Here's a list of the main listening we've done in past classes, as well as the material I assigned as preparation. I recommend going over all the assigned listening. The recommended listening won't be on the final, but I highly recommend doing it as a way of increasing your familiarity with the composer's style, as you will be required to play guess-the-composer to a certain degree.
Lecture 1: Historical precedents and oddities, non-Western influences
No required listening, but here's some of what we listened to in class:
Wagner: Prelude to "Das Rheingold"
Debussy: "Pagodes" from "Estampes"
Chávez: Sinfonia India
Britten: Young Apollo (opening), "The Pagodas" from "Prince of the Pagodas"
Satie: "Vexations", "Trois Gymnopédies", "Musique d'ameublement" ("Furniture Music")
McPhee: "Balinese Ceremonial Music", "Tabuh-Tabuhan"
Under non-Western influences, we covered gamelan and gagaku, of which several audio examples are available in the library.
In jazz, we listened to John Coltrane's "My Favorite Things".
Under the topic of the pop/classical divide:
Sufjan Stevens: "Out of Egypt"
Galen Brown: "Pulse Point"
Nico Muhly: "A Hudson Cycle"
Lecture 2: La Monte Young
Required: "The Well-Tuned Piano"
Recommended: "On remembering a Naiad"
Lecture 3: Terry Riley
Required: "In C"
Recommended: "A Rainbow In Curved Air", "The Harp of New Albion"
Lecture 4: Steve Reich
Required, "Come Out", "Piano Phase", "Drumming" (Part 1), "Music for 18 Musicians" (complete)
Recommended: "Drumming" (Part II-IV), "Tehillim", "Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ", "Violin Phase"
Lecture 5: Philip Glass
Required: "Einstein on the Beach" ("Bed" & "Spaceship" scenes), "Music in Twelve Parts" (Parts I-II), "Contrary Motion", "Akhnaten" (Prelude)
Recommended: "Two Pages", "Music in Similar Motion", "Music in Fifths", "Music with Changing Parts"
Also check out this recent article on Charlemagne Palestine, whom we discussed a bit last week. He'll come up again. I have recordings of many of the pieces mentioned here, which I can make available.
Friday, March 5, 2010
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