Terry Riley: A Rainbow In Curved Air; Poppy Nogood and the Phantom Band

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Terry Riley: A Rainbow In Curved Air; Poppy Nogood and the Phantom Band album cover
Album Information
ALBUM ONLY // EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 2   Total Length: 40:17

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Still worth listening to after almost 40 years!

peterchamp

In college, way back in the early 1970's, I fell under the sway of Terry Riley's music. "In C" was a stretch for me then--and still is challenging listening--but I loved Rainbow in Curved Air the 1st time I heard it. I still own a well-worn vinyl copy purchased in college, and still spin it several times a year.

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Terry Riley was Ahead of Everybody

jazzmine

Terry Riley conjured revolutionary creative ideas for 30-40 years. He would start some wild new wonderful concept then while everyone was just starting to work on that idea, he already had moved on to working on something else.

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They Say All Music Guide

After several graph compositions and early pattern pieces with jazz ensembles in the late ’50s and early ’60s (see “Concert for Two Pianists and Tape Recorders” and “Ear Piece” in La Monte Young’s book An Anthology), Riley invented a whole new music which has since gone under many names (minimal music — a category often applied to sustained pieces as well — pattern music, phase music, etc.) which is set forth in its purest form in the famous “In C” (1964) (for saxophone and ensemble, CBS MK 7178). “Rainbow in Curved Air” demonstrates the straightforward pattern technique but also has Riley improvising with the patterns, making gorgeous timbre changes on the synthesizers and organs, and presenting contrasting sections that has become the basic structuring of his works (“Candenza on the Night Plain” and other pieces). Scored for large orchestra with extra percussion and electronics, some of this work’s seven movements are: “Star Night,” “Blue Lotus,” “The Earth Below,” and “Island of the Rhumba King.” – “Blue” Gene Tyranny

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