fbpx
Wikipedia

Morton Subotnick

Morton Subotnick (born April 14, 1933) is an American composer of electronic music, best known for his 1967 composition Silver Apples of the Moon, the first electronic work commissioned by a record company, Nonesuch.[1] He was one of the founding members of California Institute of the Arts, where he taught for many years.[2][3][4]

Morton Subotnick playing a Buchla synthesizer at his studio, NYU (2012)

Subotnick has worked extensively with interactive electronics and multi-media, co-founding the San Francisco Tape Music Center with Pauline Oliveros and Ramon Sender, often collaborating with his wife Joan La Barbara.[5] Morton Subotnick is one of the pioneers in the development of electronic music and multi-media performance and an innovator in works involving instruments and other media, including interactive computer music systems. Most of his music calls for a computer part, or live electronic processing; his oeuvre utilizes many of the important technological breakthroughs in the history of the genre.

Early career edit

 
Buchla 100 modular synthesizer at NYU

Subotnick was born in Los Angeles, California, and graduated from the University of Denver. In the early 1960s, Subotnick taught at Mills College and with Ramon Sender, he co-founded the San Francisco Tape Music Center. During this period he also collaborated with Anna Halprin on two works (the 3 legged stool and Parades and Changes) and acted as music director of the Actors Workshop.

In 1966 Subotnick was instrumental in getting a Rockefeller Grant to join the Tape Center with the Mills Chamber Players (a chamber group at Mills College with performers Nate Rubin (violin); Bonnie Hampton (cello); Naomi Sparrow (piano) and Subotnick on clarinet). The grant required that the Tape Center relocate to a host institution that became Mills College. Subotnick, however, did not stay with the move, but went to New York with the Actor's Workshop to become the first music director of the Lincoln Center Rep Company in the Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center. Along with Len Lye, he became an artist in residence at the newly formed Tisch School of the Arts at NYU. The School of the Arts provided him with a studio and a Buchla Synthesizer (now at the Library of Congress). He then helped to develop the Electric Circus and the Electric Ear, and became their artistic director. At the same time he created Silver Apples of the Moon, The Wild Bull, and Touch.

Silver Apples of the Moon edit

Early electronic music was made using wave generators and tape-manipulated sounds. Subotnick was among the first composers to work with electronic instrument designer Don Buchla. Buchla's modular voltage-controlled synthesizer, which he called the Electric Music Box and which was constructed partly based on suggestions by Subotnick and Sender,[6] was both more flexible and easier to use, and its sequencing ability was integral to Subotnick's music.

In the late 1960s, a time when much United States' academic "avant-gardist" electronic music was highly abstract, (largely concerned with pitch and timbre, where (metric) rhythm might be an afterthought or of no consequence, and simple patterned structures were largely avoided), Subotnick broke with this direction by including sections with metric rhythms – those based on pulses and beats. Both Silver Apples of the Moon and 1968's The Wild Bull (another Nonesuch-commissioned work for tape; they have since been combined on a Wergo CD[7]) have been choreographed by dance companies around the world.

In 1969 Subotnick was invited to be part of a team of artists to move to Los Angeles to plan a new school. Mel Powell as Dean, Subotnick as Associate Dean, and a team of four other pairs of artists carved out a new path of music education and created the now famous California Institute of the Arts. Subotnick remained Associate Dean of the music school for 4 years and then, resigning from that position, became the head of the composition program where, a few years later, he created a new media program that introduced interactive technology and multimedia into the curriculum. In 1978 Subotnick, with Roger Reynolds and Bernard Rands, produced 5 annual internationally acclaimed new music festivals.[citation needed]

Approach to music edit

Where previous electronic music had used non-traditional structures, Subotnick's electronic compositions are structured more like the classical music for acoustic instruments with which audiences are familiar, but with nontraditional timbres and pitch manipulations no orchestra could produce. He has also written for acoustic instruments, and he has studied with Darius Milhaud and Leon Kirchner at Mills College in Oakland, California.

In addition to music in the electronic medium, Subotnick has written for symphony orchestra, chamber ensembles, theater and multimedia productions. His "staged tone poem” The Double Life of Amphibians, a collaboration with director Lee Breuer and visual artist Irving Petlin, utilizing live interaction between singers, instrumentalists and computer, was premiered at the 1984 Olympics Arts Festival in Los Angeles.

The concert version of Jacob’s Room, a mono drama commissioned by Betty Freeman for the Kronos Quartet and singer Joan La Barbara, received its premiere in San Francisco in 1985. Jacob's Room, Subotnick's multimedia opera chamber opera (directed by Herbert Blau with video imagery by Steina and Woody Vasulka, featuring Joan La Barbara), received its premiere in Philadelphia in April 1993 under the auspices of The American Music Theater Festival. The Key To Songs, for chamber orchestra and computer, was premiered at the 1985 Aspen Music Festival. Return, commissioned to celebrate the return of Halley's Comet, premiered with an accompanying sky show in the planetarium of Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles in 1986. Subotnick's recent works—among them Jacob's Room, The Key to Songs, Hunger, In Two Worlds, And the Butterflies Begin to Sing and A Desert Flowers—utilize computerized sound generation, specially designed software Interactor and "intelligent" computer controls which allow the performers to interact with the computer technology.[8]

All My Hummingbirds Have Alibis (1994) was an interactive concert work and a CD-ROM (perhaps the first of its kind), Making Music (1995), Making More Music (1998) were his first works for children, and an interactive 'Media Poem', Intimate Immensity, premiered at the Lincoln Center Festival in NY (1997). The European premiere (1998) was in Karlsruhe, Germany. A string quartet with CDROM, Echoes from the Silent Call of Girona (1998), was premiered in Los Angeles by Southwest Chamber Music.

Subotnick was commissioned to complete a larger version of the opera, Jacobs Room. This premiered in 2010 at the Bregenz Festival in Austria.

Subotnick is developing tools for young children to create music. He has authored a series of six CDROMs for children, mounted a children's website and he is developing a related school program. Subotnick's Pitch Painter for iPad and iPhone (not available on App Store) is a musical finger painting app which presents a new intuitive way for kids to create music.

Subotnick is working with the Library of Congress as they are preparing an archival presentation of his electronic works. He tours extensively throughout the U.S. and Europe as a lecturer and composer/performer. Morton Subotnick is published by Schott Music. Students of his include Ingram Marshall, Mark Coniglio, Carl Stone, Rhys Chatham, Charlemagne Palestine, Ann Millikan, Nicholas Frances Chase, Brian Evans, Julia Stilman-Lasansky, John King, Lois V Vierk, Betty Ann Wong, and Jeremy Zuckerman.

Personal life edit

Subotnick is married to Joan La Barbara, a singer and composer. Subotnick's older son, Steven Subotnick, is an animator; his younger son, Jacob Subotnick, is a sound designer and his daughter, Tamara Winer, is a psychiatric social worker.

Awards edit

  • Guggenheim Fellowship
  • Rockefeller Grants (3)
  • Meet the Composer (2)
  • American Academy of Arts and Letters Composer Award
  • Brandies Award
  • Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst Künstlerprogramm (DAAD), Composer in Residence in Berlin
  • Lifetime Achievement Award (SEAMUS at Dartmouth)
  • ASCAP: John Cage Award
  • ACO: Lifetime Achievement
  • Honorary Doctorate from the California Institute of the Arts

[9]

Selected works edit

  • Sonata for viola and piano (1959–60) [10]
  • Silver Apples of the Moon (National Recording Registry inductee) (1967) [11]
  • The Wild Bull (1968)
  • Touch (1969)
  • Sidewinder (1971)
  • Four Butterflies (1973)
  • Until Spring (1975)
  • A Sky of Cloudless Sulfur (1978)
  • Axolotl (1981)
  • A Fluttering of Wings (1981)
  • An Arsenal of Defense for solo viola and "electronic ghost score" (1982)
  • Trembling (1983)
  • The Key to Songs (1985)
  • Jacob's Room (1986)
  • and the butterflies begin to sing (1988)
  • All My Hummingbirds Have Alibis (1991)
  • Echoes from the Silent Call of Girona (1998)
  • Gestures (1999–2001)
  • Then Now and Forever (2008)
  • The Other Piano (2007)
  • Jacob's Room Opera (2010)
  • From Silver Apples of the Moon to A Sky of Cloudless Sulphur (2009 – 2013)
  • Jacob's Room Monodrama (2013)

[12]

References edit

  1. ^ "Meet the 'founding father' of electronica". Bbc.com. February 20, 2016.
  2. ^ Bernstein, David W. (2008-07-08). The San Francisco Tape Music Center: 1960s Counterculture and the Avant-Garde. University of California Press. pp. 117–. ISBN 9780520248922. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  3. ^ Gillespie, John (June 1972). The musical experience. Wadsworth Pub. Co. p. 444. ISBN 9780534001612. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  4. ^ Schrader, Barry (February 1982). Introduction to electro-acoustic music. Prentice Hall. pp. 130–. ISBN 9780134815152. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  5. ^ "'The San Francisco Tape Music Center: 1960s Counterculture and the Avant-Garde' edited by David W. Bernstein". Los Angeles Times. July 27, 2008.
  6. ^ "Morton Subotnick Explains His Buchla Modular Synthesizer Setup". Synthtopia.com. April 16, 2014.
  7. ^ "Silver Apples of the Moon for Electronic Music Synthesizer - Morton Subotnick | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic.
  8. ^ Barry, Robert (December 10, 2015). "A Wild Composer: Morton Subotnick Interviewed". The Quietus.
  9. ^ "About Morton Subotnick: Awards". Morotnsubotnick.com.
  10. ^ "Morton Subotnick::Timeline". Mortonsubotnick.com.
  11. ^ "Morton Subotnick: Silver Apples of the Moon | Studio 360". Wnyc.org.
  12. ^ "Morton Subotnick". Discogs.com.

External links edit

  • MortonSubotnick.com
  • Morton Subotnick's Creating Music
  • From Moog to Mark II, to MIDI to MAX By Kyle Gann for American Public Media
  • Interview

Listening edit

  • Interview with Dublab
  • Mars Millennium Project 2030: Artist: Morton Subotnick
  • Morton Subotnick interview
  • Echoes from the Silent Call of Girona (1998)
  • Morton Subotnick Interview NAMM Oral History Library (2005)

morton, subotnick, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Morton Subotnick born April 14 1933 is an American composer of electronic music best known for his 1967 composition Silver Apples of the Moon the first electronic work commissioned by a record company Nonesuch 1 He was one of the founding members of California Institute of the Arts where he taught for many years 2 3 4 Morton Subotnick playing a Buchla synthesizer at his studio NYU 2012 Subotnick has worked extensively with interactive electronics and multi media co founding the San Francisco Tape Music Center with Pauline Oliveros and Ramon Sender often collaborating with his wife Joan La Barbara 5 Morton Subotnick is one of the pioneers in the development of electronic music and multi media performance and an innovator in works involving instruments and other media including interactive computer music systems Most of his music calls for a computer part or live electronic processing his oeuvre utilizes many of the important technological breakthroughs in the history of the genre Contents 1 Early career 2 Silver Apples of the Moon 3 Approach to music 4 Personal life 5 Awards 6 Selected works 7 References 8 External links 8 1 ListeningEarly career edit nbsp Buchla 100 modular synthesizer at NYU Subotnick was born in Los Angeles California and graduated from the University of Denver In the early 1960s Subotnick taught at Mills College and with Ramon Sender he co founded the San Francisco Tape Music Center During this period he also collaborated with Anna Halprin on two works the 3 legged stool and Parades and Changes and acted as music director of the Actors Workshop In 1966 Subotnick was instrumental in getting a Rockefeller Grant to join the Tape Center with the Mills Chamber Players a chamber group at Mills College with performers Nate Rubin violin Bonnie Hampton cello Naomi Sparrow piano and Subotnick on clarinet The grant required that the Tape Center relocate to a host institution that became Mills College Subotnick however did not stay with the move but went to New York with the Actor s Workshop to become the first music director of the Lincoln Center Rep Company in the Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center Along with Len Lye he became an artist in residence at the newly formed Tisch School of the Arts at NYU The School of the Arts provided him with a studio and a Buchla Synthesizer now at the Library of Congress He then helped to develop the Electric Circus and the Electric Ear and became their artistic director At the same time he created Silver Apples of the Moon The Wild Bull and Touch Silver Apples of the Moon editEarly electronic music was made using wave generators and tape manipulated sounds Subotnick was among the first composers to work with electronic instrument designer Don Buchla Buchla s modular voltage controlled synthesizer which he called the Electric Music Box and which was constructed partly based on suggestions by Subotnick and Sender 6 was both more flexible and easier to use and its sequencing ability was integral to Subotnick s music In the late 1960s a time when much United States academic avant gardist electronic music was highly abstract largely concerned with pitch and timbre where metric rhythm might be an afterthought or of no consequence and simple patterned structures were largely avoided Subotnick broke with this direction by including sections with metric rhythms those based on pulses and beats Both Silver Apples of the Moon and 1968 s The Wild Bull another Nonesuch commissioned work for tape they have since been combined on a Wergo CD 7 have been choreographed by dance companies around the world In 1969 Subotnick was invited to be part of a team of artists to move to Los Angeles to plan a new school Mel Powell as Dean Subotnick as Associate Dean and a team of four other pairs of artists carved out a new path of music education and created the now famous California Institute of the Arts Subotnick remained Associate Dean of the music school for 4 years and then resigning from that position became the head of the composition program where a few years later he created a new media program that introduced interactive technology and multimedia into the curriculum In 1978 Subotnick with Roger Reynolds and Bernard Rands produced 5 annual internationally acclaimed new music festivals citation needed Approach to music editWhere previous electronic music had used non traditional structures Subotnick s electronic compositions are structured more like the classical music for acoustic instruments with which audiences are familiar but with nontraditional timbres and pitch manipulations no orchestra could produce He has also written for acoustic instruments and he has studied with Darius Milhaud and Leon Kirchner at Mills College in Oakland California In addition to music in the electronic medium Subotnick has written for symphony orchestra chamber ensembles theater and multimedia productions His staged tone poem The Double Life of Amphibians a collaboration with director Lee Breuer and visual artist Irving Petlin utilizing live interaction between singers instrumentalists and computer was premiered at the 1984 Olympics Arts Festival in Los Angeles The concert version of Jacob s Room a mono drama commissioned by Betty Freeman for the Kronos Quartet and singer Joan La Barbara received its premiere in San Francisco in 1985 Jacob s Room Subotnick s multimedia opera chamber opera directed by Herbert Blau with video imagery by Steina and Woody Vasulka featuring Joan La Barbara received its premiere in Philadelphia in April 1993 under the auspices of The American Music Theater Festival The Key To Songs for chamber orchestra and computer was premiered at the 1985 Aspen Music Festival Return commissioned to celebrate the return of Halley s Comet premiered with an accompanying sky show in the planetarium of Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles in 1986 Subotnick s recent works among them Jacob s Room The Key to Songs Hunger In Two Worlds And the Butterflies Begin to Sing and A Desert Flowers utilize computerized sound generation specially designed software Interactor and intelligent computer controls which allow the performers to interact with the computer technology 8 All My Hummingbirds Have Alibis 1994 was an interactive concert work and a CD ROM perhaps the first of its kind Making Music 1995 Making More Music 1998 were his first works for children and an interactive Media Poem Intimate Immensity premiered at the Lincoln Center Festival in NY 1997 The European premiere 1998 was in Karlsruhe Germany A string quartet with CDROM Echoes from the Silent Call of Girona 1998 was premiered in Los Angeles by Southwest Chamber Music Subotnick was commissioned to complete a larger version of the opera Jacobs Room This premiered in 2010 at the Bregenz Festival in Austria Subotnick is developing tools for young children to create music He has authored a series of six CDROMs for children mounted a children s website and he is developing a related school program Subotnick s Pitch Painter for iPad and iPhone not available on App Store is a musical finger painting app which presents a new intuitive way for kids to create music Subotnick is working with the Library of Congress as they are preparing an archival presentation of his electronic works He tours extensively throughout the U S and Europe as a lecturer and composer performer Morton Subotnick is published by Schott Music Students of his include Ingram Marshall Mark Coniglio Carl Stone Rhys Chatham Charlemagne Palestine Ann Millikan Nicholas Frances Chase Brian Evans Julia Stilman Lasansky John King Lois V Vierk Betty Ann Wong and Jeremy Zuckerman Personal life editSubotnick is married to Joan La Barbara a singer and composer Subotnick s older son Steven Subotnick is an animator his younger son Jacob Subotnick is a sound designer and his daughter Tamara Winer is a psychiatric social worker Awards editGuggenheim Fellowship Rockefeller Grants 3 Meet the Composer 2 American Academy of Arts and Letters Composer Award Brandies Award Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst Kunstlerprogramm DAAD Composer in Residence in Berlin Lifetime Achievement Award SEAMUS at Dartmouth ASCAP John Cage Award ACO Lifetime Achievement Honorary Doctorate from the California Institute of the Arts 9 Selected works editSonata for viola and piano 1959 60 10 Silver Apples of the Moon National Recording Registry inductee 1967 11 The Wild Bull 1968 Touch 1969 Sidewinder 1971 Four Butterflies 1973 Until Spring 1975 A Sky of Cloudless Sulfur 1978 Axolotl 1981 A Fluttering of Wings 1981 An Arsenal of Defense for solo viola and electronic ghost score 1982 Trembling 1983 The Key to Songs 1985 Jacob s Room 1986 and the butterflies begin to sing 1988 All My Hummingbirds Have Alibis 1991 Echoes from the Silent Call of Girona 1998 Gestures 1999 2001 Then Now and Forever 2008 The Other Piano 2007 Jacob s Room Opera 2010 From Silver Apples of the Moon to A Sky of Cloudless Sulphur 2009 2013 Jacob s Room Monodrama 2013 12 References edit Meet the founding father of electronica Bbc com February 20 2016 Bernstein David W 2008 07 08 The San Francisco Tape Music Center 1960s Counterculture and the Avant Garde University of California Press pp 117 ISBN 9780520248922 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Gillespie John June 1972 The musical experience Wadsworth Pub Co p 444 ISBN 9780534001612 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Schrader Barry February 1982 Introduction to electro acoustic music Prentice Hall pp 130 ISBN 9780134815152 Retrieved 23 April 2012 The San Francisco Tape Music Center 1960s Counterculture and the Avant Garde edited by David W Bernstein Los Angeles Times July 27 2008 Morton Subotnick Explains His Buchla Modular Synthesizer Setup Synthtopia com April 16 2014 Silver Apples of the Moon for Electronic Music Synthesizer Morton Subotnick Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic AllMusic Barry Robert December 10 2015 A Wild Composer Morton Subotnick Interviewed The Quietus About Morton Subotnick Awards Morotnsubotnick com Morton Subotnick Timeline Mortonsubotnick com Morton Subotnick Silver Apples of the Moon Studio 360 Wnyc org Morton Subotnick Discogs com External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Morton Subotnick MortonSubotnick com Morton Subotnick s Creating Music CalArts Faculty Morton Subotnick From Moog to Mark II to MIDI to MAX By Kyle Gann for American Public Media Interview Interview with Peter Shea at the University of Minnesota Listening edit Interview with Dublab Interview with RedBull Music Academy Mars Millennium Project 2030 Artist Morton Subotnick Morton Subotnick interview Art of the States Morton Subotnick Echoes from the Silent Call of Girona 1998 Morton Subotnick Interview NAMM Oral History Library 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morton Subotnick amp oldid 1169856988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.