No, im a huge fan of alot of Zorn's work, and very receptive to hearing modern/avant garde music. I guess my problem with the game pieces is more out of frustration than an actual immediate dislike for the music, because some parts of it are fantastic, but with nearly all the other composers you mentioned (Baily, Cage, Cecil Taylor and even Merzbow!) the intention of the music was made quite clear, usually through an actual statement of intent. Which leaves me wondering if the game pieces are case of the emperors new clothes?

AJ


While it's obviously true that Zorn's game pieces aren't like songs,
there's a lot of other music, much of which is frequently discussed
or at least name-checked on this list, which is no more or less
abstract when heard on a recording rather than a live performance.

Do you listen to recordings of European free improvisation (Derek
Bailey, Instant Composers Pool, Peter Brotzmann, Evan Parker, etc)?
Or modern/contemporary avant garde classical music (John Cage,
Pauline Oliveros, Helmut Lachenmann, Iannis Xenakis, etc)? Or
American avant garde jazz-rooted music (Anthony Braxton, Cecil
Taylor, etc)? What about Japanese noise bands or more recent
electro-acoustic improvisation? Others on this list could add other
genres and categories to this list, but this list may be enough for
you to see what I mean.

In other words, I guess, do you listen to other abstractly structured
music on recordings and you simply have problems listening to Zorn's
game pieces? If so, being more specific about what you have trouble
with may help.

If, on another hand, you haven't heard a lot of recordings of music
that's fairly abstract, it may just be a matter of getting a  comfort
level and/or finding works in this vein that you find immediately
attractive (or at least not uninteresting) and moving out from there.
That can be a very long term process, but in my experience, any
individual's response to works like these is fairly personal.
Suggestions can help point you in new directions, but you'll need to
find your path of artists and recordings that draw you further into
this area of music.

Not sure if this will have helped,

Herb
--
Herb Levy
P O Box 9369
Fort Worth, TX  76147

herb@eskimo.com