
New Books Network Lukas Foss: A "New American Music Series" Gallatin Lecture, April 15, 1982
Jan 15, 2026
Explore Lukas Foss's engaging reflections from his 1982 lecture on contemporary American music. He delves into the rise of minimalism, tying it to popular music and meditation. Foss critiques tonality's evolution, comparing serialism with aleatory methods to highlight surprising creativity. He shares his journey from strict rules to spontaneous composition, emphasizing the joy of unexpected musical moments. The discussion also touches on the role of technology and the risks of amplification, alongside enlightening perspectives on music education and influential composers.
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Why Minimalism Became Fashionable
- Minimalism's repetition offers an escape from compositional paralysis and suggests meditation or popular flirtation.
- Lukas Foss links trends to composers seeking ways out of the 'ivory tower' and overwhelming choice.
Preestablished Systems Spark Surprise
- Setting up rules or systems before composing reduces paralysis and yields surprising material to work with.
- Foss credits Schoenberg's idea of preestablished structures as an ingenious way to generate musical surprises.
Improvisation Workshop Turned Composition Lab
- Foss describes founding an improvisation ensemble at UCLA and writing 26 chapters of rules for non-jazz improvisation.
- He later discarded those rules for 'instant composition' and edited improvisations into finished pieces.



