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San Francisco Symphony Premieres "Century Rolls"
By Steve Harris

Hello All -- I was at the "Century Rolls" concert.  The piece (the rest
of the program featured works by Beethoven) appeared to my naive ears
to have only a slight relationship to automatic music.

First, to answer Michael Swanson's question, there was no player piano
present.  Second, the music's rhythm was not fixed (as in the common
mis-impression of piano rolls), but instead varied almost continuously
throughout the work, and the piano's tempos were contrasted with the
orchestra's in rhythmical counterpoint.

I had feared a stereotypical treatment of player pianos, but the music
(as well as the essay on it in the program) certainly did not support
the "player-piano-as-musical-Frankenstein" cliche'.  Maybe too much
exposure to my Duo-Art has dulled my sensibilities, but I did not
notice the musical "strait-jacket of the piano-roll idiom" to which
the San Jose Mercury News' reviewer alludes.

Steve Harris



(Message sent Wed, 09 Dec 1998 23:34:05 -0800 , from time zone -0800.)

Key Words in Subject:  Century, Francisco, Premieres, Rolls, San, Symphony

Related by Subject:
1998.12.26.07 - Philadelphia Orchestra Premieres "Century Rolls"
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1998.12.10.06 (This article) - San Francisco Symphony Premieres "Century Rolls"
from Steve Harris
1998.12.09.01 - San Francisco Symphony Premieres "Century Rolls"
from Michael Swanson