Although La Monte Young is one of the most important
composers of the late twentieth century, he is also one
of the most elusive. Generally recognized as the
patriarch of the minimalist movement--Brian Eno once
called him ''the daddy of us all''--he nonetheless
remains an enigma within the music world. Early in his
career Young eschewed almost completely the conventional
musical institutions of publishers, record labels, and
venues, in order to create compositions completely
unfettered by commercial concerns. At the same time,
however, he exercised profound influence on such varied
figures as Terry Riley, Cornelius Cardew, Andy Warhol,
Yoko Ono, David Lang, Velvet Underground, and entire
branches of electronica and drone music. For half a
century he and his partner and collaborator, Marian
Zazeela, have worked in near-seclusion in their Tribeca
loft, creating works that explore the furthest extremes
of conceptual audacity, technical sophistication,
acoustical complexity, and overt spirituality.Because
Young gives interviews only rarely, and almost never
grants access to his extensive archives, his importance
as a composer has heretofore not been matched by a
commensurate amount of scholarly scrutiny. Draw A
Straight Line and Follow It: The Music and Mysticism of
La Monte Young stands as the first monograph to examine
Young's life and work in detail. The book is a
culmination of a decade of research, during which the
author gained rare access to the composer and his
archives. Though loosely structured upon the chronology
of the composer's career, the book takes a
multi-disciplinary approach that combines biography,
musicology, ethnomusicology, and music analysis, and
illuminates such seemingly disparate aspects of Young's
work as integral serialism and indeterminacy, Mormon
esoterica and Vedic mysticism, and psychedelia and
psychoacoustics. The book is a long-awaited, in-depth
look at one of America's most fascinating musical
figures. |
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