John Adams: Hallelujah junction
Minimalism: favourite works
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostAnd, given that 2 × 9 = Eighteen (a number to which you rather delightfully referred upthread), what about No, No, Nonette - No, No, Nonette?
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostIs there any composer, alive or dead, who is more boring than Michael Nyman? Way back, watching the The Piano, trapped with friends in the cinema, I began to lose the will to live.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThere are plenty of them, but I am with you re. The Piano. Even John Tilbury's advocacy failed to win me over to it. Didn't reckon the film much otherwise, either. However, his Purcell based stuff for Greenaway, etc. has some merit, I feel. Of his music for large orchestra, only the aforementioned A Handsom, Smooth, Sweet, Smart, Clear Stroke: Or Else Play Not At All has held my attention, and that I have only ever heard in extract (as part of a Nyman portrait programme on Radio 3 in the early '80s). As far as I know, it has only ever received the one performance, in Vienna, which stirred up a near riot.
Maybe I've been a bit unkind, since I hated The Piano and would have gone home if I could - must try harder, as the carthorse said in Animal Farm
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Don Petter
My only live exposure to a work by someone Wiki tells me is a minimalist composer was Laszlo Vidovszky's 'Schroeder's Death' for piano and two to three assistants. It took an awfully long time to get back to where it started (and to get the piano back to where it started, fully playable), and didn't make me want to explore the genre further.
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