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Muhly says that the Carnegie Hall concert was a "summary of my last five years of composition." In what was a generally favorable review in the New York Times, critic Bernard Holland still seemed puzzled by the "pick-and-choose" manner in which Muhly has assembled his own aesthetic from the historical continuum. "His musical fathers and grandfathers might have engaged in revolution, but what I heard on Friday wasn't in revolt against anything. Brahms? Twelve-tone music? It's as if they never existed."
But Muhly is more interested in affirmation than revolt.
"I was happy with that review," he says. "I felt good that this was somebody who was not really naturally responsive to what I was doing—and that he still seemed to have a pretty good time."
Tim Page won a 1997 Pulitzer Prize for his music criticism in the Washington Post. He lives in Baltimore.


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