John McCabe is Dead
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Originally posted by Conchis View Post
I first met him around 1984 at a concert at the University of New England at Armidale, New South Wales. He wrote a couple of pieces for a contemporary music society there.
RIP.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostJohn McCabe was not a great composer but he was an honest one, full of integrity.
And that's only one of his works.
OF course, you are entitled to your opinion, edashtav, and so am I!
R.I.P. John McCabe The only pianist I know who managed to make Hindemith's Ludus Tonalis sound beautiful and full of feeling.
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I remember Robert Simpson playing some haunting, visionary song cycle on The Innocent Ear, and revealing it as - John McCabe's Notturni ed Alba. To my delight I found it later in the local record library, apparently unplayed! It's on the same CD as Chagall Windows and Symphony No.2. Thus will his beautiful creations live on in any receptive ear...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI remember Robert Simpson playing some haunting, visionary song cycle on The Innocent Ear, and revealing it as - John McCabe's Notturni ed Alba. To my delight I found it later in the local record library, apparently unplayed! It's on the same CD as Chagall Windows and Symphony No.2. Thus will his beautiful creations live on in any receptive ear...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostYes - wonderful stuff indeed!
As a composer, for me in many ways he continued enriching the rich tradition of 20th century English symphonism, in particular in the luxuriant third symphony, where simple melody transforms, grows, and eventually builds up into something of great complexity, intellectual and emotional depth, while on the other hand Cloudcatcher could have been by a successor to the English Pastoral school. He is someone one somehow felt one could meet and be at ease with, and I considered him one of the few 20th century composers to have successfully continued writing tonal music, at the same time as managing to incorporate modernist ideas, right up to Lutoslawsky: a lesson for those who've elected to turn their backs.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post... I remember his performance of the Webern Variations as part of a series on him, and the way that for me he transformed what had previously been an arid exercise into a study in elegance and consequence...
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