Phill Niblock, Avant-Garde Composer and Filmmaker, Dies at 90

Phill Niblock, the minimalist composer, filmmaker, and photographer who shaped the New York avant-garde scene, died yesterday (January 8), according to Experimental Intermedia, the music foundation he had directed since 1985. A note on Niblock’s personal website confirmed the news. He was 90 years old.

Born in 1933 in Anderson, Indiana, Niblock studied economics and served two years in the Army before moving to New York, partly to indulge his love of jazz. After a period photographing Duke Ellington and pulling all-nighters in jazz clubs, his fascination with classical music, stoked by a formative experience watching Morton Feldman, led him to the Manhattan avant-garde scene of which he soon became a fixture.

Source : Pitchfork