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Roger Smalley: A Case Study of Late Twentieth-Century Composition (Paperback)
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Roger Smalley: A Case Study of Late Twentieth-Century Composition (Paperback)
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How does one go about writing the history of musical composition in
the late twentieth century when, on the one hand, so much of it
seems impossibly fractured and disassociated, and, on the other,
there has been so little certainty about what the notion of 'music
history' might entail under the critiques of post-modernism? One of
the most productive ways forward is to pursue case studies
involving single composers whose music reflects several aspects of
recent activity. This enables the discussion of broad issues in a
relatively focussed way whilst avoiding the pitfalls of traditional
narrative histories and the centrifugal tendencies of the
relativistic approach that some have called for. The music of the
English-born (1943) and Australia-domiciled composer Roger Smalley
is ideal material for such a study, because of his involvement with
and response to an unusually large number of the myriad concerns
and practices of post-1950s composition, including post-serial
constructivism; parody; electro-acoustic composition and the
electronic modification of conventionally-produced sound; Moment
Form; aleatorism; minimalism; the use of non-Western resources
(Aboriginal and South-East Asian sonorities); neo-Romanticism; and,
arguably, the 'new classicism', as well as a brief flirtation with
rock music in the late '60s. Employing an interview with the
composer as a kind of cantus firmus, the book - the first extended
single-author study of Smalley's music to be published -
incorporates critical commentary on the composer's major works in a
chronological narrative that engages with broad issues of central
relevance to Smalley's generation, such as the process of learning
the craft of composition in the early '60s; the motivation behind
the adoption of certain technical and aesthetic positions; the
effects on technical and aesthetic orientation of both the changing
relationships between composer, performer, and audience and
technological change; and the distinction betwe
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