Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Karlheinz Stockhausen published by this site and its partners.

Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 1-12 of 12
» View wsbtradio.com items only
    May 21, 2012 |Story| WTXX-LTV
  1. 2012: The Year the Music Died (So Far)

    <span style=&quot;font-size: medium;">It&rsquo;s not even June. But already this calendar year we&rsquo;ve lost a gut-wrenching list of people who&rsquo;ve impacted the music world: impresarios Don Cornelius and Dick Clark, R&amp;B legends Johnny Otis and Etta James, the incomparable Band singer and drummer Levon Helm, bluegrass banjo pioneer Earl Scruggs, amp builder Jim Marshall, Memphis Horns saxophonist Andrew Love, pop icons Whitney Houston and Davy Jones, Beastie Boy Adam Yauch, Stax bassist Donald "Duck" Dunn, disco queen Donna Summer, classical art-song master Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, on and on. And, earlier this week, Robin Gibb, who&rsquo;d been battling cancer for some time.</span>
    It’s not even June. But already this calendar year we’ve lost a gut-wrenching list of people who’ve impacted the music world: impresarios Don Cornelius and Dick Clark, R&B legends Johnny Otis and Etta James, the incomparable Band...

    Tags: Koko Taylor, George Shearing, Obituaries, Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band (music group), Michael Jackson

  2. Apr 13, 2012 |Story| WTXX-LTV
  3. Psychedelic Spring: A new Grateful Dead documentary gives Deadheads a reason to tune in and turn on

    <span style=&quot;font-size: medium;">Every spring, I listen to the Grateful Dead with fresh ears, not to the exclusion of everything else, but close to it. (I'm not alone in this. How many people in the Northeast associate the Dead's music with thaw, both literal and spiritual?) </span>
    Every spring, I listen to the Grateful Dead with fresh ears, not to the exclusion of everything else, but close to it. (I'm not alone in this. How many people in the Northeast associate the Dead's music with thaw, both literal and spiritual?) Despite...

    Tags: Luciano Berio, Science, Jefferson Airplane (music group), Jerry Garcia, Entertainment Events

  4. Dec 6, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  5. 'Opika Pende: Africa at 78 RPM' resurrects a continent's music

    Pop & Hiss
    Jonathan Ward's ‘Opika Pende' box set resurrects the world of early African music — with a history lesson in the mix. Jonathan Ward's music room in his second-floor Angeleno Heights walk-up is a tight, comfortable space with three walls full.....
  6. Nov 2, 2011 |Story| WTXX-LTV
  7. Still and Moving Lines: Wesleyan celebrates the life and career of composer Alvin Lucier

    <span style=&quot;font-size: medium;">This weekend, Wesleyan University will host an array of events paying tribute to composer Alvin Lucier, who retired from the faculty in July after 40 years of teaching.</span>
    This weekend, Wesleyan University will host an array of events paying tribute to composer Alvin Lucier, who retired from the faculty in July after 40 years of teaching. Even if you aren’t familiar with Lucier’s work, you’d be challenged...

    Tags: Music Industry, Middletown, Entertainment Events, Music, Fine Arts

  8. Nov 9, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  9. Before Kayne and after Bach: L.A. pioneer sampler Carl Stone

    Culture Monster
    Carl Stone, the Los Angeles composer, was a pioneer sampler in the 1970s, crafting passages from classical music, jazz and rock into musical works that enchant like Alexander Calder sculptures. Although he was sampling before Kanye West was born, Stone...
  10. Mar 11, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  11. Dispatch from New York: John Lennon and Karlheinz Stockhausen, together at last

    Culture Monster
    When I tell you that "1969," an evening of music, video and theater performed Thursday at the Zankel Hall in New York, and based on the prospect that John Lennon and iconoclastic German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen planned to stage a......
  12. Nov 13, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Henryk Gorecki dies at 76; composer of 'Symphony of Sorrowful Songs'

    Henryk Gorecki, a Polish composer famous for his Third Symphony, also known as the &quot;Symphony of Sorrowful Songs," died Friday following a serious illness. He was 76.
    Henryk Gorecki, a Polish composer famous for his Third Symphony, also known as the "Symphony of Sorrowful Songs," died Friday following a serious illness. He was 76. Gorecki (pronounced Go-RET-ski) died in the cardiology ward at a hospital in his home...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Poland, Music Industry, University of Southern California, Concerts

  14. Dec 29, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Requiem: 2007 passings of note

    Among the major notables who passed from the scene this year, three of the most famous -- two masters of cinema and a genius of football -- died on the same day: July 30. Two others -- a historic Russian leader and a U.S. chronicler of war -- left us...

    Tags: Kentucky Derby, Music Industry, Sophia Loren, Newspaper and Magazine, Merv Griffin

  16. Jun 30, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. Classical music online: Salonen, Sellars and Mozart

    I do not unconditionally celebrate the Internet, particularly its intrusion into classical music. As replacements for the record store, Amazon and iTunes have become necessary evils. Typical commercial downloads are sonic shadows of the superior sound of CDs. Blogs ghettoize critics. YouTube is pretty much a toy.
    Times Music Critic
    I do not unconditionally celebrate the Internet, particularly its intrusion into classical music. As replacements for the record store, Amazon and iTunes have become necessary evils. Typical commercial downloads are sonic shadows of the superior sound...

    Tags: Migration, Swiss Confederation, YouTube, Los Angeles, Social Issues

  18. Apr 13, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. All he asks is: 'Try to like it'

    HELMUT Lachenmann's work is very strange, even by contemporary standards. This preeminent German composer shapes what are essentially noises -- taps, scrapes and rustlings, though made largely by conventional instruments -- into beautiful, even spiritual, music.
    Special to The Times
    HELMUT Lachenmann's work is very strange, even by contemporary standards. This preeminent German composer shapes what are essentially noises -- taps, scrapes and rustlings, though made largely by conventional instruments -- into beautiful, even spiritual,...

    Tags: New York, Music Industry, Germany, Los Angeles, Helmut Lachenmann

  20. Apr 16, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Helmut Lachenmann at Monday Evening Concerts

    In Germany, he is often referred to as <a href=&quot;http://composers21.com/compdocs/lachenmh.htm">&ldquo;Professor Helmut Lachenmann.&rdquo;</a> He is 73, lanky, bearded. A student of <a href="http://www.luiginono.it/en/home">Luigi Nono</a> and <a href="http://www.stockhausen.org/">Karlheinz Stockhausen,</a> he is perhaps the foremost representative of the second-generation European avant-garde.
    Times Music Critic
    In Germany, he is often referred to as “Professor Helmut Lachenmann.” He is 73, lanky, bearded. A student of Luigi Nono and Karlheinz Stockhausen, he is perhaps the foremost representative of the second-generation European avant-garde. His...

    Tags: New York, Germany, Music Industry, Concerts, Entertainment

  22. Sep 4, 1998 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Modulations

    SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
    Friday September 4, 1998      Do you think of the techno-rave scene as cultural cotton candy: flavorful, but nutritionally empty? With "Modulations," director Iara Lee has managed to make a documentary on the phenomenon and fill it with fiber and...

    Tags: New Jersey, John Cage, Techno (genre), Dr. Seuss, Documentary (genre)

Original site for Karlheinz Stockhausen topic gallery.