Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Avantgarde. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Avantgarde. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, octubre 11, 2008

Rhys Chatham














Rhys Chatham (born September 19, 1952, New York City) is an American composer, guitarist, and trumpet player, primarily active in avant-garde and minimalist music. He is best known for his "guitar orchestra" compositions. He has lived in France since 1987.

Early Years

Chatham began his musical career as a piano tuner for avant-garde pioneers La Monte Young and Glenn Gould. He soon studied under electronic music pioneer Morton Subotnick and minimalist icon Tony Conrad; Chatham and Conrad played together in an early ensemble. In 1971, while still in his teens, Chatham became the first music director at the experimental art space The Kitchen in lower Manhattan. His early works, such as Two Gongs (1971) owed a significant debt to Young and other minimalists.

His concert productions included experimenters Maryanne Amacher, Robert Ashley, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk, Pauline Oliveros, Steve Reich, and early alternative rockers such as Brian Eno, Robert Fripp, John Lurie, and Fred Frith. He has worked closely with visual artist/musician Robert Longo, particularly in the 1980s, and on an experimental opera called XS: The Opera Opus (1984) with the visual artist Joseph Nechvatal.

Compositions from the late 1970s and early 1980s

By 1977, Chatham's music was heavily influenced by punk rock, having seen an early Ramones concert. He was particularly intrigued by and influential upon the group of artists music critics would label No Wave in 1978. That year, he began performing Guitar Trio around downtown Manhattan with an ensemble that included Branca, as well as Nina Canal of Ut. Some of this work parallels multi tracked and unison tuned guitar directions developed by Lou Reed and Chuck Hammer. During this period, he wrote several works for large guitar ensembles, including Drastic Classicism, a collaboration with dancer Karole Armitage. Drastic Classicism was first released in 1982 on the compilation New Music from Antarctica, put together by Kit Fitzgerald, John Sanborn and Peter Laurence Gordon. It was also included on the 1987 album that also included his 1982 composition Die Donnergötter (German for "The Thundergods").

Members of the New York City noise rock band Band of Susans began their careers in Chatham's ensembles; they later performed a cover of Chatham's "Guitar Trio" on their 1991 album, The Word And The Flesh. (This parallels the way that members of fellow NYC noise rockers Sonic Youth began their careers in Branca's ensembles; Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth did play with Chatham as well.)

Chatham began playing trumpet in 1983, and his more recent works explore improvisatory trumpet solos; these are performed by Chatham himself, employing much of the same amplification and effects that he acquired with the guitar, over synthesized dance rhythms by the composer Martin Wheeler. His 1990s recordings in this style saw release on Ninja Tune Records as the compilation Neon.

Recent activity

In 2002, he enjoyed a resurgence following the release of a limited-edition 3 CD retrospective box set on the record label Table of the Elements, An Angel Moves Too Fast To See: Selected Works 1971-1989, complete with 130-page booklet. The An Angel Moves Too Fast To See part of the title comes from Chatham's 1989 composition for 100 guitars. He has been since touring with his 100-guitar orchestra in Europe.

In 2005, he was commissioned by the city of Paris, in his adopted homeland, to write a composition for 400 electric guitars entitled A Crimson Grail, as part of the Nuit Blanche Festival. Approximately 10,000 people were present at the performance, and 100,000 more watched it on live television. A CD of excerpts from this concert was released in January 2007 by Table Of The Elements.

Rhys Chatham is currently touring the original 30 minute version of Guitar Trio in the USA and Europe, renamed G3 because the instrumentation has been increased to between six and ten electric guitars, electric bass and drums. In February 2007 he completed a twelve-city tour called the Guitar Trio (G3) Is My Life North America Tour, which was accompanied by the original film by Robert Longo that was projected behind the performance, entitled Pictures for Music (1979). The sets consisted of local musicians from each city of the performances, including members of Sonic Youth, Tortoise, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Husker Du, Brokeback, Lichens, Town & Country, Die Kreuzen, Bird Show and others. A three-CD box set of these performances was released by Table of the Elements in March 2008.

Chatham has continued to tour the original version of Guitar Trio in Europe throughout 2007 and 2008, including performances at:

* Festival Desgressions - 7 March 2007, Barcelona, Spain
* L'Ecole Régionale de Beaux Arts - 25, 26 April 2007, Valence, France
* Kosmische Club - 10 August 2007, Oslo, Norway
* ZXZW Independent Culture Festival - 22, 23 September, Tilburg, the Netherlands
* Festival Soy - 29 October 2007, Nantes, France
* Galleria Toledo - 26 March 2008, Naples, Italy

Rhys Chatham made his first American presentation of a composition for a one-hundred guitar orchestra in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on May 23, 2008, with an orchestra comprised of local students and teachers, as well as many professional guitarists. This performance was the premiere of a new composition entitled Les 100 Guitares: G100.

wiki.
























Discography:


01 - Factor X [1983]
02 - Echo Solo [1989]
03 - Septile [1997]
04 - Hard Edge [1999]
05 - Three Aspects of the Name [2004]
06 - An Angel Moves Too Fast to See: Selected Works 1971-1989 [2006] (part1/part2/part3/part4)
• 1987 Die Donnergötter (The Thundergods)
• 1997 An Angel Moves Too Fast to See
• 2006 Two Gongs (1971)
07 - A Crimson Grail: For 400 Electric Guitars (part1/part2)
08 - "Guitar Trio Is My Life!"[2008] (part1/part2/part3/part4)


An Angel Moves Too Fast to See - Part 4

jueves, septiembre 25, 2008

Ted Milton • Odes [2007]

Ted Milton (born 1943) grew up in Africa, Canada and Great Britain. He published some early poems in magazines like Paris Review. In 1969 his poetry was published in the anthology Children of Albion: Poetry of the Underground in Britain. In the mid-sixties he began performing as a puppeteer, participating in numerous international festivals and appearing on So It Goes, the TV show hosted by Tony Wilson. He contributed a short scene for Terry Gilliam's film Jabberwocky.

In the late seventies he began to play alto-saxophone and founded the group Blurt. The first single "My Mother Was A friend Of An Enemy Of The People" was soon followed by the live album In Berlin (1981). Since then Blurt released more than twenty records. While living in Brussels in the mid-nineties, Milton started making book-objects with found materials. These were shown on several exhibitions and have been taken up in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris as well as in the British Library.

Ted Milton also makes art-objects and installations, having had shows in "Nadine" in Brussels and bookstore "Tropisme" in Brussels,

In 2000 he published the CD Sublime with the Andreas Gerth (loopspool). In 2001 Ted Milton staged a hommage to the Russian author of the absurd Daniil Kharms: "In Kharm's Way", a mixture of music, puppeteering and spoken word, with the electronic musician Sam Britton. In 2007 he collaborates again with Sam Britton in the "ODES"-project; an overview of 25 years solo work outside of Blurt.
wikipedia.

























Tracklist:
  1. Ted Milton and the Back-To-Normal Orchestra: Nogales
  2. Ted Milton and Sam Britton (Icarus): Can't Beat Blim
  3. Blurt: Ted Milton and Steve Beresford: Love is like a violence
  4. Ted Milton and Paddy Steer and Andreas Gerth (Loopspool): O! Pity Us!
  5. Ted Milton and the Back-To-Normal Orchestra: She spent a fortune on lipstick on me
  6. Ted Milton and Paddy Steer and Andreas Gerth (Loopspool): Miles away
  7. Ted Milton and Herman Martin: Skies are bruised
  8. Ted Milton and Andreas Gerth (Loopspool): Fragments
  9. Blurt: Ted Milton and Tam Tam: Thirteen Rules from Composition
  10. Ted Milton and the Back-To-Normal Orchestra: My North Face
  11. Ted Milton and Herman Martin: Ode! O! To Be Seen Through Your Eyes!
  12. Ted Milton and the Back-To-Normal Orchestra: Shard
  13. Ted Milton and Paddy Steer and Andreas Gerth (Loopspool): Where you end



Odes [2007] (part1/part2)


TED MILTON & SAM BRITTON LIVE AT THE ILLUSEUM