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One very important aspect of our contemporary musical culture - some might say the supremely important aspect - is its extension in the historical and geographical senses to a degree unknown in the past.
The advent of electronically synthesized sound after World War II has unquestionably had enormous influence on music in general.
This is not a happy time for this kind of music in this country.
The retrospective glance is a relatively easy gesture for us to make.
It is easy to write unthinking music.
Perhaps of all the most basic elements of music, rhythm most directly affects our central nervous system.
The development of new instrumental and vocal idioms has been one of the remarkable phenomena of recent music.
Perhaps many of the perplexing problems of the new music could be put into a new light if we were to reintroduce the ancient idea of music being a reflection of nature.
Most of my influences are turn-of-the-century.
I think we're in a very low point of music right now.
Unquestionably, our contemporary world of music is far richer, in a sense, than earlier periods, due to the historical and geographical extensions of culture to which I have referred.
In a broader sense, the rhythms of nature, large and small - the sounds of wind and water, the sounds of birds and insects - must inevitably find their analogues in music.
Nonetheless, I sense that it will be the task of the future to somehow synthesize the sheer diversity of our present resources into a more organic and well-ordered procedure.
Perhaps two million years ago the creatures of a planet in some remote galaxy faced a musical crisis similar to that which we earthly composers face today.
The future will be the child of the past and the present, even if a rebellious child.
The rhythms of nature - the sounds of wind and water, the sounds of birds and insects - must inevitably find their analogues in music.
I must confess, my Spanish is not so good - except I read a little, so I started with the English but then determined that it would have to be in Spanish.
I am certain that most composers today would consider today's music to be rich, not to say confusing, in its enormous diversity of styles, technical procedures, and systems of esthetics.
I believe that music surpasses even language in its power to mirror the innermost recesses of the human soul
Writing seems to be more difficult as you move through the years.
I have observed, too, that the people of the many countries that I have visited are showing an ever increasing interest in the classical and traditional music of their own cultures.
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