<p>A superb new biography</p>
- Alex Ross, The New Yorker
<p>In this new biography, Bill Alves and Brett Campbell share a thorough overview of Harrison's life in the form of a dense, chronological narrative, rich in details meticulously cited, and interwoven with insightful details about his music.</p>
- John MacInnis, Notes, the journal of the Music Library Association
<p>An illuminating and engrossing new biography</p>
Los Angeles Times
<p>In this new biography, Bill Alves and Brett Campbell share a thorough overview of Harrison's life in the form of a dense, chronological narrative, interwoven with insightful details about his music.</p>
Notes
<p>Readers who are willing to take a deep dive will be well rewarded. Harrison's life story was an inspiring one, as Alves and Campbell demonstrate. . . . Through the authors' research, we see the complex network of connections between composers—the camaraderie, and the occasional infighting and drama.</p>
4Columns
<p></p><p>Comprehensive and engrossing</p>
The New York Times
<p></p><p>This scrupulously researched, lovingly written biography provides a comprehensive overview of the man, his life and times, and the music he made.</p>
Songlines
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Bill Alves is a southern California composer of acoustic and electronic microtonal music, music for gamelan, video, and other works. He is the author of Music of the Peoples of the World and his discs are available from MicroFest Records, Spectral Harmonies, and Kinetica Video Library. He teaches at Harvey Mudd College at the Claremont Colleges, where he directs the American gamelan.
Brett Campbell writes frequently about music and other arts for Oregon ArtsWatch, The Wall Street Journal, San Francisco Classical Voice, and many other publications. He teaches journalism at Portland State University and performs in Venerable Showers of Beauty gamelan ensemble, based at Lewis and Clark College in Lou Harrison's hometown of Portland, Oregon.