Thought I'd drop by and make a plug for Ann Southam's music. She's a Canadian composer that passed away last year and her
piano classes music is really quite stunning. Sometimes she employs a mixture of twelve-tone and minimalism, like in Simple Lines of Enquiry (
http://www.amazon.com/Simple-Lines-of-Enquiry/dp/B002CR1FDA), and others it's a beautiful, sort of postminimalist style like in Glass Houses Revisited (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TTY-ybM3rQ). You can order and even borrow a lot of her scores through the Canadian Music Centre (
http://www.musiccentre.ca/apps/index.cfm?fuseaction=composer.FA_dsp_biography&authpeopleid=435&by=S), and if you register on the site you can listen to TONS of archival recordings.
Edit: I should also add that everyone I've dealt with at the CMC has gone out of their way to be helpful. There are some great people working there, and no, I get nothing in promoting their organization.Yes, I'm biased as I just completed a recording project of her music, but I really do think more people should be looking into her scores. Pieces that I'd recommend, in addition to those mentioned are:
Soundings for a New Piano
Qualities of Consonance
Rivers (3 sets)
Soundstill
Most of these are hand-engraved, but once I got used to her handwriting, I found I preferred those scores to the computer-engraved ones.
Enjoy!
I'm sure I have heard some of her scores a while back and her piano music is really something. Ann Southam’s piano music was so beautiful and Eve Egoyan’s interpretation so lovely, that when I heard it plays, I just want to lose myself and simply enjoy.