
Kenneth Gaburo - Five Works for Voices, Instruments, and Electronics
Performers:
Antiphony IV (Poised) (1967)
for voice, piccolo, bass trombone, double-bass and electronics
Members of the University of Illinois Contemporary Chamber Players:
Thomas Howell - piccolo
James Fulkerson - bass trombone
Thomas Frederickson - double-bass
Barbara Dalheim - voice (on tape left channel)
Kenneth Gaburo - conductor
String Quartet in One Movement (1956)
Walden String Quartet
Mouth-Piece: Sextet for Solo Trumpet (1970)
Jack Logan - trumpet
Antiphony III (Pearl-white moments) (1962)
for sixteen voices and electronics
New Music Choral Ensemble: Barbara Dalheim, Shirley Panish, Douglas Pummill, Lawrence Weller, Janet Pummill, Miriam Barndt, Brian Winter, Philip Larson, Rosalind Powell, Marcia Swengel, William Brooks, David Barron, Jean Geil, Bonnie Barnett, Albert Hughes, Richard Hanson
Kenneth Gaburo - conductor
The Flow of (u) (1974)
for three voices
Elinor Barron, Philip Larson, Linda Vickerman
Excerpts from liner notes:
Kenneth Gaburo was born in 1926 in Somerville, New Jersey; saw service in the U.S. Army from 1943-45; attended the Eastman School of Music, the Conservatorio di Santa Cecilia, Rome, and the University of Illinois.
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In 1968 he moved to the music department at the University of California, San Diego, where his colleagues included Pauline Oliveros, Robert Erickson, John Silber, Keith Humble, and Roger Reynolds. He was also acquainted with Harry Partch, who was living in San Diego at the time, but was not associated, except briefly, with UCSD.
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Although he was intensely collaboratory in his work methods, Gaburo's sense of individuality always marked him out, even in the hothouse environments of Illinois and UCSD in these periods.
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Gradually, over the years of the 1960s and 1970s Gaburo experienced a greater and greater alienation from the academic environment, until in 1975 he left UCSD, surviving as a freelance composer, teacher, and theater director (he directed the 1980 production of Harry Partch's The Bewitched for the Berlin Festival). During this period, he also left urban living, and moved to Ramona, California, where he lived in its semi-desert until 1983, when he joined the music faculty at the University of Iowa. At Iowa, he founded the Seminar for Cognitive Studies, which was a freewheeling, intense, cross-media seminar open to creative people in many disciplines.
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Kenneth Gaburo died in 1993, in Iowa City, Iowa.
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He composed works for instruments, voices, electronics, multi-media, theater, and a variety of other resources. Foremost among his many interests was a concern with the voice and with language - how we shape language and how we are shaped by it - and with making works that existed somewhere between the boundaries of music and language. Of the works on this CD, three are intensely concerned with what Gaburo termed "Compositional Linguistics" (Antiphony III, Antiphony IV, and Mouth-Piece), while concerns with balance and perceptual edges seem to be his foremost concern in the other two [String Quartet in One Movement and The Flow of (u)].
Tracklisting:
1. Antiphony IV (Poised) {9:41}
2. String Quartet in One Movement {9:04}
3. Mouth-Piece: Sextet for Solo Trumpet {5:51}
4. Antiphony III (Pearl-white moments) {16:31}
5. The Flow of (u) {23:01}
Great collection! Seems tho like track 1 is damaged from 0:18 until 02:43 as there are cracks, pops and noises that appearantly aren't part of the composition. Hope for a re upload of same track.
ReplyDeleteNew link for track 1 (Antiphony IV (Poised)): http://sharebee.com/c4b94b90
ReplyDeleteIt's been re-ripped and the noises are not there.
My apologies for the damaged track.
Thanks a lot!
ReplyDeleteI have the old LP with the two Antiphony's, but have not heard the other tracks before. Looking forward to this. Many thanks.
ReplyDelete-Brian