• Éliane Radigue: The New York Synthesis

    Éliane Radigue: The New York Synthesis

    Éliane Radigue’s time in New York City was a pivotal turning point in her career, marking her transition from the tape-based methods of musique concrète to a lifelong mastery of modular synthesizers. The NYU Residency (1970–1971) In 1970, Radigue was invited to a residency at the New York University (NYU) School of the Arts. She worked in the electronic […] Continue Reading

     
     

    4 min read

  • Éliane Radigue and the Radical Power of Slowness

    Éliane Radigue and the Radical Power of Slowness

    Éliane Radigue, who passed away in February 2026 at the age of 94, was a composer who redefined our relationship with time and sound. Across a career spanning… Continue Reading

     
     

    4 min read

  • Earle Brown’s Four Systems: The Mobile Score

    Earle Brown’s Four Systems: The Mobile Score

    Four Systems is an early work in Earle Brown’s development of open-form composition, notated through graphic means rather than fixed musical prescription. This recording presents four distinct realizations,… Continue Reading

     
     

    4 min read

  • What Makes Perfect Lives a Radical Kind of Opera?

    What Makes Perfect Lives a Radical Kind of Opera?

    The Unique Structure of Robert Ashley’s Television Opera Robert Ashley’s Perfect Lives employs a deliberately unconventional narrative structure that significantly departs from traditional opera and from typical linear storytelling. The narrative follows an over-the-hill entertainer, Raoul de Noget, and his companion Buddy, “The World’s Greatest Piano Player,” who arrive in a small town and conspire […] Continue Reading

     
     

    4 min read

  • John Cage’s Radio Music (1956)

    John Cage’s Radio Music (1956)

    John Cage’s Radio Music, composed in 1956, is intended to be performed as a solo or ensemble piece for 1 to 8 performers, each using one radio. The piece has a specified duration of exactly six minutes. Radio Music was composed during a period when Cage heavily used chance operations, derived from the I Ching, […] Continue Reading

     
     

    4 min read

  • John Cage: 0’00” and the Performance of Silence

    John Cage: 0’00” and the Performance of Silence

    Contemporary artists have explored and reimagined 0′00″ in new contexts.Composed in 1962, 0′00″—also known as 4′33″ No. 2—is seen as a major turning point in Cage’s work. It represents a clear break from his earlier style and marks the beginning of a new direction in his approach to composition. The score for 0’00” is strikingly […] Continue Reading

     
     

    4 min read