(Catalogue no. 14608)

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| Title: |
More From The Judson Years, Instrumental Works Vol.1 |
| Artist: |
Philip Corner |
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Label: |
Alga Marghen |
| Format: |
CD |
| Price: |
€ 16.50 |
Mp3 samples: 1 2
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Title Description: Yet not to forget that extraordinary place where so much of the new and exciting performances at that most interesting time in New York, took place. There was a Theater there; and a place for the first Happenings. An Art Gallery... and later the famous Judson Dance Theater. There was Philip Corner first performance. The concert was in early 1962, January 2nd, to be exact. Handwritten change on typescrpt: Yoko Ono's studio, changed at the last moment to Judson Church. A lot of players; and a lot of pieces. Some of my old friends, like Toshi Ichiyanagi or Richard Maxfield. And a lot of new names from California, Dick Higgins and Alison Knowles, the connection between the old New York and this new scene. The creation of the Dance Theater: Philip Corner involvement with it from the beginning. (that participation documented on Alga Maghen cd On tape, from the Judson Years, as most of Corner electronic music was made for dancers associated to the Judson). Excerpts from the liner notes of Volume One, written by Philip Corner: Passionate Expanse of the Law (1959), extract from the first NY performance, featuring Charlotte Moorman, Philip Corner, Malcolm Goldstein. I wrote this on an Army cot in Texas, in the Fall of 1959; a continuation of and a major development my exploration of maximum disjuction. It expresses the dynamic unity of the active and static forces in the universe, a characteristic in some degree of all my work. Air Effect (1961), first performance, featuring Philip Corner, Alison Knowles, Malcolm Goldstein. From 1961 already my music became characterised more and more by attention to the continuous quality of sound. A chamber ensemble, dedicated to directness of breathing. The rhythms and tone modulations of life-sustaining air, as projected through wind instruments bent back from an excess of art to express better a refinement more perfectly attuned to the basics of nature. OM emerging (1971). I have adopted the Hindu term OM as generic for all the variety of ways I have formulated possibilities of performances based on the prolongations of a single tone. This time it served as prelude to a contrasting form of expression, or Lovely Music (1962), a piece were I let myself go all the way into an indulgence of gorgeous and voluptuous sounds.
Vital Review:
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