Tuesday, February 23, 2010

last night of the proms tickets 2010


Some of the audience wear patriotic T-shirts, others dinner jackets. Union Jacks are waved during Rule Britannia.
Seats for the final night sell out quickly; to get a Last Night of the Proms ticket one must also attend several other Proms in the season. Prom tickets are no more expensive for the Last Night than for other concerts, but many promenaders queue overnight and all day to get a good space.
To accommodate some of the many people who can't get a ticket, a Proms in the Park concert is held in Hyde Park opposite the Royal Albert Hall, the Proms' main venue. A live big-screen links up with the hall for the finale and people usually get into the spirit outside too.
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Friday, February 19, 2010

How the last Night of Proms has been hijacked


Accessible, that is, except on one evening. Newspapers last weekend carried an advert from an agency called Sports Exclusive. It offered tickets to the Last Night of the Proms. Televised live to 40 million people worldwide, and enjoyed in the Royal Albert Hall by Prommers who, in many cases, will sleep on the pavements to secure the best spots in the arena, the Last Night is the most famous event in the music calendar. Tickets are like gold-dust. The BBC, which runs the Proms, could probably sell out the hall ten times over.
Sports Exclusive seems to recognise that, to judge from its prices. Recession? What recession? Stalls seats (face value £82.50) are offered for £995. But if you want to sit with nine chums in a grand tier box, the show will cost you £14,995. Mind you, that does include “a three-course supper and wine with your own box waitress”. (Gosh, I hope she’s fresh. How long do they keep her in the box?) What sort of people, in the present climate, can splash out the equivalent of a year’s wage for a supermarket worker on ten concert tickets? It’s a fascinating question, but not half as fascinating as the question of where the tickets come from.
Not the BBC, that’s for sure. The Proms brochure details the elaborate procedures by which the BBC tries to ensure that ordinary music-lovers, rather than fat cats, fill the hall at the Last Night. One way is to buy a season ticket and stand in the arena through the whole summer of concerts — all 76 of them. The second is to buy seats for no fewer than five other Proms. Even then you aren’t guaranteed a Last Night ticket, and you can’t return the other tickets if you don’t get one. And the third way is to enter the Last Night ballot, by which 100 tickets are allocated. But thousands of people go in for that.
The answer is that the Albert Hall ain’t what it seems. Its management has projected a cosy image of it as “the nation’s village hall”: a revered arena that happily houses everything from boxing to ballet to the Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance. But this masks an awkward truth. Many of its boxes and hundreds of seats (perhaps a fifth of its seating capacity) are permanently owned by individuals or companies. When the hall was opened in 1871 its seats were flogged off on 999-year leases called debentures. Some are still owned by the same families; others have been sold on. Last year a grand tier box was put up for sale at £1.2 million. It’s big business. And the reason is obvious. Owners can cash in handsomely on events such as the Last Night by flogging their seats.

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Superb technique in masterclass(2008)


Many music-lovers like to list Brahms's four symphonies in order of preference, and Shostakovich was no exception.
His favourite was No 4, followed by Nos 2 and 1, with the Third lagging well behind.
So there was a touch of irony in the fact that this was the one chosen as a companion piece to his own Tenth Symphony in last night's concert by the Berlin Philharmonic under Sir Simon Rattle.
Quite what made Brahms's Third only a runner-up in Shostakovich's eyes is not specified, any more than I can articulate with convincing logic why my own ordering would, on most days, be Nos 2, 3, 4 and 1 and, on others, a different sequence altogether, but maybe the nature of the interpretation has much to do with it.
For the most part, Rattle's was strong enough to convert even the most hardened sceptic, but there were also aspects that might have sown doubt in confirmed believers.
Bolstered by the Berliners' superb technique and sonority, the overall impression was of opulence fortified by a resonant bass line, firm sinew in the outer movements and terrific clarity of detail. Lyrical lines were liquidly shaped, and the two central movements, even though they were inadequately differentiated in tempo, were impressive for some exquisite, hushed playing.
the music's emotional thrust was of uncommon power, whether in the ruminative resignation of the first movement or in the scherzo's visceral, menacing energy.
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Wednesday, February 17, 2010

last night of the proms reviews

The newest music on offer in the Last Night was the opening scene from Thomas Adès’s 2004 opera, The Tempest, a wonderful, rollicking sea-storm of an overture, its dark waves and undertow magnificently recreated by the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by JirÍ Belohlávek.

So, how would the Prommers take to their new maestro? This was Belohlávek’s first Last Night, and it was hardly a baptism by fire. He signed in with the Othello overture by his Czech compatriot, Dvorák. And then he reminded us that The Entry of the Gladiators, that audacious march with which clowns roll and tumble into the big top, was actually written by a pupil of Dvorák, Julius FucÍk. As it raced along, the Prommers at last started bobbing up and down, as an airborne parrot levitated towards the dome, and Belohlávek called for three cheers for Sir Malcolm Sargent.

The warm and decorous cries of “Hip, hip hooray!” epitomised the unusually gentle, olde-worlde, home-sweet-homeliness of this Last Night. The Prommers didn’t bait Belohlávek, and he didn’t bait them. His speech was a disarmingly diffident and dignified eulogy of the Prommers own “profound and passionate love for this wonderful event”, garnished with gentlemanly greetings to those cities linked by big screen to the Albert Hall. These links provided one of the evening’s real coups: the echoing responses from buglers far and wide to the bugle calls at the start of Henry Wood’s Fantasia on British Sea-Songs. And – to reassure everyone that this really was a party - the soprano Anna Netrebko, who had held a hushed auditorium in the palm of her hand for the closing scene from Bellini’s La Sonnambula, sang, danced, and scattered red roses throughout her aria Meine Lippen sie küssen so heiss from Léhar’s Giuditta.

And, of course, Elgar. Not only Pomp and Circumstance, but a moving vignette from the First World War, in the first Proms performance of The Fourth of August from The Spirit of England, magnificently sung by the tenor Andrew Kennedy with the BBC Symphony Chorus.

The event takes place annually throughout August, as part of the wider Edinburgh Festival.For Edinburgh Military Tattoo tickets, sports tickets, opera-ballet tickets, concert tickets, theatre tickets and exclusive event tickets in the UK and worldwide. Premier Events pledges to provide the cheapest event tickets on the net.No commission, transaction charges or hidden booking fees. By law, we must charge VAT, but the price you see is the price you pay.we ensure their safe and prompt delivery to our customer.Buy Edinburgh Military Tattoo tickets for 2010 with full trust!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Blue Peter presenters perform at the Proms


Blue Peter presenters Simon Thomas and Liz Barker will take to the stage at the Royal Albert Hall when they perform at the 2004 Blue Peter Prom.

Always ready for a challenge, Simon will play the flute with the orchestra to Tchaikovsky and Liz will participate in the flamboyant Lion Dance.

Because of the huge demand for tickets in previous years the BBC Proms stages the Blue Peter Prom twice this year, allowing double the number of children and their families to join the fun.

The Blue Peter Prom conjures up the spectacular sights and sounds of the Far East.

Two special groups of performers join the Blue Peter presenters and the BBC Philharmonic for an exotic and colourful programme inspired by the season's East/West theme.

The big Japanese drums of Kagemusha Taiko and the traditional Chinese costumes of the Choy Lee Fut Kung Fu School Lion Dance troupe will be seen at the Proms for the first time.

The Royal Albert Hall's organ makes an appearance with Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra (the theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey) and there's orchestral music by Tchaikovsky, Ravel and Stravinsky.

The concert also includes music from Harry Potter, and everyone can join in with the orchestra and the City of Birmingham Youth Chorus in a taste of the familiar festivities of the Last Night of the Proms, by singing Land of Hope and Glory.


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Blue Peter Proms

After seven years, the formula for the Blue Peter Prom is well established. Parents can expect orchestral showpieces, audience participation, film music, presenters having a go (last year conducting, this year playing the flute), and some wild guest spots. It's no mean feat to make small children feel comfortable in the overwhelming Albert Hall, but the real challenge is to keep their attention. Presenters Liz Barker and Simon Thomas joined in heroically, but nothing they said made my young friends listen.

Still, this was a pretty good year. The wild guests delivered handsomely: the whole hall gasped as the Chinese lion costumes of the Choy Lee Fut Kung Fu School charged down the aisles. And no one could resist 14-year-old Oliver Kirby, youngest member of Exeter's Kagemusha Taiko troupe, drumming with all his might.

The orchestral selection was a mixed success. Six-year-old Josh liked the Firebird and the Nutcracker, but switched off completely for John Adams' Short Ride in a Fast Machine. The audience participation was a bit limp, and in the case of finger-clicking, too difficult for small hands. The sure-fire winner was Ravel's Bolero, in which the BBC Philharmonic got to use their clowning skills. Starting with an almost empty stage, they appeared one by one from all over the hall, each with a different reason for being late. Audience heads started turning. If you watched violinist Nigel Jay fishing by the organ and catching a giant rabbit, you might have missed cellist Rebecca Aldersea wielding her broom around the double bass section.

Creativity is not in short supply at the BBC Philharmonic; double bassist Peter Willmott's orchestration of a Japanese folk song brought the hall to rapt attention. In fact, the creative potential of the orchestra came across as the most fertile field of the show, able to keep the audience's attention much better than the Blue Peter script. One thing you can't fault about the formula: they chose the right orchestra.

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Saturday, February 13, 2010

Last Night of the Proms 2010 tickets

 The world famous Last Night of the Proms at the Royal Albert Hall brings the terrific summer season of The Proms to a fitting finale. Described by conductor Jiri Belohlavek as "the world's largest and most democratic musical festival", last year's event saw the total number of concerts reach 100 for the first time. The Last Night is traditionally very different from the eight weeks that precede it, following a lighter, 'winding-down' vein and often pandering to popular classics and Patriotic Anthems (Rule, Britannia!, anyone?). Tickets are almost as hard to come by as Centre Court passes for the Wimbledon finals, but like the tennis, the whole thing is broadcast live on the BBC - and all round the world.

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Last Night of the Proms will now go live at cinemas

The Last Night of the Proms is to be beamed live into cinemas around the world via satellite for the first time, it was announced yesterday. The traditional finale to the annual series, with its patriotic renditions of Land of Hope and Glory and Rule Britannia, will be seen on big screens in Asia and countries such as Canada and Australia. It is part of a major deal by BBC Worldwide Music, the corporation's commercial arm, which will enable fans to experience the event in digital surround sound. The event can already be seen on large screens around the UK at outdoor Proms In The Park events.

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Friday, February 12, 2010

AND NOW CCTV ‘TAKES CENTRE STAGE’ @ BBC's PROMS IN THE PARK

A 10,000-strong crowd who turned out to see the legendary Chris de Burgh perform for BBC’s Proms in the Park at Buile Hill Park in Salford, were kept safe like no other music fans ever before. Organisers from Salford City Council provided CCTV for the audience, to prevent and predict potential trouble spots in the crowd, using the advanced Intelligent Moving Camera known as IMC, from Viseum. The camera monitored an area the size of 14 football pitches to look out for potential incidents, all by itself, without human intervention.

The reaction of everyone was that of sheer astonishment; after seeing the camera moving around watching suspect activity, people learned it was completely automated and not being controlled by a person. Whilst providing a key benefit of not infringing anyone’s privacy, this camera’s performance provided reassurance for the audience that they were being actively protected, ensuring the ultimate deterrent to would-be-offenders. 

key to the camera’s success is in the fact that it can be pre-programmed to monitor particular activities in particular areas, but it will still look out for incidents in the many areas where random crimes could occur. At the Proms concert the camera was scheduled to look for any type of “crowd surge or kerfuffle”. Group 4, main show contractors, commented: “This system is extremely easy to use and significantly adds to crowd protection. Having any type of CCTV at these types of event is rare. This may now have changed with the introduction of this technology.” Local police present at the event commented: “Impressive”, “certainly very clever technology”, and “amazing!” 


“The BBC had never seen anything like it”, added Stuart Thompson. “It took us a while to explain that nobody was operating it, and there was no danger of us getting in their way as it was totally automated.” 


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the 2009 prom season is announced by bbc


Having previous Visits done by international orchestras, such as the Royal Concertgebouw under Mariss Jansons, the Leipzig Gewandhaus under Riccardo Chailly, and the Vienna Philharmonic under Harnoncourt and Mehta, are contrasted with a Bollywood extravaganza, a complete performance of Handel's Samson and three performances from Daniel Barenboim's West-Eastern Divan Orchestra. The latter includes a complete performance of Beethoven's Fidelio in concert, with a rare UK visit from Waltraud Meier as Leonore, Simon O'Neill as Florestan and Sir John Tomlinson as Rocco. Barenboim will also lead the orchestra in the Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde and Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique.

The birthday composers are well served. In addition to Partenope and Samson, Handel is represented by a brilliant performance of Messiah, four of the Coronation Anthems, arias from several of the operas and excerpts from Music for the Royal Fireworks. Glyndebourne's production of The Fairy Queen comes to the Proms in a semi-staging, while other Purcell works are showcased in a Chamber Prom and on the Last Night. Mendelssohn does particularly well, with the symphonies, the Violin Concerto and the First Piano Concerto. Of note here is the Halle's performance of Symphony No 2, Lobegesang, with its extended choral movement. Haydn, too, is celebrated, but perhaps less extensively so than might be the case, given his enormous output. Still, The Creation should be a highlight, with soprano Rosemary Joshua joining Paul McCreesh and his Gabrieli Consort, as should the Manchester Camerata's performance of The Seven Last Words of Our Saviour on the Cross.
Contemporary music is as well served as ever, with a wide range of world and UK premieres. Louis Andriessen's The Hague Hacking is played here for the first time, as are the revised version of Rebecca Saunders's traces and Schnittke's Nagasaki, while Sir Harrison Birtwistle and Sir Peter Maxwell Davies are also represented. As ever, the Proms are branching out, too, with an evening devoted to seventy-five years of the MGM musicals with Sir Thomas Allen and Kim Criswell and a special day celebrating the music of Bollywood.

All of Stravinsky's ballet music will be performed – perhaps an unnecessary move, since the pieces are regularly performed in both concert halls and in their original balletic settings – as will Tchaikovsky's piano concerti. Martha Argerich will perform two concerti in the same programme, and there's a slightly crazy ‘multiple pianos' day featuring a large number of pianists including the Labeque sisters. More unusually, the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain will make their Proms debut.

On the whole, it seems a strong season, with a much greater range of international artists than the recently-announced Edinburgh Festival. That said, it's noticeable that the BBC's own orchestras are padding out the season to an extent, particularly in August, and the famous Last Night is rather low-key, with David Robertson conducting and Sarah Connolly as the vocal soloist. As noted above, it's also disappointing that only three of Haydn's symphonies are featured in his anniversary year, and the reliance on Mahler, Shostakovich, Beethoven and Brahms symphonies is a sign of safe programming. Nevertheless, it's reassuring to see that in these difficult times for the arts, the Proms show no signs of dropping their artistic standards.

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Thursday, February 11, 2010

BBC Proms in the park come to Manchester for TV and radio extravaganza


Music lovers across the North West are invited to join in the fun of a BBC Proms in the Park concert for the Last Night of the Proms, at the beautifully restored Heaton Park on Saturday 10 September at 7.30pm. The Manchester-based BBC Philharmonic tops the bill with New Zealand star soprano Hayley Westenra.
The concert will be hosted by BBC GMR's Heather Stott, and as in previous years there will be a live TV link up with the famous finale of the BBC's Last Night of the Proms from the Royal Albert Hall. Televised highlights of all five Proms in the Park will be shown as part of BBC1 and BBC2's live coverage of the Last Night of the Proms, and the entire Manchester concert will go out live on BBC GMR.
The BBC Philharmonic will be conducted by Stephen Bell, and 18 year old singing sensation Hayley Westenra will perform tracks from her latest album.
She will also sing classical favourites like Ave Maria and Puccini's O mio babbino caro. BBC Young Musician of the Year finalist, euphonium virtuoso David Childs is another star attraction on the night, and he will play his own orchestration of the Carnival of Venice. Local performers Duel, Aquarelle and Chetham's School will also perform on stage pre-concert.
The concert programme will include Shostakovich's Festival Overture, extracts from Walton's Henry V, the finale of Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake and Rimsky-Korsakov's The Flight of the Bumble Bee. After the interval the BBC Philharmonic will play extracts from Glinka's Ruslan and Ludmila as well as the rousing Dambusters March by Coates.
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Doctor Who heads to the BBC Proms

Daleks will roam the Royal Albert Hall at the Doctor(Who is to feature in this year's Proms, alongside Nigel Kennedy and maypole dancing.) which will celebrate music from the popular BBC show.
Kennedy, 51, will return to the Proms for the first time in 21 years to perform Elgar's violin concerto.
The Proms will also celebrate the music of composer Vaughan Williams on the 50th anniversary of his death.
Proms director Roger Wright said the musical emphasis would be on the British Isles, with other compositions from Eastern Europe.
And he denied the presence of Doctor Who meant the world-famous music festival was being dumbed down.
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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Roxette (Musician)

Roxette is a Swedish pop music duo, consisting of Marie Fredriksson and Per Gessle. They enjoyed worldwide success, from the late 1980s until the mid 1990s, gaining nineteen UK Top 40 hits and four US #1 singles with, "The Look", "Listen to Your Heart", "It Must Have Been Love" and "Joyride". Two further singles "Dangerous" and "Fading Like a Flower" hit #2.
After a hiatus in the mid-1990s, their popularity continued in other territories such as Europe and South America, where they earned various Gold and Platinum awards until the beginning of the new millennium. The duo took an extended hiatus from recording and touring, when in 2002, Fredriksson was diagnosed with a brain tumor. Roxette took to the stage together again for the first time in 8 years, in 2009, during Gessle's European Party Crasher tour.
Their songs continue to receive radio airplay. "It Must Have Been Love" and "Listen to Your Heart" have both recently received awards from BMI, with both songs achieving four million radio plays. They have sold an estimated 45 million albums and 25 million singles worldwide, with over 3.5 million record sales in the United States, achieving platinum for Joyride and Look Sharp! there.

Musicians

Musicians who participated at the Night of the Proms:

Orchestra: Il Novecento (since 1991)
Conductor: Robert Groslot (since 1991)
Choir: Fine Fleur (1995-2007 & 2009); Harlem Gospel Choir (2008)
Roxette (2002 (Cancelled) and 2009)

Jenifer (2006)
Howard Jones (2000)
Katona Twins (2009)
Mark King (Level 42) (1998)
Dani Klein (Vaya Con Dios) (1996)
Peter Koelewijn (1998)
De Kreuners (2003)
Roby Lakatos (2007)
Thé Lau (2005)
Cyndi Lauper (2004)
Jo Lemaire (1997)
Gérard Lenorman (2001, 2004 & 2009)
Huey Lewis (2003)
Live (2008)
Manfred Mann & Chris Thompson (2005)
Wayne Marshall (1997)
Mimie Mathy (2006)

Monday, February 8, 2010

Nicholas Kenyon(1996-2007)Controller

Sir Nicholas Roger Kenyon CBE (born 23 February 1951 in Cheshire) is an English music administrator, editor and writer on music. He was responsible for the BBC Proms 1996-2007 following which he was appointed Managing Director of the Barbican Centre, Europe's largest multi-arts centre
Education and career:
After attending St Bede's College, Manchester, and playing bassoon with Stockport Youth Orchestra,[citation needed] Kenyon studied history at Balliol College, Oxford. After graduating he worked for the English Bach Festival, and as a freelance writer on music. From 1979 to 1982 he was a music critic for The New Yorker. On returning to the UK he became music critic for The Times, then Chief Music Critic of The Observer. He was also Music Editor of The Listener and Editor of the journal Early Music. In 1992 he was appointed Controller, BBC Radio 3 and was appointed Director of the BBC Proms from the 1996 season. In 2000 his title changed to Controller BBC Proms, Live Events and Television Classical Music. In February 2007 he was announced as the Managing Director of the Barbican Centre in the City of London, in succession to Sir John Tusa.
Kenyon is a member of the Board of English National Opera, a Governor of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, a member of the Arts and Humanities Research Council, a Trustee of the Dartington Hall Trust, and a patron of Spode Music Week. He is also a Fellow of The Radio Academy .
In the 2001 New Year Honours he was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his services to music and millennium broadcasting. He was knighted in the 2008 New Year Honours.
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Roger Wright


Roger Wright (born 1956, Manchester) is an English radio administrator and arts administrator. He is currently the Controller of BBC Radio 3 and Director of The Proms.
Wright was educated at Chetham's School, Manchester, and played the cello as a youth. He studied music at Royal Holloway College, University of London, and earned a B.Mus. in 1977. On graduation, he took a sabbatical year, 1977-78, as the elected President of the Student Union.
From 1978 to 1987, Wright worked at the British Music Information Centre, as librarian and manager, then as director. He served as a senior producer for the BBC Symphony Orchestra from 1987 to 1989. He became the artistic administrator of The Cleveland Orchestra in 1989. He left his Cleveland post in 1992 for Deutsche Grammophon (DG), where he became an executive director and vice-president, and worked there until 1997.
In March 1997, Wright took up the newly created BBC post of Head of Classical Music, in charge of the BBC's orchestras, choirs, and bands. In 1998, he became Controller of Radio 3. During his Radio 3 tenure he raised the profile of jazz and world music, causing controversy among listeners. Other Radio 3 programming changes such as a perceived diminution of live music broadcasts have also attracted controversy. Wright was named Director of the BBC Proms in April 2007[9] and formally took up the post in October 2007, succeeding Nicholas Kenyon.
In 2002, Wright was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of Royal Holloway College. He is also an Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Music and a Fellow of the Radio Academy. His publications include the volume New Music 1989, in collaboration with Michael Finnissy.
Wright and his wife Rosie, a yoga teacher, have two children.
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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

BBC Electric Proms


The BBC Electric Proms is a music festival run by the BBC held during October in London since 2006.
The name is taken from The Proms a classical music festival running since 1895 and maintains a few traditions from its counterpart such as the final night culminating in an interpretation of "Land of Hope and Glory". The musical performances at the festival typically involve Indie rock bands incorporating instruments outside of their usual arrangement, most commonly in the form of collaborations with the BBC Concert Orchestra.
Primarily the festival's headline acts play at The Roundhouse in Camden but events, which include a programme of film, are not limited to this venue. For example, acoustic events take place at Cecil Sharp House. In 2008 in acknowledgment of its status as European Capital of Culture, events were be staged in both Liverpool and London.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Louis Andriessen


Louis Andriessen (June 6, 1939) is a Dutch composer and pianist based in Amsterdam. He teaches composition at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague. He was recipient of the Gaudeamus International Composers Award in 1959.
Family and early life:
Andriessen was born in Utrecht into a musical family, the son of the composer Hendrik Andriessen (1892-1981), brother of composers Jurriaan Andriessen (1925-1996) and Caecilia Andriessen (1931-), and nephew of Willem Andriessen (1887-1964).
Andriessen originally studied with his father and Kees van Baaren at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague, before embarking upon two years of study with Italian composer Luciano Berio in Milan and Berlin. His wife was Jeanette Yanikian, a guitarist (1935-2008). They were a couple for over 40 years, and they got married in 1996.
Style and notable works
Andriessen's early works show experimentation with various contemporary trends: post war serialism (Series, 1958), pastiche (Anachronie I, 1966-67), and tape (Il Duce, 1973). His reaction to what he perceived as the conservatism of much of the Dutch contemporary music scene quickly moved him to form a radically alternative musical aesthetic of his own. Since the early 1970s he has refused to write for conventional symphony orchestras and has instead opted to write for his own idiosyncratic instrumental combinations, which often retain some traditional orchestral instruments alongside electric guitars, electric basses, and congas.
Andriessen's mature music combines the influences of Igor Stravinsky, jazz and American minimalism. His harmonic writing eschews the consonant modality of much minimalism, preferring post war European dissonance, often crystallised into large blocks of sound. Large scale pieces such as 'Republic' (1972-76), for example, are influenced by the energy of the big band music of Count Basie and Stan Kenton and the repetitive procedures of Steve Reich, both combined with bright, clashing dissonances. Andriessen's music is thus anti-Germanic and anti-Romantic, and marks a departure from post war European serialism and its offshoots. He has also played a role in providing alternatives to traditional performance practice techniques, often specifying forceful, rhythmic articulations, and amplified, non-vibrato, singing.