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  • Into the Maelstrom: Music, Improvisation and the Dream of Freedom: Before 1970
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Buy from Amazon $24.95$20.98 $23.88 $22.75 $21.63 $20.50 Jan 14 Jan 22 Jan 29 Feb 6 Feb 13 Feb 21 Feb 28 Mar 6 Mar 14 Mar 21 Mar 292016 $24.95, Jan 14 - Jan 24$24.77, Jan 29 11:07 pm$24.95, Feb 4 - Mar 17$20.98, Mar 29 5:20 am 270,6502,089,490 2,343,750 1,875,000 1,406,250 937,500 468,750 0 Jan 14 Jan 22 Jan 29 Feb 6 Feb 13 Feb 21 Feb 28 Mar 6 Mar 14 Mar 21 Mar 292016

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New

Last Seen $20.98 Mar 29, '16
Highest $24.95 Feb 4, '16
Lowest $20.98 Mar 29, '16
Average $24.95 (30d avg)
$24.94 (Lifetime average)
Added Jan 14, 2016

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30 day average: 1,170,780

Product Description

In this first installment of acclaimed music writer David Toop's interdisciplinary and sweeping overview of free improvisation, introduces the philosophy and practice of improvisation (both musical and otherwise) within the historical context of the post-World War II era. Neither strictly chronological, or exclusively a history, investigates a wide range of improvisational tendencies: from surrealist automatism to stream-of-consciousness in literature and vocalization; from the free music of Percy Grainger to the free improvising groups emerging out of the early 1960s (Group Ongaku, Nuova Consonanza, MEV, AMM, the Spontaneous Music Ensemble); and from free jazz to the strands of free improvisation that sought to distance itself from jazz. In exploring the diverse ways in which spontaneity became a core value in the early twentieth century as well as free improvisation's connection to both 1960s rock (The Beatles, Cream, Pink Floyd) and the era of post-Cagean indeterminacy in composition, Toop provides a definitive and all-encompassing exploration of free improvisation up to 1970, ending with the late 1960s international developments of free music from Roscoe Mitchell in Chicago, Peter Brtzmann in Berlin and Han Bennink and Misha Mengelberg in Amsterdam.

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