Book description
Thomas Adès is fêted from Los Angeles to London, from New York to
Berlin, as the musician who has done more than any other living
composer to connect contemporary music with wider audiences. His
operas, orchestral pieces and chamber works have already stood the
test of repeated performances, productions and continued critical
acclaim. But this celebrated composer, conductor and pianist is
notoriously secretive about his creative process, about what lies
behind his compositional impulse. The poetry, technique and biography
that fuel his most successful and shattering works, such as his operas
Powder Her Face and The Tempest, or his orchestral works Asyla and
Tevot, have remained hidden and unexplained. Until now. In
conversation with Tom Service - the writer with whom he has had the
closest relationship in his career - Adès opens up for the first time
about how he creates his music, where it comes from, and what it
means. In these provocative and challenging interviews, Adès connects
his music with influences from a huge historical and cultural spectrum
- from Sephardic Jewish folk music to 80s electronica, from the films
of Luis Buñuel and pre-Columbian art to the soundtracks of Al-Qaeda
training videos - and offers a unique insight into the crucible of his composition.
Tom Service writes about music for the Guardian, where he was
Chief Classical Music Critic, and broadcasts for BBC Radio 3. He has
presented Radio 3's flagship magazine programme, Music Matters, since
2003. He was the inaugural recipient of the ICMP/CIEM Classical Music
Critic of the Year Award, and was Guest Artistic Director of the
Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival.