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Ti.re-Ti.ke-Dha, James DillonScotty Horey, percussionUniversity of Minnesota'CMW Presents' is the organizational wing of the Contemporary Music Workshop (CMW...
Helmut Lachenmann: Interieur 1 (solo percussionist):
About the piece:At a time during the 1960s in which many composers in Europe and the US began working in electronic music studios in a search for new sounds,...
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Ah. There were one or two "mega" LP recordings issued. can anyone remember what they were?
There was Oiseau-lyre DSLO 1 with Henze Prison Song, Takemitsu Seasons and Maxwell Davies Turis Campanarum Sonantium. The latter is/was available on Decca CD in a PMD anthology with the trumpet concerto and the Renaissance Scottish Dances http://www.amazon.co.uk/Maxwell-Davi...4182000&sr=1-2
I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
Elliott Carter:
Eight pieces for four timpani John Cage:
Music for percussion quartet Irwin Bazelon:
Triple play - for 2 trombones and percussion Nikolai Kapustin:
Concerto for 2 pianos and percussion
- this one feels more like jazz!
Silly me! I'd overlooked Percy Grainger. He wrote so much that includes significant percussion - especially 'tuneful percussion'. Something like The Warriors is an obvious candidate, but I'll nominate his arrangement of Ravel's La Vallee des cloches, for all sorts of marimbas, gongs and things. Here's also a recording of percussion music: http://www.move.com.au/disc/woof-tun...percy-grainger
Paul Creston's Marimba Concerto (1940)
Julius Tausch: Timpani concerto (1870)
Clementi: Twelve waltzes for piano and tambourine, op. 38 (I'd love to play this!)
Nielsen: Clarinet Concerto (I have played side drum this, in 1975)
Nielsen is either "pushing the envelope" so much that the contents go over the standard postage rate, Pabs, or mean-spirited because you haven't included the Fifth Symphony (or the Fourth for that matter. Or Shostakovich #10).
The OP mentions "classics", so perhaps we need to include the most boring CD I know:
That looks dire, ferney . Xenakis's masterpieces should be essential here; I don't think Birtwistle's For O, For O, the Hobbyhorse is Forgot has been remembered here, and there's a percussion concerto by Friedrich Cerha just issued on Kairos http://www.mdt.co.uk/cerha-friedrich...ez-kairos.html. I haven't heard it, though.
For solo percussion I think Zyklus and Psappha are seminal works, but a favourite of mine as a "following on" from these works is Per Nørgård's I Ching
Nielsen is either "pushing the envelope" so much that the contents go over the standard postage rate, Pabs, or mean-spirited because you haven't included the Fifth Symphony (or the Fourth for that matter. Or Shostakovich #10).
The OP mentions "classics", so perhaps we need to include the most boring CD I know:
Shostakovich 4 also has a spectacular timpani outburst just before the end. Other Shostakovich symphonies also demonstrate percussive effects. Nielsen 4 is also pretty dramatic - and I'd have said more effective than the 5th.
Push the envelopes if you wish, though then I suppose we'd have to allow Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique!
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