Barstow

Autor: Harry Partch
Rok vydání: 2000
DOI: 10.31022/a039
Popis: Composer, theorist, instrument builder, and performer, Harry Partch stands with Henry Cowell and John Cage among the great experimenters in American music. Constrained by conventional scales and tuning, Partch devised his own instruments to capture the sounds he imagined. Barstow, composed in 1941 and revised many times afterward through 1968, ranks among Partch's best-known and most accessible works. A setting for voices and instruments of eight hitchhikers' inscriptions near Barstow, California, the work immortalizes the dying world of the American hobo. Its intimate, honest view of Depression-era America provides a foil to the nostalgic Americana of the period. This edition presents Partch's final version of the work with a transcription based on Ben Johnston's system of notating just intonation. NB: Permission to reprint the 1968 holograph score does not extend to electronic versions. Please refer to the print version of this title for the facsimile.
Databáze: OpenAIRE