About the Music

“My music has long attempted, amongst other things, to reconcile interest in aspects, such as regular pulse, from ‘Western’ (eg American) minimalism,  with the sustained sonorities (drones) of ‘Eastern’ minimalism.

beautiful. . .like a drug, it’ll wreak havoc with tonal perception. . .astonishing

Dusted

Complex sonorities morphing according to a gradual, perceptible process (Steve Reich’s idea) may typically transform one pitch element at a time by the interval of a semitone (the smallest unit acknowledged by Western art-music). The resulting semitonal chromaticism may also evoke the early 20th-century music I love; and regarding each such element not as ‘a note in a chord’ but as a partial — a harmonic ‘node’ within an acoustical spectrum — pays homage to the approach of my revered mentor Horatiu Radulescu.

The urge to reconcile musical contradictions always came naturally to me: my earliest acknowledged work widens its purview from the world of English experimental music — the ‘white-note-ish’ pieces of Howard Skempton and Hugh Shrapnel ca.1970 — to embrace influences such as Indian classical music or the radical minimalist Giacinto Scelsi, alongside titans of European modernism (Xenakis, Ligeti).

Markedly at odds with much contemporary production, I have in recent years increasingly strongly gravitated away from music mimicking superficial features of earlier minimalist work in favour of a return to a strictly systematic, even algorithmic, attitude to composition.”