"I never feel that my music is sparse or minimalist; the way fat people never really think they're fat. I certainly don't consider myself minimalist at all"
About this Quote
Feldman’s joke lands with the bluntness of a confession: minimalism isn’t an aesthetic label you wear proudly so much as something other people pin on you when they can’t find the “right” amount of stuff in your work. The fat-people analogy is intentionally uncomfortable, a bit cruel, and that’s the point. He’s mocking the gap between lived experience and external judgment. From the inside, his music doesn’t feel like absence; it feels like saturation - of timbre, of duration, of microscopic decisions. The listener who hears “not much happening” is basically admitting they’re measuring the wrong currency.
Historically, Feldman gets filed near minimalism because he shares certain surface traits: quiet dynamics, repetition, long spans, a refusal of dramatic teleology. But he’s also resisting a very specific mid-century critical reflex: to turn a composer into a movement. Minimalism, by the time Feldman’s reputation crystallized, was already a brand with heroes, techniques, and a kind of audible efficiency. Feldman’s work is inefficient on purpose. It lingers. It drifts. It treats attention as something you stretch, not something you reward with big moments.
The subtext is prickly self-protection. He’s insisting that his music is full - full of sensation, friction, and risk - even when it’s quiet. Calling it “sparse” lets the culture off the hook; it implies the composer didn’t provide enough. Feldman flips that: maybe you didn’t stay long enough to notice the density.
Historically, Feldman gets filed near minimalism because he shares certain surface traits: quiet dynamics, repetition, long spans, a refusal of dramatic teleology. But he’s also resisting a very specific mid-century critical reflex: to turn a composer into a movement. Minimalism, by the time Feldman’s reputation crystallized, was already a brand with heroes, techniques, and a kind of audible efficiency. Feldman’s work is inefficient on purpose. It lingers. It drifts. It treats attention as something you stretch, not something you reward with big moments.
The subtext is prickly self-protection. He’s insisting that his music is full - full of sensation, friction, and risk - even when it’s quiet. Calling it “sparse” lets the culture off the hook; it implies the composer didn’t provide enough. Feldman flips that: maybe you didn’t stay long enough to notice the density.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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