By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Wednesday, 20 December 2023 at 18:28 PM


It’s telling that Philip Glass was among those spectators who, one evening in May 1961, watched the composer, conceptual artist and all-round enfant terrible La Monte Young draw a straight line across the floorboards of Yoko Ono’s loft space on Chambers Street, Manhattan.

Telling, because Young’s Compositions 1961 explored a less-is-more approach to art that would become a defining feature of Glass’s own work. Influenced by Zen Buddhism, the piece comprises of a simple instruction to ‘Draw a straight line and follow it’, not once (as in Young’s previous Composition 1960 #10) but 29 times.

In short, it observes the variety of outcomes that arise from a single repeated event. Glass, a young student at Juilliard at the time, was greatly impressed by its performance, but could not have guessed that along with Young, Steve Reich and Terry Riley, he would go down in history as one of the four founding fathers of Minimalism.