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Composing Dissent - Avant-garde Music in 1960s Amsterdam (Hardcover, New)
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Composing Dissent - Avant-garde Music in 1960s Amsterdam (Hardcover, New)
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The 1960s saw the emergence in the Netherlands of a generation of
avant-garde musicians (including figures such as Louis Andriessen,
Willem Breuker, Reinbert de Leeuw and Misha Mengelberg) who were to
gain international standing and influence as composers, performers
and teachers, and who had a defining impact upon Dutch musical
life. Fundamental to their activities in the sixties was a
pronounced commitment to social and political engagement. The
lively culture of activism and dissent on the streets of Amsterdam
prompted an array of vigorous responses from these musicians,
including collaborations with countercultural and protest groups,
campaigns and direct action against established musical
institutions, new grassroots performing associations, political
concerts, polemicising within musical works, and the advocacy of
new, more 'democratic' relationships with both performers and
audiences. These activities laid the basis for the unique new music
scene that emerged in the Netherlands in the 1970s and which has
been influential upon performers and composers worldwide. This book
is the first sustained scholarly examination of this subject. It
presents the Dutch experience as an exemplary case study in the
complex and conflictual encounter of the musical avant-garde with
the decade's currents of social change. The narrative is structured
around a number of the decade's defining topoi: modernisation and
'the new'; anarchy; participation; politics; self-management; and
popular music. Dutch avant-garde musicians engaged actively with
each of these themes, but in so doing they found themselves faced
with distinct and sometimes intractable challenges, caused by the
chafing of their political and aesthetic commitments. In charting a
broad chronological progress from the commencement of work on Peter
Schat's Labyrint in 1961 to the premiere of Louis Andriessen's
Volkslied in 1971, this book traces the successive attempts of
Dutch avant-garde musicians to reconcile the era's evolving social
agendas with their own adventurous musical practice.
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