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The Music of Louis Andriessen edited by Maja Trochimczyk. London: Routledge, 2002. [xii, 327p. ISBN 0815337592 $114.95 (hd.)]
Louis Andriessen: De Staat by Robert Adlington.
London: Ashgate, 2004. [xi, 167p. plus one CD ISBN 0754609251 $69.95 (hd.)]
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The Problem With Andriessen
- I was first introduced to the music of Louis Andriessen in perhaps
the best way possible: during a game of “drop the needle.”
I was played an excerpt from the middle of De Staat and asked
to guess what it was. The music was like nothing I'd ever heard, or
perhaps, it was like too many other things—too dissonant and aggressive
to be Steve Reich, too consonant and repetitive to be György Ligeti.
It was as if the Stravinsky of Symphony of Psalms had been
given electric guitars and an even greater propensity for repetition
and violent contrast. The music sounded fresh and exhilarating, both
because of and in spite of my inability to place the sounds into a comfortable
category. Other works of Andriessen's have not, I feel, aged so well,
but Andriessen remains a major figure, and one deserving of much study,
precisely because his career and musical thought are so disruptive to
certain comfortable categories, as
I found the sounds of De Staat to be. Andriessen appears as
a marginal figure in certain histories of institutionalized European
avant-garde, by virtue of his engagement with popular music and rejection
of any number of modernist orthodoxies. But at the same time, Andriessen
is relegated to a footnote in histories of minimalism, where he might
be expected to fit better, thanks to his unabashed engagement with that
same high-art tradition. He wears his debt to Stravinsky on his sleeve,
delights in arcane, inaudible intellectual schemes in his pieces, and
(unlike all the “canonic” minimalists) he occupies a prestigious
and powerful academic position.
- New critical work on Andriessen promises to lead to alternative narratives
of what happened to music after 1950, narratives in which Andriessen
might be a central figure. Such work might be organized around many
different issues: the collapse of the avant-garde after the 1960s and
the shift in status of classical music institutions; the refiguring
of high-culture and low-culture spheres generally; the means by which
outsiders become
insiders; or the strategies with which composers negotiate local and
international scenes. Neither of the two works under review attempt
these larger tasks, but both suggest promising directions for such work.
The lengthy volume The Music of Louis Andriessen, edited by
Maja Trochimczyk, and Robert Adlington’s much shorter monograph
Louis Andriessen: De Staat are the first
two serious studies of Andriessen in English, and both raise more questions
than they answer. But this is entirely appropriate for a composer whose
trajectory seems to move in so many different directions at once and,
moreover, one whose story is far from finished.1
- Trochimczyk’s volume is not the edited collection of essays
that one might expect from the title page. Of its thirteen chapters,
six are interviews, five are essays by Trochimczyk herself, one is a
speech given by Andriessen, and one is an essay by another musicologist
(Frits van der Waa), resulting in a book that reads like a hybrid of
a monograph and an oral history. It treats some works in great depth,
such as Hadewijch and Writing to Vermeer (both of
which are given chapters of their own) while largely passing over other
works, such as De Snelheid or Rosa, A Horse Drama.
Adlington’s title page is similarly misleading, providing far
more than commentary on the single work of the book’s title. After
a cogent account of Andriessen’s development as a composer and
thinker leading up to De Staat’s premier in 1976, he
addresses in detail important stylistic influences on De Staat
(discussed below). He then turns to the musical structures of the work,
offering analytic insights that vary in their plausibility. He himself
warns against an analysis which would “smooth over” the
audible disjunctions and “rudeness” of the work (58), but
to my taste he comes close to falling into the old music theorist’s
prejudice in favor of “coherence,” to the detriment of his
own arguments. However, in the same chapter, he powerfully and elegantly
describes the different types of music found in this fundamentally disjunct
piece. After reading the fifth and final chapter, this aspect of Chapter
4 seems even better in retrospect, since it lays the groundwork for
a convincing (if admittedly not exhaustive) exploration of the vexed
question of the meaning of De Staat, its political content,
and the “argument,” if any, that the
audience is to take from it. Since essentially all of Andriessen’s
works are, in one way or another, intentionally political, Adlington’s
readings in this chapter suggest strategies for understanding Andriessen’s
oeuvre as a whole.2
-
In the end, Adlington has crafted a more satisfying
and coherent book, one that probably provides a better introduction
to Andriessen generally. However, if I have a complaint, it is my
impression that Adlington tries too hard to tie up the loose ends
and intractable contradictions of his subject. By contrast, the rich
collection of facts and observations in Trochimczyk’s volume, despite
its disunity (and some rather annoying editorial infelicities), raises
many more issues and suggests many more directions for future research.
(Indeed, it appears to have so stimulated Adlington, who cites it
frequently.) The unanswered questions themselves most convincingly
argue for Andriessen’s importance.
-
Born into a musical family in 1939, Andriessen followed
a path familiar from other mid-century composer biographies: early
experiments with serialism, a visit to Darmstadt, and personal study
with an avant-garde master (in his case Luciano Berio). In addition
to his serial experiments, Andriessen participated in the other compositional
fads of the 50s and 60s, from “collage” pieces, to
graphical scores, to experiments with tape music. Andriessen’s story
takes a crucial turn however, when he attempts to apply his leftist
political convictions to his musical activities. He became convinced
that it was not merely bourgeois music that was somehow corrupt and
retrogressive, but the institutions and rituals of classical music
themselves, particularly those associated with the symphony orchestra.
- This led to a pivotal event in Andriessen’s development as a
composer, the story of which is told several times in different chapters
of Trochimczyk. He participated in a series of
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Concertgebouw |
demonstrations agitating for change in prestigious Dutch cultural institutions,
demonstrations that culminated in the still-notorious Notenkraker
(“Nutcracker”) action of November, 17 1969, when a group
of musicians and students disrupted an orchestral concert in the Concertgebouw.
In his retelling of this event, Adlington quotes a Dutch critic who
recently called it “the constituting myth of Dutch musical life”
(16). At the time, no one would have suspected that, almost exactly
seven years later, Andriessen’s De Staat would receive its
Amsterdam premiere in the very same hall.
- While demonstrating against Dutch bourgeois concert culture, Andriessen
was also engaged in building up a new, potentially more progressive
space for music-making, which would combine the didacticism and sense
of play of political street theater, the participatory dynamics of a
rock concert, and the seriousness of purpose of the classical concert
hall. The music that would create and fill this space would likewise
be a hybrid: avoiding the pitfalls of the romantic orchestral tradition
and the equally poisonous (for Andriessen) shortcomings of commercialized
popular music. I found Adlington particularly incisive when presenting
these elements of Andriessen’s intellectual development. The three
major models (though far from the only influences) for music that could
serve these purposes are identified in the title of Adlington’s second
chapter: “Jazz, Minimalism, Stravinsky.” As Adlington explains,
Andriessen had a conflicted relationship with all three. For example,
his love of jazz is as great as his hatred of what he calls
“popular music,” but the line separating these concepts
has never been bright, and he is thus forced into awkward rhetorical
positions, to the extent that it sometimes becomes unclear what music
he is talking about in a given quotation. With respect to Stravinsky,
it is not obvious why a communist would draw so heavily on a deeply
religious composer who chose a dollar sign as his monogram. I will limit
myself here to surveying in more detail Andriessen’s relationship
with American minimalism.
- The relationship between American minimalism and Andriessen’s
own work functions on many levels, from conventionally musical to conceptual
and ideological, but, at least as he tells the story now, his reaction
to Terry Riley’s In C was visceral, instantaneous, and pivotal.
In Adlington’s words, “minimalism offered an immediacy and physicality
that connected it to pop, yet retained a conceptualist element that
helped distinguish it from the world of commercial music—a crucial
distinction for a leftist composer hostile to the corporate world”
(24). But, if we are to believe the composer’s statements (many made
two decades or so after the fact), he had misgivings about the work
of Riley, Reich, and Glass from very early on. These misgivings took
place on both the familiar grounds of “mindlessness,” “glossiness,”
and “voluptuousness,” but also on the less commonplace ground
that the American minimalists’ art-gallery milieu “signified merely
a pandering to the art-consuming bourgeoisie” (45).
The first works that resulted from this ambivalence, such as De
Volharding (1972) or Workers Union (1975), were uniquely
suited to their hybrid concert spaces—music that was loud, aggressive,
and dissonant, but formally clear, rigorous, and direct. The live recording
included with Adlington’s book, during which the audience periodically
erupts into applause and appreciative whooping and whistling, suggests
this interdependence of sound and space. [Listen]
Even works in a gentler vein, like the interminable unison piano and
recorder duet Melodie (1972–74), make demands on the listener
more confrontational than those of American works of the same period.
- But De Staat, for a larger ensemble and with a sung text
taken from Plato’s Republic, is a slightly different and more
complicated case. In the fourth and best chapter of Adlington’s book,
he suggests why, reading the musical content of De Staat as
an argument about the relative merits of different musical
styles. This argument rests on the excellent technical analysis of the
preceding chapter, which sorts the discontinuous sections of De
Staat into passages of aggressive chromatic dissonance and passages
of more gentle, “white-note” dissonance. He calls these
modes “material A” and “material D,” but we
might, with tongue in cheek, simply refer to “the pretty music”
and “the ugly music,” as in this
example where these tropes butt heads for the first time, as trombone
clusters give way to the diaphanous first chorus. And then there are
striking passages that seem to fit in neither category, including sections
of unison writing and the concluding passage, a breathtaking two-voice
canon at the second for the entire ensemble divided down the middle,
which then breaks down and resolves into a unison. [Listen]
Adlington’s interpretation takes off from
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Example
3.2 from
Louis Andriessen: De Staat |
the suggestive observation that it is the “pretty” music,
so starkly contrasted with its other, which bears the audible influences
of American minimalism—indeed the first choral section, which
appears like an oasis after the desert of squawking trombones, uses
the basic harmony of Reich’s Four Organs, at the same pitch
and registral level.
- De Staat, then, functions as an exercise in critique-through-juxtaposition,
holding up the “luxurious” minimalist style for scrutiny.
Adlington’s reading is, to this point, sensitive and insightful, causing
me to reconsider why I was so attracted to De Staat on first
hearing. However, I cannot quite follow Adlington all the way to the
end of his argument, when he suggests that De Staat’s extreme
contrasts render only the “pretty” sections permanently
unstable:
Andriessen juxtaposes [the minimalist passages] with
music designed to establish the most tense of oppositions, oppositions
that recognize the freedoms and harmony of a relaxed minimalist style
to be illusory in present conditions. (118)
What does it mean to say that music we just heard is rendered
“illusory”? Would it not be equally valid to argue that
the passages of sheer aural pleasure consign the harsher passages to
irrelevance? The mere ordering of the sections might make a difference,
if the ugliness seemed to supercede or drown out the prettiness. But
as Adlington carefully explains, this does not happen De Staat.
The work’s ending is neither dissonant nor consonant, but in unison—a
unison, moreover, which feels worked-for, achieved after the two-part
canon at break-neck speed.
- Adlington seems absolutely right to read the work as “music about music”
(and also as music about politics and performance and other issues;
I’ve focused on only one aspect of his multifaceted interpretation here).
But in my opinion De Staat leaves its final conclusion
decidedly ambiguous. To put it in stark terms, Adlington is exactly
half right: my sense that the pretty sections make the ugly ones seem
cruel and self-indulgent is precisely as strong as my sense
that the ugly sections make the pretty ones seem facile and pandering.
And, of course, the sections that seem unclassifiable in this scheme
serve to throw the entire interpretive strategy into doubt. This uneasy
coexistence, an unresolved tension rather than a clean synthesis or
an obvious critique, seems to characterize not only Andriessen’s best
music, but also his entire career, from his institutional position to
his musical philosophy.
- Although Adlington’s book more or less ends in 1976, the most stimulating
essay in Trochimczyk’s book—the brief chapter "Unisons and
the Republic" (Chapter 5)—makes it clear that the relationship
between American minimalists and Andriessen was not a one-way street,
particularly after the international dissemination and success of De
Staat. In the short final section of this chapter, Trochimczyk
suggests that Andriessen’s work from the 70s and early 80s exerted
a clear and hitherto unacknowledged influence on American composers.
The most startling example is John Adams, whose Short Ride in a
Fast Machine owes an audible debt to De Snelheid
(that is, Velocity or Speed). De Snelheid
was commissioned and premiered by the San Francisco Symphony in 1984
while Adams was composer-in-residence there. Short Ride was
premiered by the same orchestra two years later. Trochimczyk
seems to refer only to the general similarities—the titles, the
incessant woodblock pulse, the exploration of slow-moving lines against
frenetic rhythmic activity—without isolating the startling moment toward
the end of Short Ride where Adams comes very close to quoting
a passage from De Snelheid, with the same timbre and at the
same pitch level.3 [Listen]
In light of this connection, I begin to hear Andriessenesque elements
in compositions by Adams (beyond those mentioned by Trochimczyk),
with aesthetic aims very distant from anything Andriessen ever attempted,
such as Tromba Lontana (1985) or Grand Pianola Music
(1982). Also not discussed by Trochimczyk in this context is Steve Reich’s
Tehillim (1981); its form, scoring, rhythms, and use of amplified
female voices all find obvious precedents in De Staat. [Listen]
- It is possible that Reich and Adams would have looked to Andriessen
for more than purely aesthetic reasons. While both Adlington and Trochimczyk
comment on the apparent irony of the uncompromisingly antiauthoritarian
Andriessen being performed in the Concertgebouw, neither
explicitly asks how he crafted the music that gained him access
to this and other high art institutions. This is both a social and a
stylistic question. Only in the years following De Staat were
American minimalists granted similar access.4
The quasi-improvisatory free-for-all of Frederick Rzewski’s Les
Moutons de Panurge (1969) or Terry Riley’s In C
(1964) initially inspired Glass and Reich to compose works which retain
the “experimentalist” loose control of performers and spirit
of play—Glass’s 1+1 (1967), or Reich’s Pendulum
Music (1968). Only later did they compose rigorous, disciplined
feats of endurance like Glass’s Music in Twelve Parts
(1971-74) for example, or Reich’s Four Organs (1970). But when Andriessen
heard In C, he heard the potential for rigor immediately, and,
even while rejecting the orchestra, seemed to find a more direct path
back to the concert hall. Even works employing a loose and rough performance
style, such as De Volharding (1972), still involve stunning,
almost inhuman feats of stamina and virtuosity. For all the discourse
surrounding Andriessen’s confrontational and aggressive dissonance,
this aspect of his style might have paradoxically made him more fit
for entrance into the Concertgebouw, at least for some audiences.
- Both Trochimczyk and Adlington are intrigued by the potential political
interpretation of the harsh rigor of Andriessen’s work from the 1970s.
Is Worker’s Union (1975), or De Staat itself, a sonic
representation of powerful collective action, or of enforced consensus
and repression of dissent? I admit that I find this question less interesting
than that of the role of ideas of control and freedom within concert
music culture specifically. The rigid restraint of the performer has
been a part of concert music at least since the nineteenth century;
challenging the subjugation of performance to work (and performer to
composer) is what made much American experimental music of the 1960s
so radical in the first place. At the risk of overstating the case,
if Andriessen’s rigor saved minimalism
from its experimental roots, his dissonance pulled minimalism back from
the threat of popular accessibility. To explain this statement, I’d
like to take issue with an offhand remark of Trochimczyk’s from
Chapter 3:
Thus, the new musical style [of the pieces written for
the Orkest De Volharding] “alienated” Andriessen’s
music from the traditional world of “classical concert performances”
that he was brought up with. Simultaneously, though, the continuing
formal complexity and harmonic density of his music (saturated chords,
with frequent use of major and minor seconds) has not created easy
listening experiences for conservatively-minded traditionalists who,
perhaps, would prefer the euphonious repeated triads of Philip Glass
or John Adams. (60)
On the contrary, the phenomenal popularity achieved by Philip
Glass rested first and foremost on young audiences whose most familiar
musical reference points were pop and rock, audiences that hardly deserve
the label “conservatively-minded traditionalists.” That
phrase more readily calls to mind an audience devoted to the canonized
classical orchestral repertoire, among whom Glass tends to be, at best,
the butt of jokes.5 As outdated as it
might seem, in the realm of the classical concert hall the “traditionalists”
are still the first to condemn “easy listening experiences”—there
are different kinds of conservatism among audiences (and
musicologists, too, for that matter). While Andriessen’s dissonance
might lose him an “easy listening” audience, it gains him
a high-art cachet according to a value system hardly less puritanical.
- Among all the different types of writing in Trochimczyk’s book, the
wide-ranging interviews between Trochimczyk and Andriessen are by far
the most fun to read. The reader comes away from the interviews with
a sense of who Andriessen is—articulate,
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Trochimczyk and Andriessen |
engaged with the issues that his own music and career raise, and occasionally
more than a bit pompous. This glimpse into Andriessen’s character would
be valuable on its own, but the interviews are also filled with intriguing
observations and critical aperçus. I suggested above
that the most valuable aspect of Trochimczyk’s book is the questions
it leaves unanswered, and so to conclude I’d like to follow one of many
possible threads in which the tidbits in the interviews gradually seem
to cohere into a larger picture, thereby adding another facet to the
contradictory picture of Andriessen sketched above.
- In several passages, Andriessen becomes perceptibly uncomfortable
when the subject of women is raised. This discomfort is easy to understand
when Trochimczyk asks him about the misogyny and sadism on display in
Rosa, A Horse Drama (71-72). It is more difficult to understand
his defensiveness when asked about his tendency to end works with single
female speaking voices. (His unenlightening response: “it could
be a male voice, too, of course” [79].) And when he refuses to
explain why he himself had characterized Writing to Vermeer
(1997-98) and TAO (1996) as “feminine”—except
to say that “there are women singing and women playing the harpsichord,
that is what it is” (248)—his evasiveness becomes almost
comical. Elsewhere he is not so tight-lipped: in describing his early
collaborators, he distinguishes them from those he disdainfully calls
“the pretty girls who play Mozart” (15). Later he refers
to “susceptible ladies” who are too easily seduced by spurious
tonal analyses (118).
-
That Andriessen comes off as a bit of an old-fashioned sexist is fairly
trivial, but begins to seem more significant when it plays out in his compositions.
One could begin with Trochimczyk’s observation in one of her essays that
all Andriessen’s female characters in his more recent dramatic works
are defined exclusively in relation to their men (274), but such moments
of gender anxiety also, more obliquely, offer a new perspective on one
of the most frequently employed (and frequently discussed) elements of
Andriessen’s musical language as a whole: his preference for anti-operatic,
“flat,” vibrato-free voices. Describing what he values in
a performer, Andriessen says
The problem is that in a bad performance, what you hear all
the time is not the music but the singer’s voice. You hear, “this
is me. I am singing,” instead of the music. This means there is
a wall between me, the listener, and the music that I am trying to listen
to, because there is this woman (sic) screaming continuously.
It is a very big problem. It seems to me that good performers become
invisible or inaudible during the performance; they virtually disappear
in the music. (168)
Thus the straight-toned female chorus which forms such
a recognizable aspect of Andriessen’s mature sound is revealed to
be absolutely of a piece with the problem of the performer and the work
raised above. Rather than the more abstract notions of freedom and control,
however, here the anxiety is focused on conspicuously female bodily expression.6
- This line of reasoning differs drastically from the story that Andriessen
and others tell about his attraction to these untrained voices,
again and again attributed to his exposure to jazz,
non-Western, and popular music. Of course, at least with reference to
jazz, this has never exactly made sense; when Andriessen unequivocally
declares that vibrato “is not done by jazz singers,” one wonders
which singers has been listening to.7
Regardless, the hard-edged, vibrato-free voice that Andriessen loves
has been presented as just another aspect of Andriessen’s revolt
against ideologies of classical music and orthodoxies
of Modernism, which is true as far as it goes. However, the story becomes
more complicated and interesting when these same voices are seen, simultaneously,
as an emblem of precisely the Romantic work-concept and performer denigration
upon which those ideologies were built. Andriessen, as ever, tries to
break down hierarchies and orthodoxies, while simultaneously taking
advantage of the same systems.8
- The conventional apology of the reviewer, that he has not done justice
to the complexity of the books under review, is particularly necessary
here, since any attempt to neatly summarize Andriessen’s life and works
seems to have the potential to be blown apart by another work, another
quotation, another anecdote. In a footnote, Adlington suggests that
a fascinating study would be to compare Andriessen with another deeply
political composer, whose politics play out not only in his works but
also in his approach to performers and institutions: Cornelius Cardew
(115n21). The comparison is particularly instructive here, since much of Cardew’s
music (like Andriessen’s worst music) is characterized precisely by
a lack of ambivalence, a univocality that is, in the end, both
an aesthetic and political failing.Like Andriessen’s best music, both
Adlington and Trochimczyk’s books are strongest when their proposed
syntheses remain provisional, and the many voices in Andriessen’s thought
and music remain dissonant.
Gregory W. Bloch
University of California, Berkeley
Footnotes
1. Besides various journalistic sources
and few articles, serious work on Andriessen has been in Dutch. All these
sources, through 2002, are listed in the Trochimczyk’s excellent
bibliography. Her appendices also contain a wonderful discography, and
a better works list than the New Grove’s. English-speaking scholars
should also be aware of a large collection of Andriessen’s own writings
in translation, from 1966 to 2000, published as The Art of Stealing
Time. A major study in English is forthcoming from Yayoi Uno Everett.
2. I mean in no way to slight Adlington’s
book when I say that its most exciting content may be the CD which is
included with the book (from which most of the sound examples for this
essay are drawn). It includes a live recording of De Staat from
1978, which differs in fascinating ways from the more commonly available
1990 recording conducted by Reinbert de Leeuw, along with an enthralling
live recording of De Volharding, and the first available recording
of the choral setting of Il Principe (text by Niccolò Machiavelli). None of these
performances have ever been available on CD before now.
3. Paul Griffiths notes the general similarities,
though again not the specific intertextual relation, in his listening
guide to the CD accompanying the October 2002 issue of BBC Music Magazine, which juxtaposes the two pieces.
4. Two pivotal pieces are Reich’s
Octet (1979) and Glass’s Satyagraha (1979), the
first mature works by both composers not written for their own ensembles.
Significantly, both were partly commissioned by Dutch cultural institutions.
5. John Adams has fared marginally better
on this account. I do not mean to suggest here that much of the criticism
directed at Glass isn’t valid, on a variety of grounds.
6. This contrasts with his feelings about
instrumentalists. Speaking of his raucous ensemble Orkest De Volharding,
he has put forward almost the exact opposite opinion. “Classical
musicians are really a medium. They say, ‘You write a B flat,
I give you a B flat.’ But a colleague, a classically-trained composer,
wrote for De Volharding, and after a rehearsal came to me: ‘It’s
completely different to all my former experiences, because when I write
a B flat, I don’t get back my B flat, I get De Volharding back.’
You see the difference?” (Adlington 39). So, are we to conclude
that if performers play loud squawky saxophones they are permitted to
drown out the composer’s voice, but if they have warm, enveloping, conventionally
expressive feminine voices, they must be made "invisible or inaudible"?
7. The complete quotation is as follows: “There is no other
culture in the world, nowhere whatsoever in human history [besides opera],
where such a vibrato exists. I am very specifically a sworn enemy of vibrato.
It is not necessary anymore: it is not done by Baroque singers, it is
not done by jazz singers, it is not done
by folk singers, it is not done by pop singers, and it is not done by mothers when they sing to their children. Such a vibrato is not done by anybody else and it is a very unnatural,
‘manneristic’ way of making a sound” (Trochimczyk 169;
also quoted by Adlington 38). Clearly, there are many problems with this
quotation, beyond the fact that it is simply false.
8. For one who happens to enjoy the screaming women, it is satisfying
to read, in Trochimczyk’s interview with Andriessen’s longtime
collaborator, the conductor Reinbert de Leeuw (Chapter 10), that such
voices simply do not work on the operatic stage, and that “I think
Louis is now in the process of reconciling that aspect of performance
and that he feels he should not be too rigid with them, but work with
people who can really sing” (216). We are informed in an endnote
that Andriessen expressed his disagreement with this remark when given
the interview to read before publication (217n11).
Works Cited
Books and Articles
Andriessen, Louis. The Art of Stealing Time. Ed. Mirjam Zeegers. Translated by Clare Yates. Todmorden, UK: Arc, 2002.
Everett, Yayoi Uno. The Music of Louis Andriessen: Politics, Parody, and Crossing Boundaries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming.
Griffiths, Paul. Liner notes. CD accompanying BBC Music Magazine 11. BBC MM222, 2002.
Sound Recordings
CD accompanying BBC Music Magazine 11. BBC MM222, 2002.
Reich, Steve. “Tehillim.” Perf. Schoenberg Ensemble with Percussion Group The Hague. Cond. Reinbert de Leeuw. Works 1965-1995. Vol. 5. Nonesuch 79451-1, 1997.
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