Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-swr86 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T12:17:36.064Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Record Review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2009

Extract

  • Post-modernists, Nyman to Mason David Clarke

  • Smalley and Swayne Michael Oliver

  • Richard Barrett, compositeur maudit manqué Robin Freeman

  • Ligeti Concertos Michael Oliver

  • Lyatoshinsky and other Russians Martin Anderson

  • Luigi Nono Nicolas Hodges

  • Nikolai Medtner Martin Anderson

Type
Record Review
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 39 note 1 Andrew Cornall, liner note to sampler CD included with Nyman The Piano Concerto.

page 42 note * For Barrett at Darmstadt see Christopher Fox's ‘British Music at Darmstadt, 1982–1992’ in Tempo 186 (Ed.)

page 42 note 1 The choice is typical of Barrett's strategy of margins. Matta was an advocate of th e Fourth International, hence a Trotskyist and as such closely watched by both the FBI and KGB in Greenwich Village during World War II.

page 43 note 2 Barrett invokes in connexion with Earth a kind of surreal folk-music situate in a ‘fourth world’. Sadly economists have already taken up this expression to describe places where, instead of underdevelopment, there is no development at all: Timor, Haiti, the Central African Republic…

page 44 note 3 The name suggests another of Barrett's ‘fictions’. The French Creole writer Edouard Glissant sustains in a recent book that most of what is important today is happening not on the broad continent of life and opinion but out on some distant archipelago or other. Boucourechliev has gone so far as to compose a piece called Anarchipelago – the land of ‘one's own thing’.