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Gordon Mumma: Music of Theatre and Public Activity

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Electronic Music of Theatre and Public Actvity

  • Megaton for Wm. Burroughs (1964)
    with the ONCE Group
  • Conspiracy 8 (1970)
    co-composed and performed with Stephen Smoliar
  • Cybersonic Cantilevers (1973)
    with public participation
  • Cirqualz (1980)
    electronic music for the Cirque dance ensemble

Gordon Mumma (born 1935) has played a pioneering role in the development and evolution of live-electronic music. Live-electronics as a concept and practice appears to have originated in the United States in the late 1950s, outside the few institutional electronic studios and often in the context of innovative theatre activity. From its inception, it frequently involved two processes: (1) live performance with accompanying or interacting sound materials on magnetic tape; and (2) the use of electronic circuitry as sound-modifying and sound-producing instruments.

Beginning with his classic Megaton for Wm. Burroughs of 1963, Mumma’s live-electronic and cybersonic works of the 1960s and 1970s, especially Medium Size Mograph (1963) and Hornpipe (1967), display his resourceful use of both live-electronic processes. Cybersonic Cantilevers (1973) extends them to include the active participation of audience members, many of them children and teenagers who were quick to grasp the artistic potential of cybersonic technology, while Conspiracy 8 (1969–1970) is an early example of live interaction between performers and computer. A major addition to the contemporary music discography, this is essential listening for anyone interested in the history of electronic music. 

 

David Tudor & Gordon Mumma

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David Tudor & Gordon Mumma

 

David Tudor

  • Rainforest (1968)

Gordon Mumma

  • Very Small Size Mograph (1962)
  • Small Size Mograph ((1964)
  • Gestures II, section X (1961)
  • Gestures II, section 7 (1960)
  • Medium Size Mograph (1964)
  • Very Small Size Mograph (1963)
  • Very Small Size Mograph (1962)

 

David Tudor

  • Rainforest (1969)

 

Gordon Mumma

  • Song Without Words (1996)

 

David Tudor and Gordon Mumma, keyboards and electronics

 

This historic recording features the first-ever release of the two earliest surviving recordings of David Tudor’s seminal work, Rainforest. Sandwiched in between are six keyboard works by Gordon Mumma in recordings featuring the composer and his close collaborator, Tudor. Together, these works constitute a fascinating and historically important document of the 1960s avant-garde in America.

 

In early 1968, Merce Cunningham created a new dance whose apparent impetus was Colin Turnbull’s The Forest People, with its account of life among the Mbuti Pygmies of the Ituri Forest in Zaire. For the music, Cunningham turned to Tudor and for the first time asked him for an original work. When he learned that the dance was to be called Rainforest, Tudor said, “Oh, then I’ll put a lot of raindrops in it.” Raindrops were just the beginning: using audio transducers originally designed by the navy for hearing under and above water simultaneously-eight small objects programmed with signals from sound generators, phonograph cartridges, and two sets of speakers-Tudor created a world of sound in perpetual but unpredictable motion, a steady state at once abstract and evocative. The first recording, made from the Teatro Novo orchestra pit on July 30, is an excellent document of the sound character of Tudor’s Rainforest work when it was performed with the Cunningham Dance Company in those early years.

 

The second recording documents the first concert performance of Rainforest, in March 1969, several months after the Rio de Janeiro dance performance. The venue was a large conference space at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. The equipment was set on tables in the center of the space, with the audience seated around the performers. Four separate channels of sound were used and widely spaced, with two in the foreground and two in the background. The sound sources had also expanded from the earlier Cunningham performances, with Tudor now adding recordings of small sounds from insects and birds, in conjunction with the previous electronic sounds, all modified by his acoustical resonant devices. The interactive circuitry was fundamentally the same as previously, but expanded with new devices and interactive connections.

 

Gordon Mumma's Gestures II and the Mographs are two sets of pieces for two pianists, composed between 1958 and 1964. During the 1960s Robert Ashley and Gordon Mumma toured with their concerts of New Music for Two Pianos, including parts of Gestures II and some of the Mographs. Later, some of these two works were performed in recording experiments by Mumma and David Tudor. Two sections from the Mumma and Tudor recordings, X and 7, are presented on this CD. Each of the eleven completed Mographs includes the year of composition in its title. The first two words of each title indicate the general length of that particular composition, ranging from Very Small Size Mograph 1962 to the only solo piece, Large Size Mograph 1962. The structure and activities of each Mograph were derived from seismographic recorded P-waves and S-waves of earthquakes and underground nuclear explosions. These seismograph patterns were part of 1960s cold-war research that attempted to verify the differences between their seismic disturbance sources.