I’ll just mention the ones which have caught my attention so far, and I’ll certainly explore the other suggestions here.
1. The three compositions on Three Compositions (EEMHM) 2011. Crazy, wild music, full of life. Long pieces, not Feldman long but still, you have to be ready to give it an hour or so.
2. The duets with Roscoe Mitchell - all short (and all good)
3. The early recording called B-Xo/N-0-1-47a. (Somehow, maybe this is silly, but somehow I sense an influence of Darmstadt there - Stockhausen.)
4. Compositions 101 and 88 on Five Compositions (1988) - some really nice timbres, textures on 101.
Oh, and I’ve bought Graham Lock’s book Forces in Motion.
1. The three compositions on Three Compositions (EEMHM) 2011. Crazy, wild music, full of life. Long pieces, not Feldman long but still, you have to be ready to give it an hour or so.
2. The duets with Roscoe Mitchell - all short (and all good)
3. The early recording called B-Xo/N-0-1-47a. (Somehow, maybe this is silly, but somehow I sense an influence of Darmstadt there - Stockhausen.)
4. Compositions 101 and 88 on Five Compositions (1988) - some really nice timbres, textures on 101.
Oh, and I’ve bought Graham Lock’s book Forces in Motion.
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