Cantor, for piano (Not Your Grandparents' Twelve-Tone Music IV) (2019) by David Victor Feldman published on 2019-06-12T05:59:35Z Another piece which possibly parses as 12 simultaneous pieces, one for each pitch-class. Unlike my previous effort along these lines, where a steady pulse characterized each layer, I've applied approximations to the mathematical object called a Cantor sets to make the rhythm of each layer clumpy. This allows a variety of pitch-sets to emerge but with no hard boundaries between these "harmonies." Of course a cantor is also a kind of singer... Genre Classical Comment by Mark Dowding Very interesting, David! I like your use of Cantor as a homonym, also 2024-03-23T18:14:47Z Comment by Death Is Knot Love the clumpness of the Cantor set. Are the 12 pieces related to iterations in the construction of the set? 2022-12-23T15:30:07Z Comment by Drew Flieder This has a very organic feel. The harmonies sound neither "prepared" nor "random"...like they arise effortlessly, yet out of some sort of necessity. 2022-08-09T18:31:55Z Comment by WalkingEars Not your grandparents' 12-tone indeed! Beautiful and intricate composition, lovely to listen to, well done 2019-08-11T20:30:43Z Comment by euclid1618 really beautiful 2019-06-13T14:15:55Z