ABSTRACT

The composer and pianist Michael Finnissy (b. 1946) is an unmistakeable presence in the British and international new music scene, both for his immeasurable generosity as prolific composer for many different types of musicians, major advocate for the works of others, and performer and conductor who has also been a driving force behind ensembles; he was also President of the International Society for Contemporary Music from 1990 to 1996. His vast and enormously varied output confounds those who seek easy categorisations: once associated strongly with the ‘new complexity’, Finnissy is equally known as composer regularly engaged with many different folk musics, for working with amateur and community musicians, for a long-term engagement with sacred music, or as an advocate of Anglo-American ‘experimental’ music. Twenty years ago, a large-scale volume entitled Uncommon Ground: The Music of Michael Finnissy gave the first major overview of the output of any ‘complex’ composer. This new volume brings a greater plurality of perspectives and critical sensibility to bear upon an output which is almost twice as large as it was when the earlier book was published. A range of leading contributors – musicologists, composers, performers and others – each grapple with particular questions relating to Finnissy’s music, often in ways which raise questions relating more widely to new music, and provide theoretical foundations for further of study both of Finnissy and other composers.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

section Section A|101 pages

Finnissy’s aesthetics and styles

chapter 1|12 pages

Michael Finnissy

Modernism with an English accent

chapter 2|18 pages

Post-experimental survivor

Finnissy the experimentalist

chapter 3|47 pages

Negotiating borrowing, genre and mediation in the piano music of Finnissy

Strategies and aesthetics

section Section B|93 pages

Finnissy’s identities

chapter 6|13 pages

‘My “personal themes”?!’

Finnissy’s Seventeen Homosexual Poets and the material world

chapter 7|18 pages

Finnissy’s voices

chapter 8|22 pages

‘Listening to the instrument(s)’

A performer’s response to Finnissy’s music for String Quartet and the Chi Mei Ricercari for cello and piano

section Section C|80 pages

Compositional considerations

chapter 10|20 pages

Finnissy and pantonality

Surface and inner necessity

chapter 11|19 pages

The medium is now the material

The ‘folklore’ of Chris Newman and Michael Finnissy

chapter 12|19 pages

Finnissy’s hand

section Section D|77 pages

Contexts and case studies

chapter 13|15 pages

Questioning the foreign and the familiar

Interpreting Michael Finnissy’s use of traditional and non-Western sources

chapter 14|12 pages

Michael Finnissy’s three-point plans

Political Agendas and musical enunciations

chapter 15|16 pages

Finnissy’s alongside

chapter 16|32 pages

From Jean-Luc Godard to Dennis Potter

Finnissy’s cinematic and televisual inspirations