Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Lutoslawsky never as far as I know went as far in seeking total control over formal elements within his own music as this, even when he was writing dodecaphonic music: I think he was interested in extending the aural fascination of superimposed rhythms and the accumulating suspense of repetition, of building up inner tensions from intersecting lines in which unison precision is broken up to dramatic effect by each player simultaneously playing the same scored material as his or her colleagues over pre-determined durations of time, controlled by the conductor. David Bedford, who for a time in the 1960s was influenced by Lutoslawsky and the Polish school he was then assocated with, as well as Xenakis and Ligeti, wrote about his own introduction of flexible timings producing the same, if not greater complexity, as that which he had earlier tried introducing by complex serial juxtapositionary means which had turned out to be of extreme difficulty to interpret, and also exhausting to pre-calculate!
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