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Album Review: Open Secrets

Review

This CD provides a good overview of Mac Low's creativity: the "1st Milarepa Gatha" (1976), "Thanks" (1960), the "38th and 39th Merzgedichte in Memoriam Kurt Schwitters" (1989), "Phoneme Dance in Memoriam John Cage" (by Mac Low and Anne Tardos) (1993), "Free Gatha 1" (1978), and "Free Gatha 2" (1981) are works for massed, multi-tracked voices speaking/singing at the same time with complex compositional procedures described in the notes; the "Milarepa Quartet for Four Like Instruments" (1982) employs a letter-to-pitch-class code that translates text into music in the manner of procedures used by Messiaen, Ashley, Cage, et al. "Winds/Instruments" (1980) is for voices and instrumentalists who sometimes speak, and "Lucas 1 to 29: For One or More Instrumentalists (In Memoriam Morton Feldman and for the Musicians of Germany)" (1990) is based on the Lucas sequence. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
1st Milarepa Gatha Jackson Mac Low (5:15)
Milarepa Quartet for Four Like Instruments Jackson Mac Low (3:48)
Thanks Jackson Mac Low (9:57)
Winds/Instruments Jackson Mac Low (18:57)
38th and 39th Merzgedichte in Memoriam Kirt Schwitters Jackson Mac Low (1:54)
Phoneme Dance in Memoriam John Cage Jackson Mac Low (5:03)
Lucas 1 to 29: For One or More Instrumentalists Jackson Mac Low (24:28)
Free Gatha 1 and Free Gatha 2 Jackson Mac Low (5:12)

Credits

Anne Tardos (Paintings), Mary Jane Leach (Producer), Tom Hamilton (Digital Editing), Marie Coons (Graphic Design), Bryce Goggin (Engineer), Allan Tucker (Digital Remastering), Mike Metz (Logo)
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more