Only just caught the ending of today's programme, as I wanted to watch the lunchtime news. What I was hearing sounded more Copland than Lennon and McCartney, as stated in RT.
Jennifer Higdon (b. 1962) - 26-30 July
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOnly just caught the ending of today's programme, as I wanted to watch the lunchtime news. What I was hearing sounded more Copland than Lennon and McCartney, as stated in RT.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000y551
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Originally posted by EnemyoftheStoat View PostIf what you were hearing was the Concerto for Orchestra, I'd not be surprised. I'm not familiar with JH's other music apart from that and City Scape, so have downloaded for future listening.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postparade of known knowns
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI see you studied at the Rumsfeld School of Musicology.
I think innovation in music in the 21st century is going to depend increasingly on new ways of making music, using technology, collaboration including of an improvisational kind, a wider range of conceptual departure points (Eisler: "people who only know about music don't know about that either") and so on. Anything else has little and decreasing relevance I think. The phenomenon of people like Jennifer Higdon, who indeed by all accounts is a fine person, derives from a view of musical composition as being a career, rather than anything more rarefied (and valuable), returning in a way to an 18th century craft-centred situation, but without the organic relationship between the music and the society from which it emerged. It fulfils a niche in American corporate-oriented culture.
It's not that I have anything against Ms Higton's music per se - it's just that my feelings about it are similar to those I have about young jazz musicians who insist on playing styles of jazz that are 60, 80, 100 years old, and sometimes are given to making some big point about so doing. That's fine for a septuarian jazz musician who grew up in an earlier era, that of his or her youth, or an ageing composer. The best of that kind of music was in its time, at that time - it can be found on recordings. While I will go and see a local band play proficient hard bop in my local jazz pub, I am unlikely however to find the BBCSO performing there!
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