I've been meaning to ask this for a while: what are some scores (or perhaps classical pieces) that you like which are clearly "acquired tastes?" Music which you don't listen to that often, but when you do, you want to clear out the cobwebs, or you want it to take you to a dark place, or you simply enjoy it more on an intense intellectual level, rather than emotional? (Or, put a different way, music that you will only listen to alone, because most people you know wouldn't necessarily like it.) It doesn't necessarily have to be atonal and dissonant, but just... unusual.
Off the top of my head:
1.) A Life in Suitcases (Borut Krzisnik) -- one of my favorite scores from last year. An extremely complex, densely-textured classical score that ranges from minimalism to tango. To me, this is addictive; I hear something new every time I listen to it.
2.) The Piano Tuner of Earthquakes (Chris Slaski) -- another densely textured classical score for this weird independent film
3.) Ghost in the Shell (Kenji Kawaii) -- haunting and ambient
4.) The Cell (Howard Shore) -- intense music for madness
5.) Symphony #6: Devil Choirs at the Gates of Heaven (Glenn Branca) -- the first movement of this is a head-banging piece for drums and a dozen electric guitars, and it's dynamite
6.) Piano and String Quartet, Crippled Symmetry, Rothko Chapel, Why Patterns (Morton Feldman) -- extreme hypnotic minimalism
7.) Preparation for the Final Mystery (Alexander Scriabin) -- a visionary classical piece from the early 1900s
Other honorable mentions: Beltrami's The Omen, Goldsmith and Rosenmann's Planet of the Apes scores, Goldsmith's Mephisto Waltz, some of Chris Young's more experimental work (like The Vagrant), and of course, Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring.
So, what's on your "difficult listening" playlist?
-- Jon
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