Originally posted by RichardB
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Mark-Anthony Turnage (b. 1960)
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Originally posted by french frank View PostDepends what you think of as being 'useful', but they might have wider appeal than the cutting edge innovators?
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostHardly any of the "classical" composers most people listen to nowadays would have been described as "middle of the road composers" in their time, when indeed they might not have had as wide an appeal as their less "cutting edge" contemporaries. But if "wider appeal" is what's important there's always the aforementioned Adele.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postsome, for instance Poulenc, Martinu or Honegger, incorporating modernist elements within broadly traditional frameworks. Something similar would happen in jazz after 1940. I would see a composer such as Turnage as being within that mainstream.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostHardly any of the "classical" composers most people listen to nowadays would have been described as "middle of the road composers" in their time,It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThere weren't as many genres for musicians to negotiate, and messages were less "mixed", back in earlier ages!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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It would be a shame were this discussion to end leaving bad feelings.
My own acquaintance with Turnage goes back to 1992, at Kenny Wheeler's 60th birthday tribute concert at the South Bank, when, in the bookshop before the event, Ian Carr, the jazz trumpeter, introduced us. I was then familiar with all Turnage's broadcast music, which would have been most of what he had composed up to that point, and liked what I had heard. It was no great surprise to me that these two should have been acquainted - Turnage enjoyed some kudos on the domestic jazz scene through his association with the two highly respected and admired jazz musicians who had performed in his "Blood on the Floor" around that time - the drummer Peter Erskine and the guitarist John Scofieldd. Years later I was in a position to "return" that introduction at one of the freebie lunchtime jazz gigs in the bar at the Festival Hall. I spotted Turnage at one of the tables to the left of the bar as one faced the bandstand; Ian Carr, by then suffering with dementia, was at the opposite end, among a group of musicians I also recognised, so I went over to Turnage to re-introduce myself, asking if he had noticed Ian, and maybe he would like to join me to say hello. Turnage had heard about Ian's condition and the way he spoke to Ian seemed to me to say a great deal about the decent sort of person I took him to be.
It may be the case that I am too much given to speaking positively about Turnage on the basis of what I knew of his music up to that point, and of having briefly met him: the truth is that I have not followed his career to anything like the same degree since that time - somewhere around 2008 - so this week's COTW is an opportunity for catching up. Suffice it to say that Turnage has worked with personalities well known in jazz worldwide, including the bass player Dave Holland, and a number of leading lights on the home scene, such as Iain Ballamy, John Parricelli, John Taylor and Django Bates.
I am sure Turnage has turned out work of variable quality, as have all composers, and that there are let's say things about him that some have found questionable for reasons that have to do with the questionability of the success he has won on the musical establishment's terms. But I leave it to readers to decide if the implicit respect accorded Turnage by musicians not usually known to be short of a gig is justified or not. I believe his usefulness - a bad term of description, I admit - lies in his music offering a way into "modern music" for many who, like me in my younger days as a listener, wanted to find my own way into it.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt would be a shame were this discussion to end leaving bad feelings.
But: composing music that some famous jazz musicians have been involved in playing doesn't quite count as "working with" them in the sense that actually performing with them would have, in my opinion. As in those of us who might have played with Evan Parker at the London Jazz Festival and then the next day a premiere with Elision at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival*, and all that without a hint of "eclecticism", so pardon me if I'm not too impressed with what MT gets up to!
*17 and 18 November 2006
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Originally posted by Quarky View Post.....This thread I found useful. It has pushed MAT down my list of listening priorities, and I can now catch up on some of the other stuff I want to listen to.....
There doesn't seem to be many contemporary music threads on the forum to seek out new listens - any advice?
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