Well, while I still think I know next to nothing about new Danish music, I have picked up a cd or two as well as a name or two (like Fuzzy) that make me feel I'm starting to sort out who the cool kids are. And a website, for the curious:
http://www.danishmusic.info/594000c/GSID/2959875 I recently added Ib Nørholm, Jørgen Plaetner, Svend Hvidtfelt Nielsen, Hans Abrahamsen, and Else Marie Pade to my collection of Langgaard, Nielsen (Carl), Holmboe, Bentzon (Niels Viggo), Ruders, and Nørgård. Pade and Plaetner were both electroacoustic composers of the first generation. Nice stuff, though the sound is very much of the fifties and sixties--the actual sounds I mean, though the aesthetic of those decades is there, too. (I just listened to the cd of Luc Ferrari's early tape pieces. They sound fine. Maybe that's all about who, if anyone, is doing remastering.) I have Nørholm's seventh and ninth symphonies. Also fine. Not quite as quirky as Nørgård, but still very listenable. Nørholm taught Nielsen (S.H.), whose album "Into the Black" I now have. His music on this disc (all small ensembles) is all from the 1990 to 95, and one casual hearing didn't detect any extended techniques, but it all seems to be pretty solid stuff. Worth another spin or two for sure! The Abrahamsen disc I found is the one with pieces from several "periods" in Hans' career--"Stratifications" from the seventies, "Nacht und Trompeten" from the eighties, and the piano concerto, which straddles the 20th and 21st centuries. I don't have a very good sense of this music, mostly because each time I put the disc on, something comes up that distracts me. Mea culpa. The real treat for me, so far--not that all this other stuff hasn't been nice--was the Trash cd, six short pieces for accordion by younger Danish composers, of which the opening seconds of the first track, Simon Christensen's "The Acc's Low Track" was worth the price of admission. This is not your grandfather's accordion music, but if you already know and like Guy Klucevsek or, even better, Pauline Oliveros, then you'll this disc of Frode Andersen's. All of these but the Nørholm are on Dacapo. The Nørholm is on Kontrapunkt. As soon as I can get a copy of the first DIEM compilation, I'll let you know how tasty that one is.