Recording Views:
- Brief Display
- Full Description
Recording Contents:
-
Opening credits; and Roots
-
The composer
-
Twentieth-century masterpieces
-
Appreciating different works
-
Eclectic programming
-
Performers
-
Accessibility
-
Language and tonality
-
The avant-garde; and closing credits
-
Experimental music
Additional Materials:
Great conversations: the composers / Eugene Istomin [video recording]
- Title
- Great conversations: the composers [videorecording]
- Host
- Istomin, Eugene
- Interviewees
- Zwilich, Ellen Taaffe
- Rorem, Ned
- Perle, George
- Lieberman, Lowell
- Danielpour, Richard
- Babbitt, Milton
- Producer
- Rosen, Peter
- Place of Publication/Creation
- New York
- Type of Material
- moving image
- Date Issued
- 2005
- Publisher
- Peter Rosen Productions, Inc.
- Issuance
- monographic
- Form
- videorecording
- Physical Description
- 1 digibeta videotape; duration: 56 min., 4 sec.
- Repository
-
Music Division
- notes
- Composers Milton Babbit, Richard Danielpour, Lowell Liebermann, George Perle, Ned Rorem, and Ellen Taaffe Zwilich join Istomin at the American Academy of Arts and Letters in New York to discuss and argue about the strong feelings and controversies surrounding modern contemporary music and the challenges that programming their music presents. The composers talk about their lifelong struggles to achieve recognition, but express pride in their collective status as representatives of the avant-garde.
- "Program two" in the series of Great conversations.
- Additional credits: for the Music Division of the Library of Congress: Jon Newsom, Chief; Jan Lauridsen, Asst. Chief; Ruth Foss, Program Specialist.
- Creator notes
- In opening credits: "The Library of Congress, Washington, DC, presents."
- In credits: "produced for the Library of Congress by Peter Rosen Productions, Inc."
- Venue
- Filmed at the American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York.
- Permissions note
- Copyright Library of Congress. This program was made possible through the courtesy of Eugene Istomin. Artists' appearances are courtesy of themselves: Milton Babbitt, Richard Danielpour, Lowell Lieberman, George Perle, Ned Rorem, and Ellen Taaffe Zwilich.
- Updated
- 11-18-2005
Last Updated: