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Infinite Curves

Lawrence Dillon: Connecting the Dots

Adam Gopnik on Cole Porter

January 29, 2020 by Lawrence Dillon

Adam Gopnik continually amazes me with the range of his critical thinking.  Whether he’s tackling Shakespeare, physics, bread or the Holocaust, he is sure to bring a fresh perspective and several warm turns of phrase to the subject.  “The essential work of discrimination is lost in a blanketing cloud of nostalgia” is a line I could happily wrap myself up in on a chilly winter … [Read more...]

Keeping Track of Us

May 8, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

There are at least twenty-three devices in our home that keep track of what we do.  I say “at least” because there may be others I’m not aware of.  It’s not unreasonable to think that anything I buy at this point – and definitely anything I get for free -- is sending information about me to some outside entity.  A shirt I recently ordered on Amazon has an odd pattern of silver threads running … [Read more...]

Brio and Blossom

April 23, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

This week, the Cassatt String Quartet is having its annual Cassatt in the Basin residency, through which they bring the abiding principles of chamber music -- effective communication, responsibility to the group, mutual respect, and intimate musical expression – to young people in West Texas.  They began yesterday with a concert that included music by Melinda Wagner and Lev 'Ljova Zhurbin.  They … [Read more...]

Music by the Second

April 16, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

Sometimes I’m amazed when I realize the number of clocks I encounter every day:  on the wall, on the stove, on the phone, on the screen I’m typing on now.  Reminders of the passage of time seem ever present. But it’s not really the passage of time, is it?  It’s the current time.  Unlike the clocks I grew up with -- clocks with faces and arms and reference points around a circle – the clocks … [Read more...]

Eighth Blackbird Records Student Compositions

April 9, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

Last week I wrote about a recording session we had with soprano Lindsay Kesselman on March 15th.  Two weeks later we brought Eighth Blackbird here to record seven student chamber pieces: Oliver Glynn: A Couple of Ogden Nash Poems Nicholas Karr: Sulcus Thomas Little: Invasion of the Minor Seconds Thomas McMillan: Prime Gaps Algernon Robinson: Spring Luis Sanz: Transiciones … [Read more...]

Recording songs by student composers

April 2, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

I wrote here about the recording session we had in February with the Attacca String Quartet.  We had another this past month, this time with soprano Lindsay Kesselman and pianist Daniel Pesca collaborating on four student songs: Kyrie Antoinette: Old News Derek Wesley Arnold: The Song of the Shirt Alicia Bachorik: How Do I Love Thee? Jessica Buford: They Were Miners Jessica’s song … [Read more...]

Other people’s stories: art by parents

March 26, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

We all have a strong inclination to view ourselves as the protagonists of our own stories. People in committed relationships have an increased incentive to view themselves as serving supporting roles in someone else’s narrative. Parents have an even stronger incentive to see themselves in supporting roles, and even as backdrop. What does this mean for artists?  It can mean any number of … [Read more...]

The Pleasure of Context

March 19, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

Like many people, when I read a great book, I immediately cast about for other titles by the same author.  When I see a film that catches my attention, I look for more by the same creative team. Part of this practice is a desire to get more of the same – the personal version of the ubiquitous marketing ploy “if you liked this, try these.”  Another part, though, is a pursuit of the pleasure of … [Read more...]

Disruption

March 12, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

Life is full of small pleasures, and I do my best not to undervalue them. For me, many of life’s pleasures are solitary.   Writing music, for example.  Or reading.  Or just thinking about things. Sometimes, though, events capture my attention, pull me out of my self and away from my solitary activities.   Last spring was such a time.  Like many others, I found national and world events … [Read more...]

Spring Flinging

March 5, 2018 by Lawrence Dillon

I mentioned a couple of weeks ago that we had the Attacca String Quartet in residence here at the UNC School of the Arts.   Things are really jumping this spring, starting next week.  We are going to have new music coming out our ears, which is exactly how I like it.  And I can't help pointing it out, because I love this: the next seven weeks include sixty performances of new pieces by our sixteen … [Read more...]

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Lawrence Dillon

Composer in Residence at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, Lawrence Dillon creates works that connect past and present in attractive and unexpected ways. [Read More]

Infinite Curves

There are no two points so distant from one another that they cannot be connected by a single straight line -- and an infinite number of curves. In a musical composition, there are always many ways to get from Point A to Point B, regardless of how little A and B seem to have in common. Similarly, … [Read More...]

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Recent Posts

  • Adam Gopnik on Cole Porter
  • Keeping Track of Us
  • Brio and Blossom
  • Music by the Second
  • Eighth Blackbird Records Student Compositions

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