Lux Aeterna Shines on György Ligeti
Yesterday, after a long struggle with illness, one of the giants of modern music died, Romanian-born Hungarian composer György Ligeti. Tim Page has a lengthy tribute in today's Post (Gyorgy Ligeti's Music Was a Constant Surprise, June 13), as do most of the major American and European music dailies, including Mark Swed in the Los Angeles Times, Paul Griffiths in the New York Times, Nicolas Blanmont in La Libre Belgique, Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Renaud Machart and Marie-Aude Roux in Le Monde. The bloggers are also weighing in, including Alex Ross, Jeremy Denk, On an Overgrown Path, Daniel Felsenfeld, Tim Rutherford-Johnson. The folks at Sequenza 21 have gotten hot under the collar, and rightly so, about all of the media connecting Ligeti's name with the Kubrick film that used some of his music, 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Ligeti is a particular favorite here at Ionarts:
- György Ligeti Becomes "Blue Velvet" in the Hands of the Brentano Quartet (second string quartet, February 15, 2006)
- Rostropovich Cello Competition (cello sonata, August 3, 2005)
- Left Bank Ligeti (first string quartet, May 9, 2005)
- Ligeti with the Pacifica Quartet (first string quartet, April 11, 2005)
- Ligeti's Le Grand Macabre in San Francisco (November 12, 2004)
3 comments:
I just downloaded his 1994, Cello Concerto, Violin Concerto & Piano Cocerto.
Mark, let us know what you think of them.
I write the cloud/bagel pieces, with some car horns for good measure.
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