Today's Composer of the Day is Carl Ruggles.
(1876-1971)
Ruggles was an individualist, cranky, transcendentalist New Englander. He had a fierce modernist bent. He was friends with, and championed by, Charles Ives. His music is delightfully atonal, rugged, and beautiful. He later turned his interest to painting, which may account for his limited compositional output.
Ruggles was a true American original. His limited oeuvre is individualistic and fascinating. He is long overdue a revival of interest in his work.
His most famous pieces are The Sun-Treader and Men and Mountains. His work is scrappy, experimentalist, obscure, and delightful. He represents, and/or typifies, the forgotten between-war American atonal composers that I love.
You should listen to his music.
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Showing posts with label Ruggles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ruggles. Show all posts
1/30/08
Composer of the Day!
Posted by Sator Arepo at 9:59 PM 5 comments
Labels: American between-war atonality, Composer of the Day, Ruggles
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