Originally posted by RichardB
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Electronic Music
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostI don't know - I was listening to it on a radio streaming service, and it passed into the aether without commentary.
Prior to that I was listening to a piece in a similar vein by the current composer Jörg Widmann.
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Listening again to Gabriel Prokofiev's The Electronic Century, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000rmkx ,
I found myself enjoying it much more than when it was first broadcast, and appreciating much more his view of the music as a Composer in the field.
Obviously not a completely objective view (but that would require many more episodes), but he did manage a reference to Stockhausen, and one of my current favourite Composers, Kaija Saariaho.
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I see the new CDs of Xenakis's electronic music have now appeared on Qobuz. So far I've listened to Orient-Occident (because I have to give a talk about it later in the week) - sounds pretty good, at least as good as any release I can remember hearing - and I'm a few minutes into the much later Voyage des Unari vers l'Andromède, one of his least known electronic compositions and generally considered not to be in the same league as things like Bohor and La légende d'Eer, but actually here it comes across as completely convincing in both sound and form. The pervasive glissandi and mostly sustained sounds are idiomatic features of most music produced with the UPIC system, as this was, but once you get used to its relatively restricted soundworld there is much interesting detail and development to follow. ("Unari" are Japanese kites by the way.)
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI see the new CDs of Xenakis's electronic music have now appeared on Qobuz. So far I've listened to Orient-Occident (because I have to give a talk about it later in the week) - sounds pretty good, at least as good as any release I can remember hearing - and I'm a few minutes into the much later Voyage des Unari vers l'Andromède, one of his least known electronic compositions and generally considered not to be in the same league as things like Bohor and La légende d'Eer, but actually here it comes across as completely convincing in both sound and form. The pervasive glissandi and mostly sustained sounds are idiomatic features of most music produced with the UPIC system, as this was, but once you get used to its relatively restricted soundworld there is much interesting detail and development to follow. ("Unari" are Japanese kites by the way.)
Agreed. You've prompted me to give Voyage another listen. I intend to give all the Xenakis I have in my collection another spin round what would have been his 100th birthday...
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Just gave a listen to Orient-Occident on Qobuz. What a horrible noise, I thought.
Is there really a market for this sort of music, in terms of CDs etc and concert tickets?
I know certain modern/contemporary composers like Mark Anthony Turnage, David Matthews and Robert Simpson have had the thumbs down on here from some, but I can understand why people might buy their recordings and concert tickets.
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Originally posted by mahlerfan View PostJust gave a listen to Orient-Occident on Qobuz. What a horrible noise, I thought.
Is there really a market for this sort of music, in terms of CDs etc and concert tickets?
I know certain modern/contemporary composers like Mark Anthony Turnage, David Matthews and Robert Simpson have had the thumbs down on here from some, but I can understand why people might buy their recordings and concert tickets.
I have just checked out the "Brain Discos" version on QOBUZ. Not up to the standard of that in the Karl Records set referred to by RichardB and Joseph K. The Brain Discos transfer lacks much spacial information.
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Originally posted by mahlerfan View PostIs there really a market for this sort of music, in terms of CDs etc and concert tickets?
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