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David Del Tredici and ‘Syzygy’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2010

Extract

One of the most refreshing and absorbing features of the American musical scene is the high proportion of ‘eccentrics’ among composers—Billings, Ives, Cowell, Partch and Cage to name but the most prominent. This can be accounted for, in part, by the proverbial nature of the place as a ‘cultural melting-pot’, forging what often seem to be diametrically-opposed styles and aesthetics together into new idioms which occasionally prove to be something more than the sum of their components. Another factor is the very size of the country: the convenient divisions of East-coast, Mid-west, West-coast, South and so forth can refer not only to different areas of the land mass but also to highly contrasted cultural tendencies. This is not terribly clear from our vantage point, as the (still) disgracefully scanty information which filters across the Atlantic does not allow us to piece the bits together into a satisfactory picture—and thus even the informed listener may be at a loss to place a composer of David Del Tredici's originality into some sort of context.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1976

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References

1 All three of the works comprising the Joyce cycle have been commercially recorded: I Hear an Army on CRI Z94; Night Conjuie-Verse on CRI 243; Syzygy on Columbia MS 7281—this latter is already out of print, but copies do turn up now and then.

2 Given its first British performance at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on May 28, by Deborah Cook (soprano) Michael Thompson (horn) and the London Sinfonietta under Michael TUson Thomas.

3 A more thorough analysis of Syzygy than is possible within the confines of this essay can be found—for those with enough patience to penetrate the jargon—in Perspectives of New Music vol. 10/I (Princeton University Press, 1971), by Earls, Paul Google Scholar.