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The composer and pianist Michael Finnissy (b. 1946) is an unmistakeable presence in the British and international new music scene, both for his immeasurable generosity as prolific composer for many different types of musicians, major advocate for the works of others, and performer and conductor who has also been a driving force behind ensembles; he was also President of the International Society for Contemporary Music from 1990 to 1996. His vast and enormously varied output confounds those who seek easy categorisations: once associated strongly with the ‘new complexity’, Finnissy is equally known as composer regularly engaged with many different folk musics, for working with amateur and community musicians, for a long-term engagement with sacred music, or as an advocate of Anglo-American ‘experimental’ music. Twenty years ago, a large-scale volume entitled Uncommon Ground: The Music of Michael Finnissy gave the first major overview of the output of any ‘complex’ composer. This new volume brings a greater plurality of perspectives and critical sensibility to bear upon an output which is almost twice as large as it was when the earlier book was published. A range of leading contributors – musicologists, composers, performers and others – each grapple with particular questions relating to Finnissy’s music, often in ways which raise questions relating more widely to new music, and provide theoretical foundations for further of study both of Finnissy and other composers.

Section A: Finnissys Aesthetics and Styles
1. Michael Finnissy:
Modernism with an English Accent Christopher Fox
2. Post-Experimental
Survivor: Finnissy the Experimentalist Philip Thomas
3. Negotiating
Borrowing, Genre and Mediation in the Piano Music of Finnissy: Strategies and
Aesthetics Ian Pace
4. Ontological implications in the work of Finnissy Nigel
McBride Section B: Finnissys Identities
5. Marginality and Finnissian
Performance in the 1980s Roddy Hawkins
6. My "personal themes"?! Finnissys
Seventeen Homosexual Poets and the Material World Gregory Woods
7. Finnissys
Voices James Weeks
8. Listening to the instrument(s): a performers
response to Finnissys music for String Quartet and the Chi Mei Ricercari for
cello and piano Neil Heyde Section C: Compositional Considerations
9.
Notational and Non-notational paradigms in Finnissys music Nigel McBride
10.
Finnissy and Pantonality: Surface and Inner Necessity Arnold Whittall
11. The
Medium is now the Material: The Folklore of Chris Newman and Michael
Finnissy Lauren Redhead
12. Finnissys Hand James Weeks Section D: Contexts
and Case Studies
13. Questioning the foreign and familiar: Interpreting
Finnissys use of traditional and non-Western musical sources Maarten Beirens
14. Finnissys Three-Point Plans: Political Agendas and musical enunciations
Max Erwin
15. Finnissys alongside - Richard Barrett
16. From Jean-Luc Godard
to Dennis Potter: Finnissys Cinematic and Televisual Inspirations Ian Pace
Ian Pace (b. 1968) is internationally renowned as the leading pianistic interpreter of Finnissys work, as well as a major scholar who has written extensively on compositional, aesthetic, and performative aspects of Finnissys music, including major sketch study. He gave a six-concert series of Finnissys complete piano music in 1996 for the composers fiftieth birthday, and followed this twenty years later with an eleven-concert series of the now vastly expanded output, including a complete performance of Finnissys epic five-and-a-half-hour cycle The History of Photography in Sound, which he premiered in London in 2001, recorded for Divine Art, and about which he published a monograph. More widely, Pace is well-known as a staunch advocate of new music who has given over 300 world premieres, played in over 25 countries, and recorded over 30 CDs. He is also a musicologist, and is Senior Lecturer and Head of Performance at City, University of London, having previously worked at Southampton University and Dartington College of Arts. His PhD was on new music and its infrastructure in West Germany from the Weimar Republic to the early Allied Occupation. Other areas of expertise include nineteenth-century performance practice, contemporary performance and practice-as-research, critical musicology, avant-garde aesthetics, and music under fascism and communism.





Nigel McBride (b. 1990) is a composer and researcher. He was educated at The Queens University, Belfast, and St. Annes and Magdalen Colleges, Oxford. His research primarily focuses on philosophical approaches to compositional and musicological issues. While at Oxford, he taught composition and musicology extensively, as well as developed and convened the seminar series The Composers Forum at Magdalen College. As a composer, he has collaborated with many leading performers of new music, including Ian Pace, Christopher Redgate, Gleb Kanasevich, Jack Adler-Mckean, The Cavaleri String Quartet, Jonathan Powell, and others. His music has been performed in Germany, across the UK, the USA, and others.