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Tom Johnson (composer)
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{{Short description|American composer (1939β2024)}} {{other people||Thomas Johnson (disambiguation)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}} {{infobox person | name = Tom Johnson | image = Tom Johnson - composer (1b).jpg | alt = Colour three-quarter profile publicity shot, of clean-shaven, bespectacled half-smiling man, with receding short white hair, brushed back | image_upright = 0.8 | caption = Johnson, {{circa|2000}} | birth_date = {{birth date|1939|11|18}} | birth_place = [[Greeley, Colorado]], US | death_date = {{death date and age|2024|12|31|1939|11|18}} | death_place = Paris, France | education = [[Yale University]] | occupation = {{ubl| Composer | Music critic }} | employer = {{ubl| [[The Village Voice]] (1971β1983)}} | spouse = {{ubl|Kathy Duncan (divorced)|{{marriage|[[Esther Ferrer]]|1986}}}} }} '''Thomas Floyd Johnson''' (November 18, 1939 β December 31, 2024) was an American composer and music critic associated with [[Minimal music|minimalism]]. After a religious upbringing in Colorado, he studied at Yale with [[Allen Forte]] and in New York City with [[Morton Feldman]]. There he covered the work of several noted composers, bringing them to wider attention in ''[[The Village Voice]]''. He found inspiration in the ideas of ancient and early modern mathematicians and philosophers, and collaborated with contemporary mathematicians, while incorporating theatrical and visual elements in his work. Johnson often sought to engage audiences by explaining or narrating the processes of his music in or as part of the musical experience. He relocated to Paris in 1983, where he remarried in 1986 and lived until his death. His works include ''[[An Hour for Piano]]'', ''The Four-Note Opera'', ''Riemannoper'', and the ''Bonhoeffer Oratorio''.
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