Difference between revisions of "Pot-pourri"
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It was also performed as the first piece of a concert of electronic music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 15th January 1968.<ref name=Routh20>Francis Routh, ''Contemporary British Music: The Twenty-Five Years from 1945 to 1970'' (1972), [http://www.musicweb-international.com/routh/Contemporary.htm Chapter 20: Electronic music and the Avant-garde: Electronic Music]</ref> | It was also performed as the first piece of a concert of electronic music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 15th January 1968.<ref name=Routh20>Francis Routh, ''Contemporary British Music: The Twenty-Five Years from 1945 to 1970'' (1972), [http://www.musicweb-international.com/routh/Contemporary.htm Chapter 20: Electronic music and the Avant-garde: Electronic Music]</ref> | ||
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+ | [[Pot Au Feu]] is believed to be a more developed version of this work. | ||
=Availability= | =Availability= | ||
− | Unknown | + | Unknown. |
=References= | =References= |
Revision as of 11:29, 26 November 2016
Pot-pourri, 5 minutes long, seems to be a collage of extracts from her BBC work.
It was performed on 10th September 1966 as part of the Unit Delta Plus Concert of Electronic Music and the concert programme entry for it reads:
Each of the short sections was composed as a piece of introductory music for the BBC, with similar rhythms, melodic intervals and sound qualities.
It was also performed as the first piece of a concert of electronic music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 15th January 1968.[1]
Pot Au Feu is believed to be a more developed version of this work.
Availability
Unknown.
References
- ↑ Francis Routh, Contemporary British Music: The Twenty-Five Years from 1945 to 1970 (1972), Chapter 20: Electronic music and the Avant-garde: Electronic Music