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I'm always going to use music, use culture as a tool to engage people to have this dialog, to enable others. That's very important.
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I think the dark psychology of human beings is very interesting as an artist.
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I'm a very textural composer. I care a lot about textures and gestures. Electronics add so much to that. It's like a flavor - it creates so much texture.
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Some of my contemporaries don't want to talk about the female problem because they feel like whenever they get a teaching position or an award, we are just being pinpointed, fitting into the model.
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A lot of times, politics, global issues are very black and white. There is a place for that, but it's also fantastic to have art side by side, from different viewpoints, open for interpretations.
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I'm the benefactor of people who are doing so much hard work championing women composers.
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The more tools I have, the more freedom I have.
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In pop music, people take a stand. When you look at a Beyonce or a Kendrick Lamar, they are going to tell you what they think. And audiences totally get it. They totally love it, and they are totally hungry for it. But in our conservatory training, I think it's a little lacking.
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Art music is an evolving matter, and so are a lot of cities.
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When you are known as this cutting-edge composer all the time... it's no longer cutting-edge.
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I'm not a programmer; I'm more of a performer. I'm really bad at math.
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We all have our own narrative of what human trafficking is supposed to be, but if you do a little research, human trafficking happens, in many different forms and shapes, right in our backyard.
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It's about how you're using the space. That's what makes live music.
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I like a lot of different things equally, with no boundaries, and in a very serious way.