5 Minutes That Will Make You Love 21st-Century Composers: Justin Peck, Choreographer
5 Minutes That Will Make You Love 21st-Century Composers: Justin Peck, Choreographer
5 Minutes That Will Make You Love 21st-Century Composers: Justin Peck, Choreographer
https://nyti.ms/2BXrhQC
Aug. 5, 2020
In the past, we’ve asked some of our favorite artists to choose the five minutes or so they would play to make their friends fall in love with
classical music, the piano, opera, the cello and Mozart.
Now we want to convince those curious friends to love music written in the past 20 years — some of it meditative, some explosive. We
hope you find lots here to discover and enjoy; leave your choices in the comments.
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The music I love most often gives me the feeling of being in transit — ideas and sensations like ever-changing landscapes seen through
the window of a train. In “Stars — Sun — Moon,” the fourth movement of Thomas Adès’s “In Seven Days,” the trip becomes a voyage into
space; soundscapes turn into moonscapes. This gorgeously organized chaos has some of the most imaginative writing I can think of for
piano and orchestra (here, Kirill Gerstein and the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra). When I first heard these sounds 10 years ago, I
giggled softly, which is my slightly awkward physical reaction to being amazed. I still have that reaction when I hear — or, these days,
play — this movement.
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Du Yun, composer
A staple of the New York improvisation scene, the cellist and composer Okkyung Lee released her latest album two months ago. “In
Stardust” is dedicated to the Korean cartoonist Kang Kyung-ok, who created a manhwa series under that name, a sci-fi story about a
normal high school girl who is later revealed to be the heir to an interstellar kingdom. She was meant to be sent off to the universe but
ended up on earth.
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9/1/2020 5 Minutes That Will Make You Love 21st-Century Composers - The New York Times
Du Yun’s “San” for cello and electronics is a modern-day twisted vocalise, reaching back in time to honor the guqin, an ancient Chinese
string instrument. The piece seems to transport the listener to a long-ago era, and the cellist Matt Haimovitz draws out the complex
conversation and storytelling buried within this work through high, soaring melodies, unmetric rhythmic patterns, lyrical scratches and
scrapes.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/05/arts/music/five-minutes-classical-music.html?referringSource=articleShare 3/4
9/1/2020 5 Minutes That Will Make You Love 21st-Century Composers - The New York Times
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