On Thursday, Oct. 1, Q2 Music launches a weeklong pop-up stream timed to celebrate the release of the latest episode of Meet the Composer, featuring the New Haven, CT-based composer Ingram Marshall. Listen to hours of his music, including commercial and live recordings featured on the show, exclusive introductions to many of his most arresting works, and the episode of Meet the Composer as well, all through Oct. 7. Delve into the expressive soundscapes of this unheralded composer.

PLAY THE MEET THE COMPOSER STREAM

Read our profile on Marshall, 73, from two years ago, and listen to him discussing his music:  

Some of Ingram Marshall's earliest recordings are of solo, semi-improvised performances, playing an Indonesian flute and singing falsetto to an accompaniment of prerecorded electronics and live tape delays. They are mesmerizing—thick, swelling, fragrant clouds of music.

His music has evolved over the decades, but the sweetest ingredients are still there. The love of Indonesian music survives in luminous, overlapping, diatonic melodies, inspired by Marshall's immersion in the gamelan, in pieces like Peaceable Kingdom for orchestra and tape (1990), and the lush atmospherics have expanded into landscapes of Romantic grandeur, inspired by Marshall's lifelong infatuation with the symphonies of Bruckner and Sibelius. And core techniques remain the same, as in Hymnodic Delays for voices with electronics (1997), composed for Paul Hillier's Theatre of Voices, where Marshall uses loops to turn melody into canon and canon into a great wash of sound.

Perhaps most importantly, he has retained an improvising performer's sense of timing.  He listens long and deeply, and organizes his music according to a mysterious, intuitive, but undeniable logic.  Even when he ventures into writing music totally free of electronic augmentation, his compositional voice is strong and clear, as in his surprisingly moving Authentic Presence for solo piano (2001).

Perhaps the greatest mystery of Marshall's music is why it isn't better known. Despite performances by the Kronos Quartet (Fog Tropes II, 1994) and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra (2006), his music has never been taken up by the classical mainstream.

But its genius is recognized by a handful of connoisseurs.  John Adams, Marshall's ex-roommate from his West Coast days, remains a steadfast champion of the composer, and with good reason—it's hard to imagine Adams writing a piece like On the Transmigration of Souls without Marshall's influence.  The New Albion record label, one of the essential independent voices in modern music, was founded largely for the purpose of putting out a recording of Marshall's Fog Tropes for brass and tape (1982). 

And a generation of younger music lovers, studying under Marshall, or just downloading his records, is spreading the word: here is a major American composer, even a central one, writing mystifyingly beautiful music like nobody else. Have you heard this stuff?