Anyway, here are some you could check into: Terry Riley, Steven Reich, Per Norgaard, Zoltan Jeny, Gyorgi Ligeti, and Philip Glass.
Otte's Das Buch der Klange
I'm not even going to bother responding to Rachfan's crap; and yes, it's definitely crap. Also, retrouvailles, there is very little that's simple about Glass' compositional technique. Just because his music is the most accessible doesn't mean he is one of "the worst". Try his string quartets, for starters.
Really don't suggest trying that piece.
I have heard my fair share of Glass and I frankly don't think I am missing out on the rest.
Ligeti was not a minimalist.
He wrote minimalist pieces.
To s_bussotti:Just because you happen to disagree with another person's point of view does not mean it's "crap".
I have to say that I am with s_bussotti on this one.
I don't think he wrote a significant amount to be called a minimalist though. Lots of people have written minimalist pieces but cannot be called minimalists.
But why would you recommend someone if a given musical genre isn't their main thing. I wouldn't say to look into Stravinsky if you want to hear serial music, just because he wrote a few pieces that use serialism. I would say to lool into Schoenberg because he was one that did it primarily. It is the same principle here. I wouldn't recommend Ligeti because he was not a minimalist. Also he has said that his piece "Continuum" can only be done on piano if it is a player piano, not by a real person. It can only be played on harpsichord otherwise. He cites that the action of the piano does now allow one to play the piece at a near continuum speed. So one can say that he has written NO works for piano that are minimalist.
Hi ramseytheii,Yes, in the same way that Debussy, Ravel and Griffes were contemporaries of Monet, Manet and Pissarro et al in the Impressionist movement, Glass and Riley and other minimalist composers have been counterparts to fine artists like Morris, Flavin and LeWitt, as well as like-minded sculptors and architects. But it's difficult to know if in the early stages there was a chicken and egg dynamic, or whether there was instead simultaneous and mutual cross-influence. So this element cannot be discounted out of hand. However, it seems that musicologists see the rise of minimalism as being more overtly a reaction against serialism and chance music, much of which by then had become more and more unfathomable and inaccessible due to their complicated and not very obvious intracacies.
I think the "minimalist" composers were just reacting against the previous generation, as all young artists do. Serialism had pretty much run its course, and people just weren't listening anymore. Audiences only wanted tonal music, but you couldn't go back to Rachmaninoff, so they had to come up with something that was pleasant to listen to but could still be defended as "modern" somehow. If you're cynical you could think of it as a strictly commercial decision.