hinton and a few others probably know something about Dillon. always nice to learn something about modern music. there still are a few interesting posters here.
Well, I only know what I've read about him and the YouTube "Ti.re-Ti.ke-Dha," an inauspiciously pretentious and off-putting title, drum performance from Oberlin, which doesn't give me much insight. Any links where I can hear more of his stuff?
P.S. those of us not into the "new complexity" are not necessarily less "interesting" than those of you who are. Perhaps you could post some links to educate us. I'm not opposed to "modern music." I just haven't heard much that convinces me that I want to hear more. Maybe you can help.
P.P.S my problem with the "new complexity" is the same problem I have with "metafiction" in literature -- that postmodern, self-imposed self-consciousness that never lets you escape from the artifice of the art object. Such an experience, for me, destroys the effect of Art. I want Art to describe, illuminate and enrich my world -- not to reference my world with irony and posturing.
When you read metafiction, for example, you're never allowed to sink into the experience of reading fiction, to suspend your disbelief, because you're constantly reminded of the author's cleverness in CREATING fiction. It strikes me as decadent. I get the same effect from the "new complexity." It's so convoluted you can't simply enjoy it: you must "appreciate" its complexity, revel in the composer's ostentatious ingenuity to enjoy it. Beethoven and Bach didn't ask that of listeners, nor did any of the greatest composers or novelists. The complexities in their works were integral to the work and were subsumed in the emotional experience of listening/peforming/reading. As in Tolstoy or E. M. Forster's novels. With them, the reader could disappear into their worlds to escape his or her own world. With metafiction (and the "new complexity"), you are constantly reminded that you are immersed in artifice. Yech.
No great artists succeed in parading their complexity for complexity's sake. That's artifice and pomposity.
So, tell me why I should enter this world of self-conscious, hyper-complex composition? Present your case before you label us as not interesting posters.
I don't need irony and narcissism, pies. I need beauty.