Very strange that the same people who like Finnissy also seem to rave about what a great book Gravity's Rainbow is.
I couldn't get through GR.
It was like reading something written by someone on crack.
remy
You admitting that you couldn't finish the book sort of disqualifies (or at least takes the air out of) any snarky comments and levels it roughly on the same playing field as a 13-year-old's review of the latest Britney Spears album on amazon.com.
I'm not a big Finnissy enthusiast or expert, but I'm pretty sure that the work in question is not the one that people should use to judge everything about him, which I feel often happens.
English Country Tunes is not the most gradual way to get into his oeuvre. People with severe misgivings should take a listen to the
North American Ballads section of his larger
History of Photography in Sound magnum-opus. Marilyn Nonken played it on one of her discs and it is pretty fantastic. It's definitely whetted by appetite to hear Ian Pace's full recording, which hopefully will be released sometime before the new Guns and Roses record comes out. I hope whoever bought Metier knows how much people want to hear that.
Lately, I've been listening to the Kreutzer Quartet's disc of Finnissy's music for string quartet and I'm pretty blown away.
Nobody's Jig has to be one of the tensest and most unsettling pieces I've ever heard, but I couldn't keep my ears off of it. It's the aural version of a horror film that's so eerie that you want to close your eyes but you just have to keep watching to see what happens next, no matter how ghastly it is. On the other hand, a work like
Plain Harmony takes you for a different kind of journey entirely, that of extremely dense and heavy chords that amount to a sort of dodecaphonic hymn, interspersed with moments of tonal clarity. The entire disc is pretty remarkable and, sadly, one of the only records I've found dedicated to his chamber music.