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- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen abstract ""Who Cares if You Listen?" is an article written by the American composer Milton Babbitt (May 10, 1916 – January 29, 2011) and published in the February, 1958 issue of High Fidelity. In addition to being the single most well-known work by Babbitt, it epitomized the distance that had grown between many composers and their listeners. In the words of Anthony Tommasini in the New York Times, "To this day, it is seized as evidence that he and his ilk are contemptuous of audiences" (Tommasini 1996).Babbitt was a practitioner of integral serialism, which in his hands could be a highly technical mode of musical composition. The article, which begins "This article might have been entitled 'The Composer as Specialist'", does not refer to serialism at all, but rather takes the position that "serious", "advanced" music, like advanced mathematics, philosophy, and physics, is too complex for a "normally well-educated man without special preparation" to "understand".".
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- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Category:Serialism.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Ernest_Bloch.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink High_Fidelity_(magazine).
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Howard_Hanson.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Milton_Babbitt.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Nicolas_Flagello.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Creston.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Populism.
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- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLink Vittorio_Giannini.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen wikiPageWikiLinkText "Who Cares if You Listen".
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- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "1950.0".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Babbitt, Milton . "A Life of Learning: Charles Homer Haskins Lecture for 1991". ACLS Occasional Paper 17. New York: American Council of Learned Societies.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Beckerman, Michael . "Tonality Is Dead; Long Live Tonality". The New York Times : H23.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Grant, M[orag]. J. . Untitled review of Stephen Peles, Stephen Dembski, Andrew Mead and Joseph N. Straus , The Collected Essays of Milton Babbitt . Music Analysis 26, no. 3:365–72.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Lister, Rodney . Untitled review of The Collected Essays of Milton Babbitt edited by Stephen Peles, with Stephen Dembski, Andrew Mead, and Joseph N. Straus. Princeton University Press. Tempo 59, no. 233 : 67–69.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Nicholls, David. 2007. Untitled review of: Voices in the Wilderness: Six American Neo-Romantic Composers by Walter Simmons . Music & Letters 88, no. 4 : 704–706.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Rockwell, John . "When Practice Refuses to Make Perfect". The New York Times .".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Schwarz, K. Robert . "In Contemporary Music, A House Still Divided". The New York Times : H24 & 28.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Simms, Bryan R. . Untitled review of Stephen Peles, Stephen Dembski, Andrew Mead and Joseph N. Straus , The Collected Essays of Milton Babbitt . Music & Letters 86, no. 1 : 157–60.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Tommasini, Anthony . "Finding Still More Life in a 'Dead' Idiom: Babbitt Has Never Expected His Music to Be Popular but Contrary to Myth, He Does Care if You Listen". The New York Times : H39.".
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen reference "Zuckermann, Gabrielle . "An Interview with Milton Babbitt". American Mavericks on American Public Media .".
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- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen subject Category:Articles_created_via_the_Article_Wizard.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen subject Category:Music_journalism.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen subject Category:Serialism.
- Who_Cares_if_You_Listen comment ""Who Cares if You Listen?" is an article written by the American composer Milton Babbitt (May 10, 1916 – January 29, 2011) and published in the February, 1958 issue of High Fidelity. In addition to being the single most well-known work by Babbitt, it epitomized the distance that had grown between many composers and their listeners.".
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