|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
209.43.1.25
In Reply to: Contemporary Classical compositions posted by theaudiohobby on February 16, 2007 at 06:07:19:
I'm not familiar with the two names you mentioned but I listen to a lot of Milton Babbitt, Elliot Carter, Robert Simpson, David Shea, Charles Wuorinen, Christian Wolfe, and the usual pack of Cage, Penderecki, Xenakis, Feldman, etc.What are some of the pieces you're interested in now? Email me if you might be interested in a compilation CDR of samples of some of the newer folks I've mentioned and others.
Follow Ups:
.
I'm constantly on the lookout for new and interesting music.
Describing music is tough. It is, at various points: tense, floating, longing, abstract. It's easy to envision a huge thundercloud moving over a stormy sea. Other times, it is simply ethereal and wispy-frail...peace and resignation to things beyond comprehension. It is among the most deeply moving "abstract music" I've experienced. Simply awesome -- and gorgeous -- as pure sound. Try the recording below on for size first. If it hooks you, get ANY OTHER RECORDING YOU CAN FIND. The ECM issues are all readily available, but there's also a handful of CDs on the Megadisc label that are indispensible, and include large-scale orchestral and choral works not otherwise obtainable. The Megadisc issues, unfortunately, are hard to come by -- getting harder every day, it appears:-(The major labels ignored Silvestrov (there is one Sony recording from 10 years ago of Symphony 5, and it's an expensive collectors item that I do not own), and it's likely too late in the Classical music business for anyone to rectify the situation. If the music of Silvestrov gets to you, you'll be like me -- sitting there marvelling at the glow of this profound music, and shaking your head at a world gone mad -- or a world that has only given us passing illusions that it was not always so. Silvestrov's music is like a stream, a current, a breeze, a sigh, a scream.
The picture links...
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: