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A giant of postwar music and the most powerful figure in the
contemporary French music scene, Pierre Boulez is widely known to
American and English audiences as both an important composer and as
star conductor of the New York Philharmonic, the Cleveland
Orchestra, the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra. These candid interviews give us vintage Boulez - his
bold views, enigmatic wit, practical wisdom, and uncompromising
beliefs. Here the eminent composer, who has been called both "a
wild man of the avant-garde" and "the last true maestro" (New York
Times), talks about being one of the world's most controversial
conductors and daring programmers of musical taste. Boulez
sometimes locks horns with French author Jean Vermeil, who
confronts him with his past and prods him to discuss the future of
music and orchestras. Boulez tells how and why he chose his battles
and lays out his vision of the conductor's mission. He tells what
he learned - and didn't learn - from other conductors, and how he
feels about the composers who compromise his repertoire, including
Webern, Berg, Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Messiaen (with whom he
studied), and, of course, Boulez himself.
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