composer/musician/ZTT artist
 
 
The Beating Of Wings

The Object Is A Hungry Wolf
32 Frames For Amplified Orchestra
Listening In
Cadenza For Piano And Electric Piano

*
Inside The Wolf
The Impossible Net
Listening In (Re-Modelled)

Alphabed (A Mystery Dance)

The Amusement (7 Inch Edit)                      
45 Is                                                                                                                                      
Goodbye Mr G                                                                                    
The Amusement (12 Inch)                                                                                        

*

Kink Kink Presto
East Fragment
Kink Konk Adagio
 
Under The Son

The Sequence
The Passage (Parts 1, 2, 3)
Sometimes It Rainshttp://www.discogs.com/Andrew-Poppy-On-Zang-Tuum-Tumb/master/359890

Andrew Poppy – On Zang Tuum Tumb

two customer review on amazon


Philip Glass meets John Cage in the Summer of Love? 7 Dec 2006


By John David Charles Hilton

Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase

Obviously part of the minimalist movement, sometimes sounding like Philip Glass (The Object is a Hungry Wolf), sometimes veering into Cage territory (Cadenza for Piano and Electric Piano), other times late 80s trance (Listening In), he nevertheless manages to carve out a distinctive sound world of his own.


He casts quite a wide net, as well as the aforementioned there's a spicing of African rhythms, mid 70s kraut-rock (particularly Klaus Schulze) and various 'avant-garde' movements, all pieced together with the skill associated with the classical field, and it all gels surprisingly well. The whole set weighs in at just under three hours. The packaging is excellent, as is the documentation.


ZTT are likely to be remembered for Frankie Goes to Hollywood and maybe Propaganda. This release shows another, arguably more rewarding, side to their oeuvre.


Highly recommended to lovers of 'modern' classical, and to fans of intelligent music everywhere.




A hefty wedge of musical innovation - highly recommended 9 May 2008


By Neil C

Format:Audio CD

This set, beautifully packaged, contains remastered versions of the two albums Andrew Poppy released on ZTT Records in the mid-eighties - 'The Beating of Wings' and 'Alphabed'. Significantly it also contains a wealth of previously unreleased material from that period....


This is music that is full of technical, intellectual, visceral and atmospheric appeal. It will almost certainly appeal to people who like Steve Reich or Philip Glass and other more obscure 'minimalist' composers, because it seems to initally be coming from that direction.


However, what makes it different, and in a way more interesting, is that at this point in his career Poppy seemed to be driving towards a music which was more studio focused in many respects and which went further than Reich, Glass and others in adopting the music technology and production techniques of popular music and using it to forge a bona fide new kind of art music. Thus, music such as this is the natural successor to Reich and Glass in the innovation stakes.


Of course we are talking mid-80s and Poppy particularly makes extensive use of the Fairlight CMI (cutting edge music technology at the time) to produce much of the music in this set. Where acoustic instruments and voices are used in conjunction with the electronics I believe the work is at its most successful. Sometimes the purely electronic pieces have an 80s pop feel which is not too far removed from the electro pop of the day, and thus is slightly dated.


The remastering has certainly helped across the board - 'The Object is a Hungry Wolf' for instance now sounds much fuller and less spikey than on the previous CD version.


Highlights for me across the whole collection include the stately '32 Frames for Orchestra', the propulsive extended mini-opera '45 Is' and the very ambient 'Goodbye Mr G' with its idiosyncratic use of text and narration. For me, a significant highlight of this set is the previously unreleased 'The Passage (1-3)', a 26 minute long epic with banging electronic metallic percussion and operatic vocals.


If you are interested in genuinely innovative music then it will be well worth your while purchasing this collection.


thank you very much for taking the time to say something. AP