Posts Tagged ‘Instrument’

Outsider Music – Harry Partch

Monday, March 15th, 2010

I had been away from the part of the world I generally consider home for six years. In the seventh year I found a studio in the unused Pioneer Hatchery in Petaluma, California. However sentimental or Oriental that many sound, the fact remains: it was the time of falling petals, and this music followed. – Harry Partch

Partched


One of the most individualistic composers of all time, Harry Partch was not only a great composer, but an innovative theorist who broke through the shackles of a tuning system of all Western music which had lasted for many centuries. He created dozens of incredible musical instruments for the specific peformance of his music and was a dramatist who wrote his own texts for dance-theatre extravaganzas based on everything from Greek mythology to his own experience as a hobo. Between 1930 and 1972, he created one of the most amazing bodies of sensually alluring and emotionally powerful music in the 20th century: music dramas, dance theatre, multi-media extravaganzas, vocal music and chamber music – mostly all performed on the instruments he built himself.

Could Chamber Bowls


The picture to the right is of an instrument created by Partch called Cloud Chamber Bowls. The bowls themselves are 12-gallon Pyrex carboys, suspended from a redwood frame on ropes. These difficult to find and impossible to tune glass gongs are played very carefully by a percussionist who risks the anguish of of a shattered disaster. The original bowls were found at the Radiation Laboratory of the University of California, Berkeley, and had been sued as cloud-chambers to trace the paths of sub-atomic particles.

Considering the earlist known letter written by Harry Partch dates from 1931, when he was already 30 years old, very little is knows about his pre-mature life. As a child, living in various areas of the American southwest, Partch was exposed to a variety of influences from Asian to Native American. He spent his childhood in remote tones in Arizona and New Mexico where he heard and sang songs in Mandarin, Spanish and American Indian languages. After dropping out of the University of Southern California, he began to study on his own and to question the validity of the tuning and philosophical foundations of Western music. He believed the standard system was unsuitable for reflecting the subtle melodic contours of dramatic speech, and as a result, he burned all of his early works. Partch was always clear that this burning of his early music was of tremendous symbolic importance to him, and he speaks of it as an act of purification, a ritualistic purging by fire.

During and after the Great Depression, he was a hobo and itinerant worker, riding trains, all the while keeping a musical notebook of his experiences named Bitter Music which he later set to music.The entries frequently included overheard bits of everyday vernacular speech. Partch always said his reason for developing his microtonal scales was to try to replicate and demonstrate verbal expression.

Corporeal creations


In 1930, Partch broke with Western European tradition and forged a new musicology, based on a primal, corporeal integration of the elements of speech with music, using principles of natural acoustic resonance (Just Intonation) and expanded melodic and harmonic possibilities. He began to first adapt guitars and violas to play his music, and then began to build whole new instruments based on his new microtonal tuning system. Over his lifetime he built over 25 instruments as well as numerous small hand instruments and became a brilliant spokesman for his ideas. Largely ignored by the standard musical institutions and industry, he criticised concert traditions, the roles of the performer and composer, the role of music in society, the 12-tone equal-temperament scale and the concept of “pure” or abstract music. To explain his philosophical and intonational ideas, he wrote a treatise, “Genesis of a Music” which has served as a primary source of information and inspiration to many musicians for the last half century, considered the standard text of microtonal music theory and takes the concept of Corporeality, the fusion of all art forms with the body, as its central focus.

The album we’ve uploaded for you to download and listen to here is the most extended all instrumental work by the microtonal guru. The Haiku-like title may sound metaphysical but has a prosaic explanation. In 1962, Partch returned to California after six years in the Midwest. Returning to his roots in the seventh year was like a sabbatical. He was getting tired of frequent moving: “The spectacle of me and two tons of musical instruments wandering around the country is becoming almost comical. He had to find a spacious and cheap studio and living space, and his former landlord in Sausalito, California in September 1962 allowed him to use an empty chick hatchery. When he visited the building the walkway leading to the place was “… strewn with petals – roses, camelias, and many others” and the title of the new work came to him. “It was a time of falling petals and the music followed.” He had to attract a group of committed musicians who could be relied upon to put in the time, learn how to play the unusual instruments, learn how to play the written parts (in special notational systems), develop the ear to play music where there are many “extra” notes besides the familiar 12 they had learned, and finally learn to play their parts.

Partch was notorious for going beyond instrumental and intonational uniqueness. He communicated to the members of his ensemble the “extra-musical” attitudes and actions he felt lead to an experimental performance. He would show how to approach an instrument with the proper physical inclination, not unlike the motivation of an actor for his part. The physical approach would reflect both the nature of the notes and phrases themselves, and the dramatic or musical intent of the passage. He taught respect for the instruments and how to coax the best and worst sounds out of them. In doing so he wanted to see a transformation of his musicians from passive translators of his scores to active, engaged participants. Partch would often speak of not only “caressing the instrument, but raping it too.” The physical relationship between player and instrument is crucial to the corporeal performance. The musician must transcend their role as instrumentalist and become more fully formed performers, ready to move, act and live the part. To create the corporeal performance.

Partch and some loyal supporters recorded most of Petals in 1964 while the premises they were recording in was literally being bulldozed around them, often begging operators to stop for a minute to make a take. Often the duets are played by Partch on both parts, through overdubbing. The recording was resumed in San Diego in 1966, and the tapes were painstakingly overdubbed for a CRI records release. This results in a useful introduction of the sound of Partch’s instruments. But Petals suffers a bit from its form. At one-minute intervals the music comes to a stop, and half the time resumes in the same tempo and with the same harmonic patterns. Performance and tape synchronisation problems involved in the production of this recording were of an extraordinary level of difficulty, calling for more than a hundred hours of editing. Although the rhythms are wonderfully irregular, this predictability offsets the fascination of the wonderful sounds of Partch’s instruments.

Dirty Harry


So download the album here, check out our other favourite Outsider music here. And remember what Harry said…

This is my trinity: sound-magic, visual beauty, experience-ritual.

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Future Sounds – Melodyne

Monday, March 8th, 2010


Although the previous incarnations of our future sounds articles have focused solely on physical instruments, today we have a look at something solely software based. It’s caused stirs since first conceptualised in 2000 and is now winning awards for innovation across the board. The concept underlying Melodyne is Local Sound Synthesis. Peter Neubäcker, creator of the program, first thought of the idea philosophically, with the desire to free sound from time. The question was posed symbolically – What does a stone sound like? – relating sound to a stone, which has a form but to which time is not really relevant. From this question came the idea that sound may exist independently of pitch and time. The program it self varies from other audio processors in that it doesn’t work to make audio samples longer or shorter but instead to view the clip as a landscape where different sounds can be found in different time locations. That landscape can be travelled through freely with the pitch of the sound at any location being an arbitrary characteristic of that sound. This manages to isolate what have previously been defined as inseparable aspects of sound: pitch, time, and timbre. It allows users to do what seems intuitively impossible, to manipulate individual notes within chords independently. Check out the video below for a better description of what is going on…

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Future Sounds – Tenori-On

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

I want to handle both light and sound simultaneously and pleasantly, as we play music or draw pictures. This is a theme I have been working on for a long time. Pursuing this idea further I have been developing the Tenori-On with particular attention given to the beauty of the light and sounds, the ease of performance, and as a musical instrument for the future – the design and quality of the instrument as a whole. In days gone by, a musical instrument had to have a beauty of shape as well of sound, it had to fit the player organically (the violin springs to mind). All these elements were once considered indispensable. Modern electronic instruments don’t have the inevitable relationship between the shape, the sound, and the player. What I have done is try to bring back these, once indispensable elements and build them in to a try musical instrument for the digital age. – Toshio Iwai

Ten out of ten tenori

Ten out of ten tenori


Artist Toshio Iwai and Yamaha have collaborated to develop a musical instrument for the 21st century – the Tenori-On. A 16×16 matrix of LED switches creates a “visible music” interface allowing music to be played intuitively. The switches function as individual displays emitting light that emulates the related sound. When you push a switch for a short time, a ripple of light spreads out from the switch to others – corresponding with the sound you have chosen. If the switch is held down for slightly longer a dot of light remains indicating that the light & sound will play repeatedly – looped. People seem to quickly understand the relationship between the sound and light, thus even novice or non musicians can enjoy improvising and composing immediately. To play notes, you plot points on the dot-matrix as if you were drawing a picture.

Artists as diverse as Pole, Four Tet and Battles are queueing up to endorse this quite revolutionary instrument. Singer-songwriter Little Boots from Blackpool, England with her striking performance and electro-pop sound has been recently propelled into the public eye – scenes of her playing the Tenori-On at home on YouTube caught the attention of music lovers: “It’s a visual thing, live editing and building a beat onstage – people can see what they’re hearing. I’m personally quite fascinated by song structure it’s great when people can see how the layers combine through the animation. Also, I’m a sucker for futuristic gadgets – you could say there are two Tenori-On – one is a retro toy, the other is an advanced musical instrument.”

One of the best uses is free improvisation. Electronic music has a reputation for being boring to watch live, anything that can be done to get away from that, to make it as exciting as watching a rock band – to make it a physical process and demonstrate sound must surely be a good thing. It is a wonder why, with all the technological advancement and miniturization of studio technology that little has been done by way of live instrumentation. It may be that the designers of such things see sound, audio and by extension music as a laboratory exercise, and why it has taken a media artist such as Toshio Iwai to collaborate with an electronics giant like Yamaha to create an intuitive, advanced instrument such as this.

Wired.com Article on Futuristic Instruments

Interview with Little Boots – Yamaha

Tenori-On – Wikipedia

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Future Sounds – Hang

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Hanging out

Hanging out

Is it a wok? Is it a UFO? No it’s a Hang. Created in 2000 the Hang is a young musical instrument. It was created by the PANArt Company in Bern, Switzerland. It is the result of many years of research into resonating percussive instruments from around the world such as: gongs, gamelans and cowbells. Each Hang is tuned individually, players are encouraged to design their own “tone circle” thus the musician becomes part of the creation and customisation of the instrument, meeting their creative needs.

The top side of the Hang (the Ding) contains eight tone fields which form the “tone circle”, this circle surrounds a central dome which sounds like a gong. The underside (the Du) contains a hand sized hole for sound resonance and modulation. Players invite their hands to discover the instrument with their fingertips, thumbs and the heel of the palm. The creators say there are no rules for playing except one: the joy of music! This marriage between art and science creates a somewhat haunting but playful tone. A resonating harmonic note binded by the sound of the steel.

If you are interested in buying one, it may take some time. There are only two people in the world, the Hang makers (Sabina Schärer and Felix Rohner), who know how to wield the hammers on deep-drawn steel sheet blanks, which are then processed using a hardening procedure in a kiln. Periods when people can visit the Hangbauhaus and pick their Hang are already planned. The Hang makers are sending letters inviting those who are able to purchase a Hang. The letters contain a statement where they outline their point of view regarding the instrument and listening device. Felix Rohner and Sabina Schärer characterize the central aspect of their work as “harmony, equilibrium and proportion”. With the purchase agreement they engage in with their customers they want to establish a culture of trust and respect. The agreement PANArt has required since 2008 requests first rights to purchase back a Hang and discourages resale of a Hang by the owner at a price higher than at which it was obtained.

A statement from Hang makers Felix Rohner and Sabina Schärer

A Hang fan site

PANArt Research & Development Papers

Buying a Hang

Hangblog.org

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