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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2016
There is a line of thought, at least in his own country, that Elliott Carter's music has gone through a tidal change in the last ten years; that he had finally given up on his crusade to demand Olympian feats of mental and aural skill to enjoy his music, that he had begun to give way – if only a little – to the trend toward simplicity that started with the neo-tonality of the late 1970s and the neo-Romanticism of the 1980s. In essence, that his music had finally become expressive in the traditional sense. Yet there has been no such sea change; instead we have witnessed the careful, focussed growth of the imagination and intellect of a musical giant.
1 The second edition of The Music of Elliott Carter by David Schiffwill be published by Faber in the United Kingdom and Cornell University Press in the United States. The author of this article is grateful to Mr Schiff and his American publisher for making an advanced copy available for perusal.
2 The term ‘occasional piece’ is often used to mean a short work written for a single occasion which may or may not be performed again after the event. Carter's Three Occasions, as one might well imagine, are serious and weighty pieces and of course do continue to be performed around the world.