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  1. "Andrew Rudin has progressed to a distinctive place of mystery in his fine piano trio "Circadia". Wherever the music careered, it did so with a sure sense of expressive purpose, and with so much overall thrust that you couldn't always tell when one movement ended and another began."-David Patrick Stearns, Philadelphia Inquirer

  2. I was born Charles Andrew Rudin on April 10, 1939 in Newgulf, Texas, a small town south of Houston inhabited solely by employees of Texas Gulf Sulphur Company. The town was founded in the late 1920's, and dismantled in 1993, when mining and processing of sulphur finally ceased and the town was closed. Grandparents on both sides of my family ...

  3. Explore the works of Andrew Rudin, an acclaimed composer known for his innovative contributions to contemporary classical music. Discover his rich portfolio of compositions, performances, and collaborations that have shaped modern musical expression.

  4. Apr 10, 2019 · Rudin (who pronounces his name roo-DEEN) conceived Tragoedia as an exploration of Greek tragedy. But with its familiar four-movement structure, I hear it as more of a synthesized symphony, a modern microtonal organism built from rhythm and timbre but supported by a traditional skeleton. Viewed this way, the first movement, Kouros, stands in for ...

  5. www.youtube.com › user › AndrewRudinAndrew Rudin - YouTube

    views of my performances, rehearsals, interviews, and other matters connected to my life as a composer

  6. ANDREW RUDIN [roo-DEEN] (b. 1939) is a Texas-born composer of Swedish ancestry whose many contributions to the literature of electronic music brought him early recognition. Critic Michael Caruso, reviewing his Violin Concerto in 2007, remarked “Andrew Rudin has been an important presence in the local contemporary music scene for the past four decades.”

  7. May 11, 2020 · A 2019 album, Synthesizer Pioneer: The Early Electronic Music of Andrew Rudin, gathers this work for new and longtime fans. Andrew Rudin’s “abstract opera,” Il Giuco, premiered at a 1966 concert of the Philadelphia Composer’s Forum, alongside music by George Crumb and Vincent Persichetti. It was, according to the inventor himself, the ...