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The Music of David Lumsdaine

DOI link for The Music of David Lumsdaine

The Music of David Lumsdaine book

Kelly Ground to Cambewarra

The Music of David Lumsdaine

DOI link for The Music of David Lumsdaine

The Music of David Lumsdaine book

Kelly Ground to Cambewarra
ByMichael Hooper
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 3 March 2016
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315555386
Pages 246 pages
eBook ISBN 9781315555386
SubjectsArea Studies, Arts
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Hooper, M. (2012). The Music of David Lumsdaine. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315555386

Australian by birth but a longtime resident of Great Britain, David Lumsdaine (b.1931) is central to both Australian and British modernism. During the early 1970s Australian musical modernism was at its height. Lumsdaine and his Australian contemporaries were engaged with practices from multiple places, producing music that displays the attributes of their disparate influences; in so doing they formed a new conception of what it meant to be an Australian composer. The period is similarly important in Britain, for it saw the rise to prominence of composers such as Birtwistle, Davies, Goehr, Gilbert, Wood, Cardew and many others who were Lumsdaine's contemporaries, colleagues and friends. Hooper presents here a series of analyses of Lumsdaine's compositions, focusing on works written between 1966 and 1980. At the early end of this period is Kelly Ground, for solo piano. One of Lumsdaine's first acknowledged works, Kelly Ground connects explicitly with the music of high modernism, employing ideas about temporality as espoused by Ligeti, Stockhausen and Boulez, to form a new ritual for the (now mythical) Australian outlaw Ned Kelly. Hooper places Lumsdaine's music in the context of Australian and British avant-gardes, and reveals its elegance, lyricism and technical virtuosity.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|16 pages

David Lumsdaine’s Kelly Ground

chapter 3|16 pages

‘I would love to know how it all goes together’ or ‘free as a bird’: Improvisatory Flights, Indeterminacy, and Two Works

Byby David Lumsdaine

chapter 4|27 pages

Labyrinths and Journeys

chapter 5|77 pages

Hagoromo – The Melody of a Bell | The Harmony of a Flute

chapter 6|28 pages

David Lumsdaine, Modernism, and Bach: Ruhe sanfte, sanfte ruh’

Byand Mandala 3

chapter 7|30 pages

Reconfigurations in the Facture of Lumsdaine’s Cambewarra: Re-experiencing a Territory

chapter 8|8 pages

Postscript

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