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#11 (permalink) | ||||
Music Addict
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: The Organized Mind
Posts: 2,044
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This was a night like any other night. I returned home from work and put on a familiar favorite record. A quick skim of Facebook and a forum or two are part of my routine method of relaxation before I get in to the evening's project. But, as fate would have it, this would not be just any ordinary evening.
I'd felt disheartened of late, fearing that my obsessive exploration of 20th century music had exhausted all possible niche and microgenres and that there were no real surprises left to experience. I understood each of the major artistic musical shifts which had occurred aligning with the ever-changing social identity and value set of each generation. It was a melancholic notion - that perhaps I'd heard it all. But this evening, something caught my eye as I scrolled passively through my Facebook feed. WFMU had shared an image from Alex Ross' website. (Ross is the author of the ultimate guide to the music of the 20th century - The Rest is Noise.) The image was a print advert which appeared in the Village Voice on June 19, 1969. The ad reads: Quote:
![]() Only the album's opening track was available on YouTube, so I queued it up and was wowed at first-listen. Before the track had completed, I tracked down a clean copy of the deluxe edition for my collection and it is presently en-route to my address. Thank you, Mr. Partch for dispelling my silly fear that I'd heard it all, and thank you WFMU for waving the 1969 advert in front of my face. December will be a month of microtonal bliss. ![]() ![]()
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