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John Adams

New England-born, California-based composer John Adams is a pivotal figure in 20th century classical music -- he can be viewed as either the last of the minimalists or the first of the post-minimalists. Though his style shares several traits with that of Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and Terry Riley, Adams' sound used a wide variety of melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic ideas, starting with his earliest works, making his music perhaps more accessible to a new listener who might find works like Riley's In C or Glass' Einstein on the Beach too forbidding. John Adams was born on February 15, 1947, in Worcester, Massachusetts, and raised in various towns throughout New England. His parents recognized his aptitude for music early; his father, an amateur clarinetist, taught him the basics of the instrument, and both joined a local concert band in their New Hampshire town when Adams was in his early teens. By this point, Adams had already had several years' worth of piano and other music lessons; he claims that he knew he was going to be a composer by the age of eight and was already writing tonal orchestral pieces by the time he was 13. Adams entered Harvard University in 1965, completing his undergraduate and graduate work under Leon Kirchner, Roger Sessions, and David del Tredici while pursuing an abiding interest in jazz and rock in his spare time. (A 1970 composition for two-channel tape was called "Heavy Metal.") At Harvard, Adams focused primarily on performing and conducting, with composition little more than a hobby. By the time he graduated in 1971 and took a teaching job at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Adams had changed his focus to composing, writing chamber and choral works for a variety of ensembles; he later dismissed most of these works, the majority of which remain unpublished, and considers 1977's "Phrygian Gates," a pulsing solo piano piece commissioned by the performer Mack McCray, to be his first mature composition. This was quickly followed by 1978's string ensemble piece "Shaker Loops," which would prove to be Adams' most popular early work, and the 1980 composition for chorus and orchestra Harmonium, which used poetry by John Donne and Emily Dickinson as its texts. 1982's Grand Pianola Music was Adams' first controversial work, a brassy and ironic ensemble piece for two pianos, female voices, winds, brass, and percussion that sounds like a Mad magazine parody of Charles Ives and was booed upon its premiere. 1985's Harmonielehre is an even more deliberately parodic piece named after Arnold Schoenberg's 1911 treatise on tonal harmony that was the first step toward the Austrian composer's rejection of tonality. Adams has expressed his dislike for Schoenberg's 12-tone music in several ways, and in this long piece he goes so far as to revise the 12-tone system with the entirety of 20th century musical history by applying the techniques of minimalism to the tonally rich Late Romantic tradition of the early 20th century. Adams' next major work, 1987's Nixon in China, temporarily elevated him from the modern classical ghetto into the mainstream public eye. A full-length opera, in English (with a libretto by the poet Alice Goodman), featuring Richard Nixon, his wife Pat, Henry Kissinger, Chairman Mao, and Madame Mao as the main characters was based on the true events of Nixon's historic 1972 visit to China, Nixon in China was that rarity, a serious piece of modern classical music that created a popular media sensation, particularly among misguided pundits who decried it as liberal political propaganda disguised as art. Although Adams, who was of draft age during the Vietnam War, makes no secret of his personal dislike of the man, Goodman's libretto is actually surprisingly sympathetic toward the former president, even at its most cutting. (Two smaller works, 1985's ballet score The Chairman Dances and 1987's voice-and-orchestra suite The Nixon Tapes, were fashioned from leftovers of this large-scale project.) 1991's The Death of Klinghoffer, another opera with a libretto by Goodman, was an even more controversial release; a tragic, elegiac work based on a horrifying 1984 terrorist attack aboard a cruise ship; the artistic virtues of this opera have become obscured by political jockeying over what some see as a pro-Palestinian/anti-Israeli bias due to the fact that the terrorists are not portrayed as cardboard villains. A planned performance of the opera's choruses by the Boston Symphony Orchestra was canceled in November 2001 due to heightened sensitivities following the terrorist attacks on New York City, Pennsylvania, and Washington the previous September. Other important works by John Adams include 1995's song cycle I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky, with libretto by the poet June Jordan; 2000's El Niño, a Nativity oratorio; 1988's Fearful Symmetries, perhaps his most rock-oriented work; and 1993's Hoodoo Zephyr, a song cycle for tape machine and samplers that reflects his longstanding interest in jazz and blues. In addition to a continuing prolific output in a variety of musical styles and settings, Adams also resumed conducting other composers' works with symphony orchestras around the world. In 1999, Nonesuch Records released Earbox, a ten-CD retrospective that includes the complete scores to Nixon in China, The Death of Klinghoffer, I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky, and other works stretching back as far as 1973's chamber piece "Christian Zeal and Activity." By the 2020s, Adams had completed another four operas -- the most successful of which was Doctor Atomic -- more concertante and orchestral works, and several smaller pieces.
© Stewart Mason /TiVo

Discography

119 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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