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This Life of Sounds portrays an important and previously unexplored
corner of the history of new music in America: the Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts in the State University of New York at
Buffalo. Composers Lukas Foss (the Center's founder), Lejaren
Hiller, and Morton Feldman were the music directors over the life
of "the Buffalo group," during the years 1964-1980. Based on Foss's
plan, the Rockefeller Foundation provided annual fellowships for
young composers and virtuoso instrumentalists to live in Buffalo
for up to two years, thus creating a cadre of like-minded musicians
who would spend their time studying, creating, and performing
difficult - often controversial - new work. The now legendary group
of musicians (some would say "musical outlaws") who participated in
the Buffalo group included Pulitzer Prize winner George Crumb,
Terry Riley, Cornelius Cardew, Maryanne Amacher, Frederic Rzewski,
David Tudor, Julius Eastman, and many more. Composers John Cage,
Jim Tenney, Iannis Xenakis and others all figure in the story as
well. The book provides valuable accounts of the Center's
influential concert series, Evenings for New Music, performed in
Buffalo, New York and throughout Europe; its famous recording of
Terry Riley's In C; the political activism of the time; and the
intersection of academic, private, and institutional funding for
the arts. Life magazine declared in an article about the 1965
Festival of the Arts Today titled, "Can This Be Buffalo?," "Buffalo
exploded last month in a two-week avant garde festival that was
bigger and hipper than anything ever held in Paris or New York..."
The concerts, the festivals, and the adventurous musical climate
attracted filmmakers and young visual artists resulting in what one
person called "one of those kinds of places the way people talk
about Vienna in 1900-1910."
A compelling portrait of composer-performer Julius Eastman's
enigmatic and intriguing life and music. Composer-performer Julius
Eastman (1940-90) was an enigma, both comfortable and uncomfortable
in the many worlds he inhabited: black, white, gay, straight,
classical music, disco, academia, and downtown New York. His music,
insistent and straightforward, resists labels and seethes with a
tension that resonates with musicians, scholars, and audiences
today. Eastman's provocative titles, including Gay Guerrilla, Evil
Nigger, Crazy Nigger, and others, assault us with his obsessions.
Eastman tested limits with his political aggressiveness, as
reflected in legendary scandals like his June 1975 performance of
John Cage's Song Books, which featured homoerotic interjections,
and the uproar over his titles at Northwestern University. These
episodes are examples of Eastman's persistence in pushing the
limits of the acceptable in the highly charged arenas of sexual and
civil rights. In addition to analyses of Eastman's music, the
essays in Gay Guerrilla provide background on his remarkable life
history and the era's social landscape. The book presents an
authentic portrait of a notable American artist thatis compelling
reading for the general reader as well as scholars interested in
twentieth-century American music, American studies, gay rights, and
civil rights. This Life of Sounds: Evenings for New Music inBuffalo
received an ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for excellence. Mary Jane
Leach is a composer and freelance writer, currently writing music
and theatre criticism for the Albany Times-Union.
A compelling portrait of composer-performer Julius Eastman's
enigmatic and intriguing life and music. Composer-performer Julius
Eastman (1940-90) was an enigma, both comfortable and uncomfortable
in the many worlds he inhabited: black, white, gay, straight,
classical music, disco, academia, and downtown New York. His music,
insistent and straightforward, resists labels and seethes with a
tension that resonates with musicians, scholars, and audiences
today. Eastman's provocative titles, including Gay Guerrilla, Evil
Nigger, Crazy Nigger, and others, assault us with his obsessions.
Eastman tested limits with his political aggressiveness, as
reflected in legendary scandals like his June 1975 performance of
John Cage's Song Books, which featured homoerotic interjections,
and the uproar over his titles at Northwestern University. These
episodes are examples of Eastman's persistence in pushing the
limits of the acceptable in the highly charged arenas of sexual and
civil rights. In addition to analyses of Eastman's music, the
essays in Gay Guerrilla provide background on his remarkable life
history and the era's social landscape. The book presents an
authentic portrait of a notable American artist thatis compelling
reading for the general reader as well as scholars interested in
twentieth-century American music, American studies, gay rights, and
civil rights. This Life of Sounds: Evenings for New Music inBuffalo
received an ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for excellence. Mary Jane
Leach is a composer and freelance writer, currently writing music
and theatre criticism for the Albany Times-Union.
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