Music For 88

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 61:20

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John Schaefer

eMusic Contributor

01.08.04
Minimal, mathematical composition might be a lesson - or a joke
2004 | Label: XI Recordings / The Orchard

Tom Johnson is a pianist and composer, but for many, he will forever be known as an early and influential music critic for The Village Voice — one of the first to seriously cover the first rumbles of what would become New York's “downtown” scene and according to some, the man who coined the term Minimalism to describe the early music of Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and similar composers. Ironically, the term Minimalism could perhaps more fairly be attached to Johnson's own music, which does indeed restrict itself to minimal means. One work consisted of Johnson walking in various patterns among 9 bells, striking them as he passed. The rhythm track consisted of the composer's sneakered feet moving among the bells, and the “composition” consisted of the patterns he was walking, since the 9 notes of the bells remained the same.

There is a certain element of whimsy to this sort of music-making which has saved Tom Johnson's work from avant-garde navel-gazing and instead made it some of the most appealing, and often genuinely funny, new music around. This album consists of a single instrument, the piano and its 88 keys. Oh, and Tom Johnson's voice. No, he's not… read more »

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Just the disc to give to those people who remark inquisitively about the relationship of music and mathematics. Johnson actually explains out front before and at times during each piece about the math being used, and at times how musicians and mathematicians differ in their views. Many charming and lovely minimalist pieces for voice and very well recorded piano with sometimes unintentionally droll humor. A very original piece (as in “why didn’t I think of that?”). (See also his piece “Failing: A Very Difficult Piece for Solo Bass” in Bang on a Can Live, Vol. 1 in collections.) – “Blue” Gene Tyranny