MiltonParker
Well-known member
I am a big fan of the drone, and might just make that mix, but that's for another thread
though I will offhandedly recommend this if you like Playthroughs:
http://www.mimaroglumusicsales.com/...last=garlo&artistfirst=&arraynum=384&limit=20
as well as plug this ILM thread (as always with long ILM lists, find the people who post albums you like, and look for their other posts)
http://ilx.wh3rd.net/thread.php?msgid=4210891
& while it's almost a crime to post an excerpt from a unified one hour piece like Hykes' 'Hearing Solar Winds', track three is a good example of what you're getting into. no electronics; just seven voices with precise overtone control in one cathedral. five star record.
http://s6.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=108YF1BXD0TQL3B51ETPV0RSUL
and here's the performance that sold me on feldman for life, 30 CDs later still in my top 5: 'four pianos' from 1957, played by le bureau des pianistes, from 'pieces for more than four hands' on Sub Rosa, criminally out of print. four people all play the exact same score, a series of staggered chords, but they each choose their own tempo, so the chords fall increasingly out of sync with each other. yet they all just keep landing in place. not unlike Eno's Pachebel ditty two decades later, but much more mysterious. I love playing along.
http://s36.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=0WJ8G0VVZLQU414WCM926KN95I
though I will offhandedly recommend this if you like Playthroughs:
http://www.mimaroglumusicsales.com/...last=garlo&artistfirst=&arraynum=384&limit=20
as well as plug this ILM thread (as always with long ILM lists, find the people who post albums you like, and look for their other posts)
http://ilx.wh3rd.net/thread.php?msgid=4210891
& while it's almost a crime to post an excerpt from a unified one hour piece like Hykes' 'Hearing Solar Winds', track three is a good example of what you're getting into. no electronics; just seven voices with precise overtone control in one cathedral. five star record.
http://s6.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=108YF1BXD0TQL3B51ETPV0RSUL
and here's the performance that sold me on feldman for life, 30 CDs later still in my top 5: 'four pianos' from 1957, played by le bureau des pianistes, from 'pieces for more than four hands' on Sub Rosa, criminally out of print. four people all play the exact same score, a series of staggered chords, but they each choose their own tempo, so the chords fall increasingly out of sync with each other. yet they all just keep landing in place. not unlike Eno's Pachebel ditty two decades later, but much more mysterious. I love playing along.
http://s36.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=0WJ8G0VVZLQU414WCM926KN95I
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