"I love doing concert music"
About this Quote
“I love doing concert music” lands like a small rebellion from a man whose name is more often filed under exotica, space-age bachelor pad, and the seductive slickness of mid-century pop. Les Baxter isn’t just declaring a preference; he’s staking a claim. In a music industry that loved to sort artists into neat commercial bins, “concert music” carries the faint perfume of legitimacy: the hall, the program notes, the hush before a downbeat. It’s a phrase that quietly insists he’s not only a craftsman of mood but a composer with serious ambitions.
The intent feels practical and personal at once. Baxter wrote for the marketplace and mastered the language of atmosphere, but “doing concert music” suggests a different kind of time and attention: longer forms, fewer compromises, less need to telegraph a fantasy in three minutes for a hi-fi demo. The verb “doing” matters. It’s workmanlike, not lofty. He’s not posturing about “high art”; he’s talking about the act of making, rehearsing, shaping sound with real players in real space.
Subtext: don’t confuse popularity with shallowness. For artists associated with stylized escapism, the culture often treats the concert stage as a confessional booth where you prove your depth. Baxter’s line flips that dynamic. He loves it. Not because it redeems him, but because it’s another arena where his central skill - orchestral color, drama, arrangement as storytelling - gets to breathe without the wink.
The intent feels practical and personal at once. Baxter wrote for the marketplace and mastered the language of atmosphere, but “doing concert music” suggests a different kind of time and attention: longer forms, fewer compromises, less need to telegraph a fantasy in three minutes for a hi-fi demo. The verb “doing” matters. It’s workmanlike, not lofty. He’s not posturing about “high art”; he’s talking about the act of making, rehearsing, shaping sound with real players in real space.
Subtext: don’t confuse popularity with shallowness. For artists associated with stylized escapism, the culture often treats the concert stage as a confessional booth where you prove your depth. Baxter’s line flips that dynamic. He loves it. Not because it redeems him, but because it’s another arena where his central skill - orchestral color, drama, arrangement as storytelling - gets to breathe without the wink.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
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