Composers inside Electronics: Music after David Tudor

Similar documents
Indeterminacy and Improvisation in Live Electronic Music. Alex Christie

David Tudor s transition from performer to

Chapter 1. Meeting 1, Foundations: Live Electronics

how did these devices change the role of the performer? composer? engineer?

ANALOGUE AND DIGITAL ELECTRONICS STUDENT S WORKBOOK U1: INTRODUCTION

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

Original Marketing Material circa 1976

Experimental Music in Theory and Practice

EARLY ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS

Poème Électronique (1958) Edgard Varèse

Wednesday, October 3, 12. Music, Sound, Performance

A History of Music Styles and Music Technology

The Project for Magnetic Tape (1952/53): Challenging the Idea of a Critical Edition of Historic Music for Recording Media

A COMPUTER AIDED INTERPRETATION INTERFACE FOR JOHN CAGE S NUMBER PIECE TWO 5

Printed in U.S.A. 6/64

Midterm Review TechnoSonics People / Groups

Music 80C History, Literature, and Technology of Electronic Music Monday/Wednesday 1:00-4:30 Music Center 131

The Digital Audio Workstation

MUS302: ELECTROACOUSTIC COMPOSITION AND SOUND DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES

Mary: Well, I have a set of 78 rpm records from the 1920s that are an exercise program.

Hear After: Matters of Life and Death in David Tudor s Electronic Music

Usability of Computer Music Interfaces for Simulation of Alternate Musical Systems

diptych Paul Schuette Fall 2008 a DUET for harpsichord, electric piano and live electronics

Élan. Consoles for multitrack recording and mixing in modern, multipurpose studios. Introduction: why we did it. How we did it.

Archives, Electronic Files and Licensed Material

External Assessment practice paper

DMX 512 Language Date: Venerdì, febbraio 12:15:08 CET Topic: Educational Lighting Site

Application Note Using Buffered Outputs and Patch Panels with the SETPOINT Machinery Protection System

John Cage and David Tudor

From Tendenzmusik to Abstract Expressionism Stefan Wolpe s Battle Piece for Piano

ANALOG RADIO MIXER. Flexible. Affordable. Built To Last.

COURSE WEBSITE. LAB SECTIONS MEET THIS WEEK!

RoHS. Atma-Sphere Music Preamplifier. model P-2 OWNER'S MANUAL. Please study this document carefully before using equipment

Modular Memory System

Mr Hyde User Manual Mr. Hyde. synthblock. by Analogue Solutions

PHONO LOCO Q AND A

A Versatile New Intercom System

Dr. Strangelove synthblock

AACR2 Chapter 6. Description of Sound Recordings. Chief source of information. New Record? 245: Title. 245 General material designation

DIMI Lassfolk, Kai. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens 2014

Atari 400/800 Super Color CPU Card

Why Use the Cypress PSoC?

ICT goods categories and composition (HS 2012)

VPAT (Voluntary Product Accessibility Template ) Version 1.4. Summary

Springer Praxis Books

Digital Systems Principles and Applications. Chapter 1 Objectives

In the early 1980s, a computer program was developed that caused a major

RSL MusicPower Plug-In Installation Manual For Naim NAC 72 Preamp

Vtronix Incorporated. Simon Fraser University Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6 April 19, 1999

RETURN THIS AMENDMENT TO THE ISSUING OFFICE AT: AMENDMENT (1) ONE to RFP

Model 5250 Five Channel Digital to Analog Video Converter Data Pack

Art and Technology- A Timeline. Dr. Gabriela Avram

Instructions and answers for teachers

Music in the Digital Age

Voluntary Product Accessibility Template for Web Application

Summary Table Voluntary Product Accessibility Template. Supporting Features. Supports. Supports. Supports. Supports

Analyzing & Synthesizing Gamakas: a Step Towards Modeling Ragas in Carnatic Music

TEKTRONIX 2465B OSCILLOSCOPE: MAIN BOARD INTER-TRACK LEAKAGE.

Literature: Words across the Universe

Connecting a Turntable to Your Computer

Lecture 1: Circuits & Layout

RAKK dac. RAKK dac Mark IV. RAKK dac Mark IV. Assembly and Installation Manual

F24X DSK Setup and Tutorial

DMC550 Technical Reference

Edison Revisited. by Scott Cannon. Advisors: Dr. Jonathan Berger and Dr. Julius Smith. Stanford Electrical Engineering 2002 Summer REU Program

Real-Time Chance Operations: A Technologically Modern Approach to John Cage s for a Percussionist

Princeton University

Early Fall Lineup for Friday BAM/PFA

2 The MIDI Manual. Figure 1.1. Example of a typical MIDI system with the MIDI network connections.

The world has changed less since the time of Jesus Christ than it has in the last thirty years. Charles Peguy (1913)

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AS SCORES: A HYBRID APPROACH

TABLE OF CONTENTS. 1) Introduction 2. 2) Unpacking the Ares 2. 3) Installing the Ares in your system 3. 4) Setting the Operational Parameters 4

MUSIC TECHNOLOGY MASTER OF MUSIC PROGRAM (33 CREDITS)

ICT goods categories and composition (HS 2002)

CONNECTION TYPES DIGITAL AUDIO CONNECTIONS. Optical. Coaxial HDMI. Name Plug Jack/Port Description/Uses

Government Product Accessibility Template for Servers

Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT)

Parts of dicing machines for scribing or scoring semiconductor wafers , , , , ,

ROM MEMORY AND DECODERS

The Clear Channel Patent on Live Recording U.S. Patent No. 6,614,729. Latest Date That Material Can Qualify for Prior Art: September 26, 2000

Cathedral user guide & reference manual

Embedded System Design

EECS145M 2000 Midterm #1 Page 1 Derenzo

UNIT V 8051 Microcontroller based Systems Design

Research of Intelligent Traffic Light Control System Design Based on the NI ELVIS II Platform Yuan Wang a, Mi Zhou b

Devices I have known and loved

KS5 KS3. Loop pedals: singing, layering and creating INTRODUCTION WHAT IS A LOOP PEDAL? by James Manwaring

20th Century Discussions on Instrumentation and Timbre in Regards to Pierre Boulez and Le marteau sans maître

Valmy Assam Fourth-year undergraduate, Bachelor of Science, Music Minor University of Guelph

Contents. How to Use This Book...6 FUNDAMENTALS PART 1 Unit 1 THE SCIENCE OF SOUND... 11

Voluntary Product Accessibility Template

Installation / Set-up of Autoread Camera System to DS1000/DS1200 Inserters

MUS302 ELECTROACOUSTIC COMPOSITION AND SOUND DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES. Week 1 Introduction electronic music, sound in music and thinking in sound

Retail Products Catalog. Kiosks TV Displays Appliance Displays Computer Displays Transaction Counters

Form and Function: Examples of Music Interface Design

Model 5405 Dual Analog Sync Generator Data Pack

Cryostat Instrumentation Cabling Grounding and Shielding. Eric Hazen Boston University 12/15/08 1

Summary Table. Voluntary Product Accessibility Template

BodyBeat Metronome Instruction Manual

Turbo-Sonic Whopper. The Turbo-Sonic Whopper (TSW) is an instrument which has been

Transcription:

Composers inside Electronics: Music after David Tudor Collins, Nicolas. Leonardo Music Journal, Volume 14, 2004, pp. iv, 1-3 (Article) Published by The MIT Press For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/lmj/summary/v014/14.1collins.html Access Provided by Columbia University at 02/23/13 2:36AM GMT

INTRODUCTION Composers inside Electronics: Music after David Tudor The electronic future, as envisioned for the past 80 years or so, has usually taken one of two forms: the streamlined, antiseptic, utopian vision in which technology allows us ever more control (the ipod future) and the messy, chaotic, dystopian vision in which electronics multiply and decay, leaving us at their mercy (the impenetrable-thicket-of-cables-making-it-impossible-to-vacuum-behind-your-desk future). There is, of course, a third vision: one in which we accept the machine as a collaborator, rejoice in its inexplicable intransigence and, like Michelangelo finding the figure in the marble, pause to listen to the composer inside the electronics. This David Tudor was doing as he sat at a table piled with wire-spewing circuits, tending to them like an old lady with 3 dozen cats while producing some of the most extraordinary music of the 20th century. David Tudor was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1926. He began his musical career as an organist but quickly acquired a reputation as a leading pianist of the avant-garde, championing the music of Pierre Boulez, Sylvano Bussotti, Morton Feldman, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Stefan Wolpe among others (see Austin Clarkson s article in this issue). By the early 1950s Tudor had begun working with John Cage, performing Cage s music, serving as pianist for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company and assisting in the realizations of Cage s electronic works. As early as the 1930s, Cage had treated scavenged everyday electronic appliances record players, radios and amplifiers as performable musical instruments [1]. Tudor, working with Cage, recognized the profound potential of electronics to create fundamentally new, endlessly adaptable and (equally important) eternally unpredictable performance instruments. Over the course of the 1960s, Tudor gradually abandoned the piano and emerged as a virtuoso of electronic performance. As Ron Kuivila and James Pritchett recount in their articles, Tudor underwent a two-part metamorphosis: from pianist to electronic performer, with his meticulous realizations of Cage s Cartridge Music (1960) and Variations II (1961); and then, by the time of his own Fluorescent Sound (1964) and Bandoneon! (1966), from performer to composer in his own right. Expanding on Cage s discovery of alternative musical forms implicit in the found technology of radios and record players, Tudor embarked on the arduous process of acquiring enough knowledge of circuit design and soldering to construct his own new instruments [2]. He believed that new, object-specific, intrinsically electronic musical material and forms would emerge as each instrument took shape: I try to find out what s there not to make it do what I want, but to release what s there. The object should teach you what it wants to hear [3]. This was a profound shift in the aesthetics of electronic music. It was implicit perhaps in Cage s earlier work, but Tudor made it tangible and audible to a new generation: John Bischoff, in his interview with Douglas Kahn, describes how listening to Tudor completely turned my musical world around. Inspired by Tudor (and fellow visionaries such as David Behrman and Gordon Mumma) and aided by the proliferation of the integrated circuit, which combined transistors into functional, Lego-like modules that could be wired up with a bare minimum of engineering skill, a number of composers adopted a working method based on seat-of-the-pants electronic engineering. The circuit whether built from scratch, a customized commercial device, or store-bought and scrutinized to death became the score. 2004 ISAST LEONARDO MUSIC JOURNAL, Vol. 14, pp. 1 3, 2004 1

In 1973 Tudor held an extended workshop in Chocorua, New Hampshire. The focus was on creating a collaborative realization of his composition Rainforest, but as John Driscoll, Matthew Rogalsky and Bill Viola describe the event served as a catalyst for a handful of emerging electronic artists, who banded around Tudor to form a loosely collective ensemble called Composers Inside Electronics. Over the years this group served as a laboratory for artist-designed circuitry and experimental electronic performance, presenting dozens of installations of Rainforest IV worldwide, as well as performances of works by individual members of the ensemble (such as Ralph Jones s Star Networks at the Singing Point (1978), the score of which is included in this issue). The introduction of the microcomputer and MIDI at the start of the 1980s prompted many musicians to swap the soldering iron for software and increasingly affordable commercial music synthesizers, but as D Arcy Philip Gray and Nancy Perloff write Tudor continued to create extraordinary analog works up until his death in 1996. Other composers, inspired by his vision of the music within the machine, ported their ideas into code and went on to combine computers and circuits into quirky hybrid instruments. Tudor was a catalyst for a generation of artists and musicians (Stephen Jones recounts how the ethos of the Tudor/Cage/Cunningham collaboration reached around the world to Australian choreographer Philippa Cullen), but the aesthetic of composing inside electronics extended far beyond the cult of his personality. Douglas Irving Repetto, Norbert Möslang and Gert-Jan Prins, while aware of Tudor s music and demonstrating some similar concerns and methods, developed their own work free of his direct influence. Reed Ghazala has been circuit-bending since the late 1960s, quite unaware of Tudor s precedent, introducing Tudor-esque electronic ideas to a new generation of sound artists through his popular web site [4]. By 2004, in fact, the aesthetic has spread well beyond the confines of the avant-garde: Hip-Hop, House and other forms of dance music and Electronica share a similar obsession with the quirks intrinsic to specific pieces of audio hardware or software. Every Pop producer has a signature gizmo. Music software, such as Max/MSP and Reaktor, emulates the creatively corruptible modularity of 1970s-era electronic technology, and the latest software plug-ins strive to mimic obsolete but beloved hardware. As Tudor-esque aesthetics have permeated culture both high and low, his legacy has not gone unacknowledged in academe. The Getty Research Institute, which houses the David Tudor Papers archive, hosted the first international Tudor symposium in May 2001. For this issue of LMJ we selected four symposium papers that relate most directly to Tudor s work with technology; the authors revised them for publication here. The rest of the symposium papers are represented by their abstracts, with full texts available on the Getty web site. The balance of papers in this issue result from our call to authors to submit articles on any aspect of the work of David Tudor (both in its historical context and as it applies to music and art today), on the influence of Tudor s ideas on their own work, or on the role of technological idiosyncrasies in their composition, performance or production. Ron Kuivila, who arranged for Tudor s electronic instruments to be donated to the Wesleyan University World Music Instrument Collection in 1997 1998, curated the CD, which includes rare performances by Tudor. In Microchip, an account of the invention and early history of the integrated circuit, Jeffrey Zygmont observes that in the early 1960s the first microcomputer chips, which would one day make possible the personal computer, the cell phone and the Internet, were designed and manufactured in absence of any foreseeable market [5]. After months of unreturned phone calls, the salesmen at Texas Instruments and Intel finally pitched their wares to two clients: one wanted to make a handheld substitute for the cumbersome desktop mechanical calculator; the other needed a control device for one of the first consumer microwave ovens. American industry wasn t listening back then. But David Tudor was. NICOLAS COLLINS Editor in Chief 2 Introduction

References and Notes 1. Imaginary Landscape No. 1 (1939), for piano, cymbals, turntable and test-tone records; Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951), for 12 radios; Cartridge Music (1960), for phonograph cartridges and contact microphones. Performable electronic instruments existed before Cage s experiments the Theremin, Ondes Martinot and Hammond Organ, among others but Cage wanted to free electronic music from the gestural conventions that bound these new devices too closely to traditional performance practice. 2. He was not alone other composers of the time, such as Louis and Bebe Barron, Hugh Le Caine and Raymond Scott, also designed their own instruments, but to rather different ends and with less impact on fellow composers. The Barrons, after a brief stint working with Cage, moved to Hollywood and created electronic scores and effects, most notably for Forbidden Planet (1956); Canadian composer Le Caine is best known for his invention of the Electronic Sackbut in the late 1940s; Scott, an extremely prolific film and television composer, invented the Theremin-esque Clavivox keyboard in 1957 and produced three records of proto-ambient music for newborns and infants using home-made forerunners of sequencers and synthesizers. 3. David Tudor and Victor Schonfeld, From Piano to Electronics, Music and Musicians 20 (August 1972) pp. 24 26. 4. See http://www.anti-theory.com. 5. Jeffrey Zygmont, Microchip: An Idea, Its Genesis, and the Revolution It Created (Cambridge, MA: Perseus Publishing, 2002). Frontispiece Image Stan Ries, David Tudor at The Kitchen, NYC, circa 1972--1974. (Photo stanries.com) ON-LINE RESOURCES David Tudor Web Site The Electronic Music Foundation hosts a web site containing extensive resources on David Tudor, including past presentations and installations, links to interviews and other articles, discographies and details about Tudor s electronics. The site was created by John D.S. Adams and D Arcy Philip Gray, with many other contributors. See http://www.emf.org/tudor/. BACK ISSUES AND CDS AVAILABLE LMJ Back Issues and Compact Discs Back issues of Leonardo Music Journal (LMJ ) are available through the Electronic Music Foundation s CdeMusic at <http://cdemusic.org>, where information about the contents of the journal issues and CDs and about ordering them can be found online. LMJ Volumes 1 14 can be ordered in conjunction with their accompanying journal issues; LMJ Volumes 8 14 can be ordered as individual CDs or in conjunction with journal issues. Introduction 3