to understand Satie, the more difficult it becomes. His 'Gymnopédies' are just a taste of a much bigger, stranger collection of works that are rarely heard. They were composed outside any fashion, and beyond traditional forms like the symphony and concerto, with scores idiosyncratic to the point of absurdity. To some they are a joke; to others they are disarming, a way to clear your mind and allow it to question the nature of music and performance.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
The depressing thing 1 in 10 people would rather do than have sex — even if it makes them feel terrible
Bedroom boom-boom could be doomed. The fun of a good ol' fashion roll in the hay, apparently, doesn't compare to the euphoria of a scroll on the screen. Dismal new data shows that that an eye-popping one in 10 folks would rather fool around on their phones — than fool around with their partners. Researchers for global technology manufacturers OnePlus surveyed 2,000 adults in the UK to find that Brits spend a collective 67.4 million hours of 'doom scrolling' — laying in bed and thumbing through social media apps such as TikTok, Instagram and Twitter— on a daily basis. And the nasty new-age habit is likely to trigger a series of damaging side effects, experts warn — including drowsiness, memory loss, decreased information retention and declined mental health. The survey revealed that 28% of doom-scrollers are often tired or drained, while 22% feel anxious or overwhelmed. Half of the respondents admitted that bedtime timeline surfing reduces their productivity (46%) and creativity (28%). Overall, they wasted over 1.5 hours (96 minutes) doom scrolling daily — be it while enjoying quality time with loved ones (49%), on the toilet (41%), at a school event (13%), wedding (12%) or a funeral (6%). More alarming, the Gen Z demographic, those digital natives aged 18 to 27, said they spent a staggering 2.5 hours (143 minutes) doing the deed — doom scrolling, not sex — each day. The finding backs up other backs up other recent reports revealing that for Zoomers, sex has indeed taken a backseat to the generation's addiction to technology. Instead of getting hot and heavy in-real life, roughly 31% of the WiFi-obsessed whippersnappers say they prefer sexting or having contactless cyber sex via their devices. Meanwhile, as a doomscrolling antidote, OnePlus has unveiled a new, hopefully healthier distraction — a unique first-person shooter web game that advocates for the anti-scroll movement. Called Brain Rot Blaster, the game features characters inspired by the most common digital demons identified in OnePlus' research. Those evils include negative world news (32%), reality TV and celebrity drama (32%), luxury living (27%), conspiracy theories (26%) and relationship content (24%). It's on-screen merriment that's meant to make players more conscious of their not-so-healthy scrolling habits. No addicts, please, however — the game self-destructs after a single play. Increased awareness of the bad behavior could help rehabilitate the 44% of people who regularly lose track of time when scrolling, or the 22% who have no idea how much they scroll at all, per the data. 'It's easy to fall into mindless scrolling — at home, at work, even around loved ones,' Celina Shi, Chief Marketing Officer of OnePlus Europe, said in a statement. 'With this campaign, we're encouraging people to take back control of their screen time and use their phones with more purpose.' 'Why lose hours to the scroll, when you could be creating something that inspires you instead?.'


Vogue
2 hours ago
- Vogue
Art That Moves: Jordan Roth and Laurence des Cars on Crafting a One-of-a-Kind Performance Piece at the Louvre
Next Thursday night in Paris, after the final show on the haute couture schedule has ended, an altogether different show will take place at the Louvre. Jordan Roth will present 'Radical Acts of Unrelenting Beauty,' a cycle of three live performances in which he uses fashion as a conduit for his impressions of the world's largest museum. It is a first-ever moment for Roth, whose fearless embrace of outré style and affable theatricality have gone a long way towards building a persona beyond his career as an acclaimed Broadway producer and philanthropy-focused impresario. To him, this 'narrative fashion performance' doesn't represent a reinvention so much as an evolution; he describes it as 'an artistic practice that is synthesizing so much of my professional, creative and emotional life so far.' With the support of six dancers and music by Thomas Roussel, he is part of the larger programming for La Nuit de la Mode, an evening that marks the last celebration of the blockbuster 'Louvre Couture' exhibition (even though it runs through late August). We have found each other in a remote wing of the building, inaccessible from the museum, where we will be joined by Laurence des Cars, director of the Louvre since 2021. Roth will spend the next week rehearsing, but has arrived at our meeting dressed très chic in a Dries Van Noten ivory top with sculptural pleating, a black straight skirt and pointed heels from Saint Laurent, and a small bag adorned with a Claude Lalanne bronze flower. So, what to expect? 'We are taking static, solid icons and exploring them through fabric and emotion and movement, which is the vocabulary of fashion,' Roth says. 'Clothes speak very loudly to my body and tell me how they want to be moved.' Consider how most of us visiting the Louvre will find ourselves enthralled by any number of ancient artefacts and masterpieces, or else the architecture itself. Roth has transposed all of this into three themes—'Red,' 'Wings,' and 'Pyramid'—and translated those themes into digital images, to be projected onto white garments of his own design. 'Red' is centered around John Galliano's empress gown from the Christian Dior spring 2005 collection, currently displayed in the Napoleon III apartments as part of the exhibition. 'Wings' entails some 50 wings from across the collections—from the obvious Winged Victory of Samothrace and Raphael's depiction of Saint Michael to small Egyptian amulets. 'Pyramid' takes a cue from the changing sky above I.M. Pei's glass pyramid structure, as well as painted skies by the likes of Andrea Mantegna and Hubert Robert.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘War Thunder' continues to live up to its reputation for OPSEC violations
Attention 'War Thunder' video gamers: Why do you do this to me? For the past few weeks, the news cycle has — to borrow a term from 'Spaceballs' — gone to plaid, and now someone has yet again posted restricted information about military hardware on a 'War Thunder' forum. Developed by Gaijin Entertainment, 'War Thunder' is a multiplayer video game that provides players with realistic simulations using U.S. and foreign military equipment. The problem has been that users have frequently shared sensitive information about military equipment on the game's forums. In at least one case, a video gamer posted classified information about a British tank as part of an argument that 'War Thunder' had not accurately depicted its capabilities. Recently, information from the Naval Air Training and Operating Procedures Standardization manual for the AV-8B Harrier and its two-seat trainer, the TAV-8B, was shared on a forum before being removed, Konstantin Govorun, head of public relations for Gaijin Entertainment, confirmed. 'It took us a few minutes to take it down,' Govorun told Task & Purpose on Tuesday. 'The user is now banned permanently.' The information shared in the June 21 post appears to include a cover page for the AV-8B and TAV-8B's flight manual. Gaijin Entertainment does not know how many pages were posted because 'we do not look inside the documents,' Govorun said. The document shared had the following disclaimer: 'Distribution is authorized to U.S. Government Agencies and their contractors to protect publications required for official use or for administrative or operational purposes only.' A community manager posted that the 'War Thunder' user had violated the forum's rules by sharing information that is not cleared for public use. 'No source material that is restricted, export restricted or classified will ever be tolerated, handled or used in any way on any of our platforms,' the community manager wrote. News about the latest 'War Thunder' OPSEC fail was first reported by the UK Defence Journal. Gaijin Entertainment has tracked roughly 20 security leaks like this in total, but in some cases different users posted the same information, Govorun said. Other sensitive information shared on the game's forums includes images from the flight manual for the F-117 Nighthawk, also known as the stealth fighter; the technical manual for the AH-64D Apache Longbow helicopter; operational flight manuals for the F-15E Strike Eagle; and documents about the M2A2 Bradley fighting vehicle. But in this case, any potential damage from the post about the AV8-B Harrier could be limited because the Marine Corps is replacing the plane with the F-35B Joint Strike Fighter. The last Marine squadron still flying AV-8B Harriers is expected to retire its aircraft in September 2026. The Marine Corps has flown AV-8B Harriers since January 1985. Prior to that, the British flew Harriers during the 1982 Falklands War, during which the Argentinian pilots nicknamed the plane 'La Muerta Negra' or the black death. Informally referred to as a jump jet, the AV-8B Harrier is designed for short takeoffs and vertical landings. And, oddly enough, Pepsi once ran into legal trouble after it jokingly offered a Harrier as prize during a 1995 promotion, and a 21-year-old man from Seattle purchased enough 'Pepsi Points' to earn the prize. The man took Pepsi to court in the hopes of getting his own Harrier, but ultimately lost. During its decades of service, the Harrier has allowed the Marines to distribute airpower to amphibious assault ships and smaller operating bases, said Richard Aboulafia, managing director of AeroDynamic Advisory, a consulting firm for the aerospace industry. 'It's an impressive capability,' Aboulafia wrote in an email. 'If World War Three had been fought against the USSR [Soviet Union], it would have allowed the U.S. to punch in different directions. It certainly played a role in USMC operations in both Gulf Wars and Afghanistan, although it's debatable to what extent that made a big difference.' Operation Midnight Hammer damaged, but may not have destroyed Iran's nuclear sites An Army base will now honor a Buffalo Soldier 2 aircraft carriers, 9 destroyers, and multiple fighter wings gather in the Middle East Marines and sailors are building trenches for the drone age The Army is deactivating police units in deep cuts to number of military cops