Classical Music CDs at ArkivMusic Cart Wish List My Account Gift Certificates Newsletter Help
Composers | Conductors | Performers | Ensembles | Operas | Labels | ArkivCDs | DVDs | More... New ArkivMusic Reissues On Sale
New Releases Recommendations Top Sellers On Sale CDs Under $10 Broadway Reissues Super Audio CDs MP3s Blu-ray Discs Listen Magazine
 Home > Composers >

WGBH Radio WGBH Radio theclassicalstation.org
Conlon Nancarrow
Born: October 27, 1912; Texarkana, AR   Died: August 10, 1997; Mexico City, Mexico  
Conlon Nancarrow was an iconoclastic American composer who wrote in an utterly new way using new instrumental resources. While isolated from the main currents of music, he was virtually ignored by the public and his colleagues until the 1970s. In the 1980s composer György Ligeti said Nancarrow was writing "the best music by any living composer." In his early years Nancarrow played jazz trumpet and enrolled in the Cincinnati College-Conservatory ...
Read more
See all recordings available (44)   OR   Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
Conlon Nancarrow titles in:
New Releases   Recommended   DVD   ArkivCD   MP3 Downloads  
Featured Conlon Nancarrow CDs & DVDs:
Nancarrow: Studies / Ingo Metzmacher, Ensemble Modern
Release Date: 07/13/1993   Label: Rca Victor Red Seal   Catalog: 61180   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
On sale!
Works
Blues for Piano (3)
Blues, for piano (1)
Canons (2) for Ursula (3)
Canons (3) for Ursula (2)
Canons (3) for Ursula, for piano (2)
Contraption no 1 (1)
For Ligeti (1)
Movements (3) for Chamber Orchestra (1)
Para Yoko (2)
Piece for Small Orchestra no 1 (2)
Piece for Small Orchestra no 2 (2)
Piece for Tape (1)
Prelude for Piano (6)
Quartet for Strings no 1 (4)
Quartet for Strings no 3 (2)
Sarabande and Scherzo (1)
Septet. Fragment (1)
Sonatina for Piano (4)
Studies for Player Piano (1)
Study for Player Piano no 1 (4)
Study for Player Piano no 10 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 11 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 12 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 13 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 14 (4)
Study for Player Piano no 15 (4)
Study for Player Piano no 16 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 17 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 18 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 19 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 20 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 21 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 22 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 23 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 24 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 25 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 26 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 27 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 28 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 29 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 2a (4)
Study for Player Piano no 2b (3)
Study for Player Piano no 2c (1)
Study for Player Piano no 2d (1)
Study for Player Piano no 30 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 31 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 32 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 33 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 34 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 35 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 36 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 37 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 3a (4)
Study for Player Piano no 3b (3)
Study for Player Piano no 3c (5)
Study for Player Piano no 3d (3)
Study for Player Piano no 3e (3)
Study for Player Piano no 4 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 40a (2)
Study for Player Piano no 40b (2)
Study for Player Piano no 41a (2)
Study for Player Piano no 41b (2)
Study for Player Piano no 41c (2)
Study for Player Piano no 42 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 43 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 44 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 45a (2)
Study for Player Piano no 45b (2)
Study for Player Piano no 45c (2)
Study for Player Piano no 46 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 47 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 48a (2)
Study for Player Piano no 48b (2)
Study for Player Piano no 48c (2)
Study for Player Piano no 49a (2)
Study for Player Piano no 49b (2)
Study for Player Piano no 49c (2)
Study for Player Piano no 5 (3)
Study for Player Piano no 50 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 51 (1)
Study for Player Piano no 6 (6)
Study for Player Piano no 7 (6)
Study for Player Piano no 8 (2)
Study for Player Piano no 9 (4)
Study for Player Piano No. 3C (1)
Study for Player Piano No.11, an isorhythmic blues study (2)
Study for Player Piano No.6 (1)
Suite for Orchestra (1)
Tango? (7)
Tango?, for piano (1)
Toccata for Violin and Player Piano (8)
Trilogy (1)
Trio for Clarinet, Bassoon and Piano (1)
Trio for Clarinet, Bassoon and Piano: Movement (1)
Two-Part Studies (3) for Piano (2)
Biography by Joseph Stevenson
Conlon Nancarrow was an iconoclastic American composer who wrote in an utterly new way using new instrumental resources. While isolated from the main currents of music, he was virtually ignored by the public and his colleagues until the 1970s. In the 1980s composer György Ligeti said Nancarrow was writing "the best music by any living composer." In his early years Nancarrow played jazz trumpet and enrolled in the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music in 1929. He later relocated to Boston for private study with Nicolas Slonimsky, Walter Piston, and Roger Sessions. Nancarrow cites his study of counterpoint with Sessions as his most important formal training. He also studied Indian and African music with Henry Cowell in New York. At the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1937, Nancarrow joined the Lincoln Brigade, an organization of Americans fighting for the Loyalists against General Franco. Upon his return to the United States in 1939, the State Department confiscated his passport for "communist associations." Outraged and fearing persecution, he went to Mexico City, not returning to the States for the next 40 years. He took Mexican citizenship in 1956.

Nancarrow is primarily known for his 50 studies for player piano, which combine a quasi-improvisatory likening to jazz pianists Art Tatum and Earl Hines, with dazzling rhythmic complexity rendered at tempos that exceed the capabilities of human performers. Nancarrow adopted the player piano as his instrument of choice because of its ability to exactingly reproduce his complex rhythmic layers -- sometimes up to 12 layers simultaneously -- and because of his relative isolation from performers while in Mexico. Nancarrow obtained a player piano in the 1940s and began laboriously hand-punching each note onto a piano roll, ultimately producing completed compositions.

Although in 1969 Columbia released an LP of several of his etudes, Nancarrow took no effort to promote his work until he was 59 years old. Motivated by a desire to show his teenaged son that he hadn't wasted his life, he visited the United States in 1981 to participate in the New American Music Festival in San Francisco. In 1982 he was composer in residence at the Cabrillo Festival, and subsequently toured in Europe. In 1982 he won a MacArthur Award (the so-called "genius grant").

Interest in his music increased in the 1980s. Some musicians began to transcribe the piano rolls into conventional musical notation. Guided by the rolls in grasping the rhythmic complexity, pianists Robert MacGregor, Joanna MacGregor, and Ursula Oppens began to perform some of the etudes. The dry wit and frequent warmth of the music comes through in live performance as they never have on a mechanical piano. Some of the more complex works have been arranged for two pianos or chamber ensembles by Yvar Mikhashoff, and played by such groups as the Arditti Ensemble and Ensemble Moderne.

Nancarrow's piano rolls and the player pianos were bought by the wealthy conductor and music collector Paul Sacher. Thus they have remained intact and archived together in the Sacher Foundation's extensive and well-protected archive of original musical documents.
 About ArkivMusic  Contact Us  Partner Program  Institutional Sales  Terms & Conditions  Privacy Policy  Help  Your Account  Shortcuts  
ArkivMusic - The Source for Classical Music!

Copyright ArkivMusic LLC, 2012.
Data supplied by Rovi Data Solutions, Inc. Copyright 1948-2012. For personal use only. All rights reserved.