I've been enjoying this disk a lot recently:

Particularly the Oboe Concerto about which I wrote:
Other recordings I love include the Concerto for Orchestra under Oliver Knussen - an incredible, exhilarating work that might, if you're anything like me, leave you breathless, such is its sheer mastery; the Symphony of Three Orchestras under Boulez, a work whose textural approach, like the Concerto, is intricate and spellbinding with lyrical solos.
Anyway, I have a fair few CDs of his music and like a lot in my collection, his is an oeuvre that I mean to better-acquaint myself with, particularly the string quartets which I own more than one recording of.
From what I've read, Carter is someone who, as with most other musical modernist of the 20thC, rethought their music from the ground up, so to speak - that is to say, formulated their own post-tonal style. And yet I am also aware that Carter trained until a fairly late age in things like Harmony & Counterpoint and general musicianship with Nadia Boulanger (there was a time I enjoyed reading his reminiscences of his time in France) and I think you can hear it in his style, particularly in the awesome grasp of polyphonic and polyrhythmic complexities his music evinces. And while such works as the Double Concerto, Concerto for Orchestra and Piano Concerto can be placed with the trends of High Modernism, what I find sets his music apart at its best is its flighty, windswept sense of forward motion.
What do other people think?

Particularly the Oboe Concerto about which I wrote:
A very enjoyable piece. One moment the oboe is nonchalant, playful and lyrical, the next the orchestra paroxysmal. I like the rhythms which here, like other aspects of the piece, are dispatched with ruthless aplomb.
Anyway, I have a fair few CDs of his music and like a lot in my collection, his is an oeuvre that I mean to better-acquaint myself with, particularly the string quartets which I own more than one recording of.
From what I've read, Carter is someone who, as with most other musical modernist of the 20thC, rethought their music from the ground up, so to speak - that is to say, formulated their own post-tonal style. And yet I am also aware that Carter trained until a fairly late age in things like Harmony & Counterpoint and general musicianship with Nadia Boulanger (there was a time I enjoyed reading his reminiscences of his time in France) and I think you can hear it in his style, particularly in the awesome grasp of polyphonic and polyrhythmic complexities his music evinces. And while such works as the Double Concerto, Concerto for Orchestra and Piano Concerto can be placed with the trends of High Modernism, what I find sets his music apart at its best is its flighty, windswept sense of forward motion.
What do other people think?
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