We use cookies on our website to provide you with the best experience. Most of these are essential and already present.
We do require your explicit consent to save your cart and browsing history between visits. Read about cookies we use here.
Your cart and preferences will not be saved if you leave the site.
play

Salvatore Martirano, George Rochberg

O, O, O, O, That Shakespeherian Rag / String Quartet No. 2 With Soprano (LP)

Label: Composers Recordings Inc. (CRI)

Format: LP

Genre: Compositional

In stock

€19.60
VAT exempt
+
-
A 1958 composition for mixed chorus and chamber ensemble backed with a 1961 string quartet with soprano, released by CRI in 1963.

condition (record/cover): VG+ (occasional surface noise / G+ (sleeve modified attaching the insert with tape repair)

Salvatore Martirano is best known today for the Sal-Mar Construction, the room-sized electronic music instrument he designed and built at the University of Illinois between 1969 and 1972: a network of logic circuits and switches that generated and transformed electronic sound in real time, operated from a control surface that functioned as a kind of improvisation environment. But Martirano's vocal and theatrical music, represented here on CRI, shows the dimension of his practice that the technological legend has tended to obscure - a deep engagement with literature and performance, a sense of drama that connects his work to a broader tradition of American music-theatre. George Rochberg's presence on this LP carries its own weight of historical significance. Trained as a serialist, Rochberg experienced the death of his son in 1964 and concluded that serial technique was incapable of expressing grief - incapable, more broadly, of addressing the full range of human experience. He began incorporating tonal quotation and neo-romantic gesture into his work, a decision that made him one of the most contested figures in American music for two decades. His String Quartet No. 2 With Soprano is an early document of this turn - a work that positions itself within and against the modernist legacy simultaneously. Two composers whose trajectories tell a great deal about the pressures American musical life exerted on its practitioners across this period.

Details
File under: Contemporary
Cat. number: CRI 164
Year: 1963