Like many admirers of Mr. Ligeti, I first heard him on the soundtrack for "2001: A Space Oddysey." As the years have gone by and my interest in the high Modernist movement's composers like Mr. Ligeti, I grew to see him as the most talented and musical amongst his peers (think Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Luciano Berio). Where the others had a tendency to be rather doctrinaire, it was clear that Mr. Ligeti felt free to make and break any rule.
A holocaust survivor who later escaped the Stalinists of communist Hungary, Mr. Ligeti expressed a view of rules and orthodoxies that I respond to on a very deep level. Perhaps we all learn different lessons during childhood but for me, I learned that authority and rules are frequently arbitrary and absurd. When I view a biography and life like Mr. Ligeti's, I see that view reflected in its stages and the works he created. I also see a response that I favor, to embrace the absurdity and pick and choose the "rules" created by other composers. That's a kind of real freedom to me.
CDs listened to today:
- Lauryn Hill: The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill
- Luciano Berio: Notturno
- Antonin Dvorak: Concerto for Cello
- Marvelous3: Hey!Album
- Nine Inch Nails: With Teeth
- Gyorgy Ligeti: Three Pieces for Two Pianos
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