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NEOS 11912CD
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Born in Cuba, Jorge E. López was raised in the USA and lives in Austria today. Although he studied composition at the California Institute of the Arts, he describes himself as an autodidact. Extra-musical influences play a large role in his music, which doesn't fit neatly into any categories or schools of "New Music". With its 52-minute duration, López's Second Chamber Symphony Op. 23 "A végső Tavasz" is the central work on this disc and also draws inspiration from various sources. This is the world premiere recording of this work as well as of the ensemble piece Kampfhandlungen / Traumhandlungen Op. 11 [Scenes of Combat / Tissue of Dreams], which is marked by dark colors and sharp contrasts.
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NEOS 11425CD
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Jorge E. López was born in 1955 in Havana, Cuba, and grew up in New York City and Chicago beginning in 1960. From 1971 until 1976 López was a composition student of Leonard Stein and Morton Subotnick at the California Institute of the Arts. He designates himself as self-taught, with roots in Western art music but also in surrealism, science, and in the experience of unspoiled nature. He moved to Europe in 1990 and was a guest artist at the KKM from 2000 until 2003. He has lived in Vienna since 2008. "I have never identified myself with the term 'New Music,'" says López. "Rather, I was driven from the beginning by the idea of making the primordial present. I do not seek for the new, but seek rather for what is repressed. I do not believe in progress in art." With the title Symphonie Fleuve, López points to the idea of a direct flow of thoughts or stream of consciousness more or less seismographically transferred into music; at the same time, he also points to the "liquefied sound" of the solo horn that is intended to appear flexible in a way similar to that of the human voice. "The horn cries out and calls mostly brief words of an unknown language." Symphonie Nr. 3, Op. 24, also in two movements, was conceived by López as a "transformation of the morphology of Beethoven's C-minor Piano Sonata, Op. 111." Performed by the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra; Peter Eötvös and Brad Lubman, conductors.
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