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Artist
Ralph Shapey (March 12, 1921 – June 13, 2002) was an American composer and conductor. Although Shapey's style is characterized by angularity, irony, and technical rigor, his work insists on sweeping gesture, frenetic passion, rhythmic vitality, lyrical melody, and dramatic arc recall Romanticism. Shapey was dubbed by critics Leonard Meyer and Bernard Jacobson as a "radical traditionalist," which pleased him immensely -- he held a deep respect for the masters of the past, whom he regarded as his finest teachers. The French-American composer Edgard Varèse was among Shapey's most important influences. Both composers shared a fascination with unusual sonorities, counterpoint masses, and the outer extremes of pitch space. The coordination of static "sound blocks" in Shapey's music also reminds one of another great French composer, Olivier Messiaen, though Shapey reportedly found Messiaen's music saccharine and maudlin. Shapey also studied with Stefan Wolpe. Although comparisons are useful, Shapey's compositional voice is undoubtedly personal and distinctive. Many listeners would call his music "atonal," but Shapey himself denied the label. He considered himself a tonal composer, and indeed his work, though couched in a highly dissonant harmonic idiom rich in interval classes 1 and 6, does adhere to certain organizational features of tonal music, including pitch hierarchy and object permanence. Shapey created a body of over 200 works, many of which have been published by Presse

Ralph Shapey: Radical Traditionalism

Psalms Of Joy And Sorrow

Ralph Shapey: Songs of Life
Amy Briggs: Tangos for Piano
Ralph Shapey: Praise

Music of Ralph Shapey

Johanna Beyer: Sticky Melodies

Radical Traditionalism

American Masterpieces for Percussion, Vol. II
The Covenant, Rituals, Incantations

new music for virtuosos
David Holzman plays Sessions and Shapey