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David Tudor's Rainforest : An Evolving Exploration of Resonance

David Tudor's Rainforest : An Evolving Exploration of Resonance Of the works of David Tudor, none would seem to be better known than Rainforest IV , his large-scale performed installation of the 1970s. Although it has received widespread and well documented public performance, Rainforest 's germination in the mid-1960s in elements of Bandoneon! (1966) and its evolution over a period of 10 years, from versions I (1968), II (1968–1969), III (1972) and IV (1973) through Forest Speech (1976), have not yet been adequately assessed. This paper follows Rainforest 's trajectory chronologically: Matt Rogalsky focuses on the early versions of the work, and John Driscoll describes the collaborative development of Rainforest IV . http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Leonardo Music Journal MIT Press

David Tudor's Rainforest : An Evolving Exploration of Resonance

Leonardo Music Journal , Volume December 2004 (14) – Dec 1, 2004

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Publisher
MIT Press
Copyright
© 2004 ISAST
Subject
David Tudor: Life and Work; Composers Inside Electronics: Music After David Tudor
ISSN
0961-1215
eISSN
1531-4812
DOI
10.1162/0961121043067415
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Of the works of David Tudor, none would seem to be better known than Rainforest IV , his large-scale performed installation of the 1970s. Although it has received widespread and well documented public performance, Rainforest 's germination in the mid-1960s in elements of Bandoneon! (1966) and its evolution over a period of 10 years, from versions I (1968), II (1968–1969), III (1972) and IV (1973) through Forest Speech (1976), have not yet been adequately assessed. This paper follows Rainforest 's trajectory chronologically: Matt Rogalsky focuses on the early versions of the work, and John Driscoll describes the collaborative development of Rainforest IV .

Journal

Leonardo Music JournalMIT Press

Published: Dec 1, 2004

There are no references for this article.