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Andrew Gelt (b. 2 February 1951, Albuquerque, New Mexico) composer, woodwind performer, conductor. Andrew Lloyd Gelt, a blatantly eclectic composer of the type characterized by Leonard Bernstein in his Six Talks At Harvard, wrote music in the strict eclectic vein culminating with his Symphony No. 1, Op. 34 "The Art of Eclecticism." [Hear excerpts of this work.] Eclecticism was, as well, the subject of his doctoral dissertation. |
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Gelt soon after developed a thinking model to be used exclusively for composition entitled Quantum Synergy In Eclecticism [diagram]. Within two major areas, a microcosm and macrocosm, he expounded upon contrasting concepts of intuitive/quantified, "referential"/authentic, and empirical/Bergsonian eclecticism and identified the types of eclecticism as synchronic, anachronistic, genetic, juxtaposed, and compound. |
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