Carl studied with Jonathan Kramer, George Rochberg, Ralph Shapey, and Iannis Xenakis. From each respectively, the composer has commented that he feels he learned about time, history, counterpoint/phrasing, and form. His music finds its roots in the spirit of eclectic juxtapositions, transcendentalism, and experiment embodied in the output of Charles Ives and other American "ultramodernists", including Carl Ruggles. Carl’s music until 1997 tends to explore different styles, and to create unusual syntheses thereof. A history major as an undergraduate at Yale University, he has felt that the musical past is a fertile source to be manipulated for new expressive purposes. Duke Meets Mort is a saxophone quartet that interprets the harmonic changes of Duke Ellington’s Mood Indigo in the voice of Morton Feldman. Time/Memory/Shadow is a double trio based on a march written in the composer’s adolescence, which is slowly “excavated” in the course of the piece, and only revealed at the end. From 1998, starting with Open for string trio, Carl’s music has become less referential. Since 2001 he has developed a technique of basing his harmonies on the overtone series, with common partials above different fundamentals serving as pivots for progressions and modulations. In American Music in the Twentieth Century, critic Kyle Gann described Carl's more recent style: " has settled into a more serene, meditative idiom, but still with a dissonant edge." More recent works that represent this approach include The Wind’s Trace Rests on Leaves and Waves for string quintet ; Marfantasie for electric guitar and large ensemble; Shake the Tree for piano four-hands ; A Musical Enquiry Into the Sublime and Beautiful for chamber orchestra; La Ville Engloutie for wind ensemble; Fourth Symphony ; The Geography of Loss for soprano, baritone, chamber chorus, and instrumental octet; and Piano Quintet, "Search". Carl also frequently collaborates with sculptor Karen McCoy, creating sound components of installation art works, including pieces for the Sculpture Key Festivals of 2009 and 2010, and the 2013 Wintergreen Festival. Carl's music has been released by Innova Recordings, New World Records, BMOPSound, and Centaur Records, among others. He has received both the Charles Ives Fellowship and a Music Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as grants from the NEA and Chamber Music America.
Writings
Since 1994, Carl has been a critic for Fanfare magazine, where he writes extensively on new music recordings. In addition, he has completed a book on Terry Riley’s In C, published in 2009 by Oxford University Press. His interest in Japanese music led to a residency in Tokyo in spring 2007, which resulted in interviews with 25 contemporary Japanese composers. In 2013, Carl published "Eight Waves a Composer Will Ride in This Century" on an emerging common practice period that he observes in twenty-first-century compositional practice, based on the universality of music technology, globalism, cross-disciplinary collaboration, and sonic essentialism. This essay has become the basis for Music Composition in the 21st Century: A Practical Guide for the New Common Practice, to be published by Bloomsbury in 2020. He has also edited the final book of Jonathan Kramer, Postmodern Music, Postmodern Listening, also published by Bloomsbury.
Selected works
Orchestral and Ensemble
Symphony No. 2 "Liberty and/or Death"
Marfantasie for electric guitar and large ensemble
A Musical Enquiry Into the Sublime and Beautiful for chamber orchestra