356. Ash Ra Tempel

(September 2021) Episode 356 is ASH RA TEMPEL, along with ASHRA and MANUEL GÖTTSCHING solo albums. It started as a classic avant-garde Krautrock collective leaning toward the spacey side (Kosmische Musik). But it became a vehicle for Göttsching and reached a peak when he put his guitar at the center. He gets the most Mike Oldfield-like guitar tone I’ve heard elsewhere. The best stuff sounds like a blend of Oldfield, Tangerine Dream and Discipline-era Fripp. 

Favorite Ash Ra Tempel album: Schwingungen

Favorite Ashra album: Blackouts

Favorite Manuel Göttsching album: Inventions for Electric Guitar

Favorite song: Echo Waves

Compared to expectations: ↑

Recommendation: If you like the artists listed above, this is a must.

347. Julia Wolfe

(August 2021) Episode 347 is JULIA WOLFE.  I’ve seen the words “relentless” and “visceral” used to describe her music, and they are apt, and why I love it. There is much diversity and eclecticism in her sounds and styles, in part due to her collaborations in the Bang on a Can partnership, with a strong undercurrent of post-minimalism.  Her compositions feature an abundant lack of convention, offering frequent surprises around each corner.

Favorite piece: Big Beautiful Dark and Scary

Favorite single instrument piece: LAD (bagpipes)

Favorite choral work: Shelter (with Gordon and Lang)

Favorite cello/vocal multimedia freak-out: Spinning

Compared to expectations: ↑

344. Louis Andriessen

(July 2021) Episode 344 of the “opus project” is LOUIS ANDRIESSEN, another one begun following the artist’s passing. Perhaps the most important modern Dutch composer, Andriessen’s works are like a menu sampler of classic musical genres of the 20th century, from neoclassical to serialism to minimalism, then arriving at a style iconoclastically his own. There is a lot here to choose from, including operas, experimental pieces, odd combinations featuring rock music elements, and quiet little piano pieces. 

Favorite piece: Workers Union

Favorite choral/orchestral piece: De Staat

Compared to expectations: ↑

340. Anton Webern

(July 2021) Episode 340 of the “opus project” is ANTON WEBERN. The last for me of the big three of the Second Viennese School of serious serialists. His portfolio isn’t big and he hardly makes it into any repertoires, but he was influential and the music is interesting.

Favorite piece: String Trio

Compared to expectations: same

336. Sun Ra

(June 2021) Episode 336 of the “opus project” is SUN RA. Pianist, bandleader, poet, cosmic philosopher, and one of a kind. Mostly accompanied by his Arkestra, he provided a soundtrack to Afrofuturism through almost every kind of jazz — swing, bebop, free, avant-garde, experimental, fusion, solo piano.  I like best the free jazz and space-ness of the late 60s and early 70s.  Extremely prolific too; at 131 albums this was by far the biggest non-classical episode in the project. I wish I had seen him in concert, although I did see members of the Arkestra once.

Favorite album: Astro Black 

Favorite song:  Nuclear War

Compared to expectations: same

335. Arvo Pärt

(June 2021) Episode 335 is ARVO PÄRT, maybe the most popular living composer you’ve never heard of.  He started out in neo-classical and serialist forms, but then went into seclusion in the early 1970s and came out with a dramatically different approach.  He invented a form called tintinnabuli, of a minimalist aesthetic.  He also focused on choral works, mostly spiritual following study of medieval music and a personal religious conversion, which also forced him to leave the USSR. Much of Pärt’s music sounds meditative and mystical, embodying his spiritual inspirations. 

Favorite piece: Fratres (for violin and piano) 

Favorite choral piece: Stabat Mater

Favorite meditative piece: Spiegel im Spiegel

Compared to expectations: ↑

331. Kaija Saariaho

(May 2021) Episode 331 is KAIJA SAARIAHO. Saariaho is kind of a throwback, composing in conventional classical forms with conventional instruments, earning commissions and premiering at esteemed venues, rather than venturing into film soundtracks or cross-genre collaborations.  Her music, though, is very modern, with polyrhythms, dissonance and rich masses of sounds.  

Favorite piece: Circle Map 

Favorite concerto: Graal théâtre

Favorite chamber piece: Neiges

Favorite opera: L’Amour de loin

Compared to expectations: same

329. Hildur Guðnadóttir

(April 2021) Episode 329 is HILDUR GUÐNADÓTTIR, a contemporary cellist and composer from Iceland.  Her neo-minimalist solo works are my favorite, but she is a frequent collaborator with a wide range of artists from electro-pop to drone metal. Guðnadóttir has focused on soundtracks recently, such as the Chernobyl miniseries and Joker (for which she won an Oscar).  One constant is that most everything in her music seems to resonate off the sober deep tone of a cello.

Favorite solo piece: Leyfðu Ljósinu 

Favorite collaborative album: In Transmediale  (with Angel)

Favorite soundtrack: Chernobyl

Compared to expectations: same

324. Erik Satie

(March 2021) Episode 324 is ERIK SATIE. For his era, he stands out for the simplicity and subdued aesthetic of his works, primarily in piano, his most common medium. His compositions are intimate affairs, both for their brevity and straightforwardness. It’s not hard to see why he’s considered a precursor to minimalism and ambient music.

Favorite piece(s): Gymnopédies

Favorite orchestral work: Parade

Favorite choral work: Socrate

Compared to expectations: same

321. Unsuk Chin

(March 2021) Episode 321 is UNSUK CHIN. A South Korean-born contemporary classical composer with a diverse array of influences (she studied under Ligeti), styles and forms, both conventional and experimental. Many of her works feature frenetic bursts of notes, and make full use of available sounds from instruments (sliding along strings, tapping the body).

Favorite piece: Cello Concerto

Favorite piano piece: Etude No. 5

Favorite choral work: Cantatrix Sopranica

Favorite experimental piece: Double Bind?

Compared to expectations: ↑