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Entries Tagged as 'Deaths'

jorge liderman, 1957-2008

February 4th, 2008 · 26 Comments · Contemporary Classical, Deaths

The composer Jorge Liderman died Sunday morning after reportedly jumping in front of an oncoming BART train in the Berkeley, CA area. I had initially heard of him after coming across his name on a bulletin board in the early 80’s at the U of Chicago, and when I saw the news item about his untimely […]

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And one more…

January 8th, 2008 · 1 Comment · Click Picks, Contemporary Classical, Deaths, Experimental Music

Honest, I swear this is Sequenza21, not the obituaries. But this is otherwise (and unfairly) likely to pass unnoticed in our usual music-blog land: Henri Chopin, one of the pioneering figures in sound poetry, passed away in France on January 3rd.
Born in 1922, he was one of the great explorers of a poetry that favored supremacy of […]

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Jennifer Fitzgerald (1975-2007)

January 4th, 2008 · No Comments · Composers, Contemporary Classical, Deaths

The past few months have seemed depressingly full of deaths, including some of the grand figures of our time. But sadder still is when we lose a wonderful musical voice far too soon. I just learned over at NewMusicBox that the highly talented composer and pianist Jennifer Fitzgerald lost her life to cancer just a few days before […]

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Leonard B. Meyer, R.I.P.

January 2nd, 2008 · 4 Comments · Contemporary Classical, Deaths, Obits

One of our greatest musical thinkers in these last fifty years, Leonard B. Meyer has passed away. His series of books from 1956 onwards are still avidly bought, read and discussed in 2007, and that’s no mean feat. Some of his work was pioneering, some spookily prescient, and a lot of it has stuck in this […]

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“Ah What a chill, Ah what a wind…”

December 17th, 2007 · 1 Comment · Composers, Contemporary Classical, Deaths

Paul Dirmeikis attended Stockhausen’s funeral on December 13, and has a report.
The family is already starting to slowly walk away. Some of us stay around the tomb, scattered between the neighbour tombs. Near the larger alley going down to the chapel, all members of Stockhausen’s family gathered together in a circle, holding their hands. Simon […]

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Karlheinz Stockhausen, 1928-2007

December 7th, 2007 · 15 Comments · Composers, Contemporary Classical, Deaths, Obits

recieved at the Canadian Eletroacoustic mail-list:
PRESS RELEASE
The composer Karlheinz Stockhausen passed away on December 5th 2007 at his home in Kuerten-Kettenberg and will be buried in the Waldfriedhof (forest cemetery) in Kuerten.
He composed 362 individually performable works. The works which were composed until 1969 are published by Universal Edition in Vienna, and all works since then […]

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A Tale of Two Györgys

October 26th, 2007 · 3 Comments · Click Picks, Composers, Contemporary Classical, Deaths

Recent postings here notwithstanding, I swear I’m not on a complete György Ligeti kick; but it just so happens that the German-news-in-English website Sign and Sight has printed the translation of a speech György Kurtág gave in remembrance of his great friend, fellow Hungarian and fellow composer. (The occasion was Kurtág’s receiving the Ordre Pour […]

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Slava, Dead at 80

April 27th, 2007 · 8 Comments · Cello, Classical Music, Contemporary Classical, Deaths, Obits

Mstislav Rostropovich died this morning in Moscow.  He was 80 and suffered from intestinal cancer.  Tim Page has an appreciation here.
Updates:  Alex Ross, Charles T. Downey, Guardian Tributes, Marc Geelhoed, Bruce Hodges, Pliable, Kenneth Woods, Steve Hicken, Jessica Duchen, Scott Spiegelberg, Jeremy Eichler

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Joan Baez sings Sibelius

December 27th, 2006 · 4 Comments · Composers, Deaths, Uncategorized

Yes, you read that right. 2007 brings the fiftieth anniversary of Jean Sibelius’ death, and his tone poem Finlandia was written as a protest against Russian influence in Finland at the end of the 19th century. Joan Baez sung her own a cappella version on Michael Moore’s 2004 Slacker’s Uprising Tour, and in anticipation of the composer’s anniversary year On An […]

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Galina Ustvolskaya, 1919-2006

December 23rd, 2006 · 1 Comment · Contemporary Classical, Deaths

The Russian composer Galina Ustvoskaya died yesterday. Alex Ross has the details and the (appropriately) terse, German notice from her publisher, Sikorski.
I don’t have time now to write much about Ustvolskaya’s music, but my encounter with it was one of the determining events of my own musical evolution, and I still can’t quite believe that […]

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