Conversation with Morton Feldman (Bunita Marcus and Francesco Pellizzi)

1983 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 112-135
Author(s):  
Morton Feldman ◽  
Bunita Marcus ◽  
Francesco Pellizzi ◽  
John Cage
Keyword(s):  
Artful Noise ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 97-106
Author(s):  
Thomas Siwe

The incorporation of degrees of chance in the creation and realization of music captured the imagination of composers in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Led by the American iconoclast John Cage—the most prominent champion of chance and indeterminacy—composers began to include chance operations in the creative process. In so doing, they relied upon the performer to understand each work’s compositional style and to respond to and interpret the notation used, often graphic in form. This chapter examines the percussion works of John Cage, Morton Feldman, Roman Haubenstock-Ramati, and Herbert Brün. Cage’s transition from his use of the square root formula to his relinquishing control over every aspect of the compositional process is explored through his works 27’ 10.554” and Child of Tree. Feldman’s use of “time boxes” in the percussion solo The King of Denmark and his desire to remove both pulse and attack from his music is illustrated. Brün’s early use of a computer to create music brings the chapter to a close.


Author(s):  
Marysol Quevedo

Born in Salinas, Puerto Rico, William Oritz was raised in New York City. He studied composition at the Conservatory of Music of Puerto Rico under Héctor Campos Parsi and Amaury Veray. He holds a master’s degree from SUNY at Stony Brook (1976), where his professors included Billy Jim Layton and Bülent Arel, and a PhD from SUNY at Buffalo (1983), where Lejaren Hiller and Morton Feldman were his professors. Ortiz served as assistant director of Black Mountain College II, NY, also teaching composition and music theory at the school. He has held the position of chair of the department of humanities and has served as band conductor for the University of Puerto Rico at Bayamón. As a music critic he has contributed to The San Juan Star. Among his many works Oritz has completed commissions for the Casals Festival, the Guitar Society of Toronto, the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, and the New York State Council of the Arts. His approach to composition is characterized by an eclectic adoption of popular and urban music genres as part of his compositional palette. Early on he incorporated elements from urban street music, found mostly in the Latino and Black neighbourhoods of New York City and in the poorer neighbourhoods of San Juan, as reflected in Street Music (1980), Graffiti Nuyorican (1983), De Barrio Obrero a la Quince (1986), and Bolero and Hip-Hop en Myrtle Avenue (1986).


Tempo ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 69 (271) ◽  
pp. 84-85
Author(s):  
Garrett Sholdice

Neither is Morton Feldman's only opera. The libretto is a single page of text by Samuel Beckett. British director Katie Mitchell has paired her new staging of this single act work, premiered in 1977, with her staging of Beckett's 1975 short play, Footfalls. This new production was presented as part of the Infektion! festival of new music theatre at the Berlin Staatsoper in June of this year.


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