Dusatko's oeuvre divides into two periods. Between 1971 and 1980 he was relatively prolific, completing more than a dozen works, and favoured a dense atonal style, intellectually rigorous in content and form. Typically in this period, the integrity of a work came from the consistent use of basic materials - for example, chords built entirely of seconds or thirds (Transformations), or given intervals deployed according to a complex mathematical ratio (Diasteme, 1980) - to dictate harmonic and melodic events. In the Melos solos, small, melodically and rhythmically distinct motives are subjected to intense development until exhausted. The Melos and Nomos works also reflect Dusatko's interest in ancient Greek melody and theory. Dusatko wrote only a handful of pieces between 1981 and 1990, but a major stylistic change was apparent. Works such as O Sancta Simplicitas are more intuitive and dramatic (at times, almost frighteningly intense), and draw more inspiration from traditional music; in Gentle Madness and Traces of Becoming, tonality and atonality are freely juxtaposed.
Dusatko is a member of the CLComp, and an associate of the CMCentre.
Author Kevin Bazzana
Schulman, Michael. 'Tomas Dusatko - writing from the heart,' CanComp, 230, May 1988.
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