George Crumb (1929–2022)
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At the very first HCMF in 1978 (I was a student there from 76-79) George was the star attraction. I think it was something of a coup for Richard Steinitz to bring him over to a grimy Yorkshire mill town.
His was probably the first contemporary music I’d heard live and RS roped myself and three other students in to join Dreamtiger in performance at the Town Hall. We were the ethereal chord of Eb sustained throughout a piece who’s title now escapes me (Vox Balanae perhaps).
It was a real privilege to play his music with the likes of Douglas Young and Rohan de Saran, they were unassuming and friendly throughout, we were a little anxious before we actually met.
GC was equally approachable and so pleased we took part. I found his music interesting, atmospheric and full of sounds which had an other-worldly origin.
What hadn’t quite been envisaged was that the precise tuning of the Eb chord gradually became a little sharper as the water evaporated or was lost in between finger-dipping to re-start the note.
And Richard Steinitz apparently didn’t retrieve his set of Crystal d’Arques wine goblets!
Sad to hear this news.
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Petroc acknowledged him this morning with The Fiddler, although I missed the beginning of what he said so I didn't realise it was because Crumb had died. One of those composers about whom I know virtually nothing and whose work I don't seek out, but when I come across it I find it a worthwhile listen.
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I missed this earlier. The George Crumb immersion day at the Barbican was a great event in 2009.
To summon spirits from the vasty deep is the ambition of too many overloaded contemporary scores. George Crumb is better than most at getting those spirits to come when he calls, yet even he touches the transcendental more surely the fewer instruments he engages. That, at least, seemed the conclusion to draw from the latest of the BBC Symphony Orchestra's perilous but admirable "Total Immersion" days exposing a curious audience to the style of one composer, and here giving us the chance to compare the grandiose and the intimate.
Sad to read of this.
GC RIP
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