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BBC Radio 3 - "50 Years of Minimalism in Music"

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progressoid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-10-11 03:23 AM
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BBC Radio 3 - "50 Years of Minimalism in Music"
If you like minimalism (or just need to clear your mind of the week's so called news) give a listen to this:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b011pksz
American conductor Richard Bernas talks to Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Terry Riley, Bob Wilson, Louis Andriessen, Michael Nyman, Meredith Monk, David Lang, Nico Muhly, John Rockwell, Paula Cooper, among others, as he undertakes a critical survey of five decades of Minimalism in music. He traces its origins in both the San Francisco and New York underground cultures of the early 1960s, exploring the relationship between music and the visual arts, but also theatre and dance. He also assesses how Minimalism, arguably the newest style proper to emerge in Classical music, evolved into a mature and powerful force during the 1970s and 80s, eventually becoming part of the cultural mainstream of today's America. Crossing the Atlantic, he examines its influence in the wider field of European composers, such as Michael Nyman and Louis Andriessen - who've created their own brands of Minimalism.


Listen before it's gone. It's only available for a couple more days.
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stockholmer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-10-11 04:15 AM
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1. thanks for posting,here's a superb open-source comp of Electronic/ Electroacoustic/ Minimal Music
A glorious monster: History of Electronic / Electroaco​ustic Music <1937-2001​> ..........​..........​... 62 CD's of seminal minimal/electronic music

http://ubu.com/sound/electronic.html

About the History of Electroacoustic Music

When I started uploading the collection, in 2009, I was an undergraduate student of a composition class at UNESP at the university's studio for electroacoustic music, PANaroma. Our professor made this collection, I believe, from his particular library, picking up some works that he found important. So there was this pile of CDs for us to hear as a kind of assignment. Because I could not be at the studio all the time I ripped the CDs to my computer so I could hear them at home. It was a natural thing then to start sharing it via the famous rapidshare, although it was not an all altruistic idea: the donwloads got me points that allowed me to get an account for downloading other shared material.

After I was done uploading I asked if someone could build a torrent so the works could be shared more easily. I didn't know if it was done or not until a friend of mine tells me that ubuweb published the collection. It was a very pleasant surprise since I, like many, admire a lot the work done in this website.

So I'm very proud and happy to see this here. I just want to clarify two things since it seems that my iniciative became some sort of legend, which is very funny. First, my college is a kind of a center of the most tradicional, western avant-garde electronic music, so I certainly agree that it leaves a lot of people outside, but leaving outside people working at the bounds of this tradition, and the area of Europe-America, was expected. I'm not saying that it's fair! Second and last, although woman are certainly an exception, I don't believe it was intentional to have few works by woman, it has more to do with the way our society and the tradition this music represent works.

Enjoy listening!
-- Caio Barros, São Paulo, Brazil 2011


find missing tracks/cds here --------> http://avaxsearch.com/avaxhome_search?q=Electroacoustic+Music+History&commit=Go
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progressoid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-10-11 08:37 AM
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3. Ubu.com is great.
I forgot how much stuff they have. I guy could waste all day there.

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HughBeaumont Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-10-11 04:35 AM
Response to Original message
2. K & R for later.
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