image52

From Semi-Simple Variations From the Piano

Article first published as An Eulogy to Milton Babbitt on Blogcritics.

In the past century, there was one composer who, contrary to many of the standards of the mainstream, believed that music shouldn’t always be easy listening; he was a composer who eventually became a giant in the classical music world for the highly unique musical language he developed. And in early 2011, there was one passing which shook the classical music world to its core, a passing which was sorely felt.

Milton Babbitt, who passed away on January 29 at the age of 94, is a name notable in the classical music world, though perhaps not quite as well known to my readers as Bach, Schubert or Beethoven. His music is not performed that frequently. Even within classical circles, Babbit was somewhat renowned for music that was extremely difficult to listen to. In fact, Alex Ross, cultural commentator, music critic and author of The Rest is Noise: Listening to the 20th Century, spoke of Milton Babbitt as an “emblematic Cold War composer” producing music “so Byzantine in construction that one practically needed a security clearance to understand it.” Despite these and other complaints that his music was deliberately inaccessible by mainstream audiences, the innovations he brought to composition and classical music remains.

Read more at blogcritics.org…

Tags: , , , , , , ,