By Lisa Bielawa
When
I first came to New York, I had no idea how I was going to make a living.
I had always written music but I didnít follow a traditional composer
career path. One of my first performances in New York was of a choral
piece with piano, and a mutual acquaintance recommended composer-pianist
Eleonor Sandresky to me.
We became fast friends, navigating the befuddling topography of the freelance
composing musician world together. A year later, by total coincidence,
we both ended up performing together around the world with the Philip
Glass Ensemble. Over the next few years Philip, Eleonor and I had many
discussions about the challenges faced by young composers -- particularly
those unaffiliated with academic institutions -- when they enter the professional
sphere.
A
few things happened all at once in 1997: Philip was looking for a vehicle
for advocacy of young composers; the Anthology Film Archives in the East
Village asked Philip if he might consider presenting concerts in their
space; and Eleonor and I were starting to find ourselves at the center
of a lively, bustling new generation of composers who arrived in New York
in the 1990ís.
We
decided to plan some concerts together at the Anthology, we raised some
funds from individuals and foundations, and on September 7, 1997, our
first concert as Music At The Anthology took place: ìSounds of War and
Peace.î Paul Griffiths of The New York Times praised MATA
for its ìesthetic policy of benign comprehensiveness,î and remarked that
ìnobody could have left without finding something to remember and think
about.î
Since
that time, Times headlines alone reveal MATAís consistent adherence
to this policy: ìStocking the Stream with New Composers,î ìA New-Music
Festival Nurtures Fresh Talent,î ìZany New Music, But Quirkily Compelling,î
ìPicking Up the Slack in Funky Adventure,î and ìA Transplanted Music Festival
Keeps Its Spirit of Adventure.î
From
the very beginning, every concert featured a commission, and guest groups
and soloists from all corners of the new and experimental music field
appeared. From composer-vocalist-pianist Jonathan Hart Makwaia to the
Talujon Percussion Quartet to the Lionheart Vocal Sextet to the Mexican
percussion duo Micro-Ritmia, the performers on our first two seasons helped
define the adventurous, ecumenical breadth that MATA has become known
for throughout the field.
(Many
young composers have told us that they know when they apply for MATA that
they can send us anything without worrying about whether itís ìour kind
of thing,î and that they send us pieces they wouldnít send to any other
organization!)
Our
first two seasons included the world premiere of Jennifer Higdonís ìShort
Storiesî by the Prism Saxophone Quartet, commissioned works by John Fitz
Rogers, Anna Weesner, Chien-Yin Chen, Peter Alexander, Ted Wiprud, Carlos
Carrillo and Aaron Stewart, and a multi-media theatre performance by Derek
Bermelís ensemble TONK, in which different composers collaborated with
librettist Wendy S. Walters to make ìThe Fences Show,î an entire evening
of world premieres with actor and dancer.
Other
memorable performances included two major works for large chamber ensemble:
Lukas Ligetiís ìGroove Magic,î in which each of the players used an individual
click track coming through headphones, resulting in a luxurious and ecstatic
polyrhythmic rhapsody, and the posthumous world premiere of Randy Hostetlerís
ìP(L)aces,î in which each of the performers played not only an instrument
but a floor lamp, the on-off patterns of light making playful yet complex
rhythmic visual tapestries.
Randyís
death several years earlier, at the age of 31, would have rendered this
masterful piece unperformable were it not for the participation of a whole
community of musicians who knew him and his family, who helped me through
the three-month-long process of reconstructing the score and identifying
the many audio samples that he used in the piece.
These
first two seasons (1997-98 and 1998-99) consisted of a series of concerts,
one every two months throughout the year. We began almost immediately
to have our guest group for each concert make the final decision on who
the commissionee would be, from a short list that we culled from our ever-growing
call for submissions. In this way we felt we could garner further performances
of the pieces we commissioned, giving them a life beyond MATA.
Each
concert also included a ëhistorical referenceí piece by a composer from
a previous generation, a charismatic voice whose influence could often
be felt throughout the young composersí works featured on the concert.
Philip Glass performed music by John Cage and Allen Ginsberg in the first
two seasons, and Eleonor and I often performed in our colleaguesí pieces
as well. Dan Dryden, who was and still is a member of the Glass Ensemble,
doing the live house mixes on our tours, served as Technical Director
of MATA since the beginning,
The
1999-2000 season saw the advent of the festival format. At first a logistical
and financial choice (there was no elevator at the Anthology, and we were
paying for a piano and other rentals to be carried up and down the stairs
each time), the 2000 MATA Mid-Winter Festival proved a winner. Composers
of works on all four concerts came together for the whole week, sharing
(sometimes heated) discussions about each otherís works and the other
pieces on the festival. A burgeoning community sprang to life around the
festival. We knew we had found the magic key to the community-building
aspect of our mission.
Ambitious
in its scope, this festival included guest groups Newband, the Western
Wind, the Brooklyn Youth Chorus, and the Eberli Ensemble, plus our first-ever
Solitary Confinement concert, in which solo works and solo composer-performers
are highlighted.
Commissionees
included: Marita Bolles; Annie Gosfield, who rose fearlessly to the challenge
of writing for the Harry Partch instruments of Newband; Shafer Mahoney,
whose piece for the Brooklyn Youth Chorus was subsequently published by
Boosey & Hawkes; and pianist-composer Petros Ovsepyan, whose piece
catalyzed strong audience reactions with its long silences and protracted
small-scale physical motions.
Other
highlights included an appearance by performance artist John Kelly in
Richard Einhornís ìMetamorphosis of the Vampire,î works by Nicholas Brooke
and Julia Wolfe, and Eve Beglarianís ìThe Marriage of Heaven and Hell,î
for large chamber ensemble and voice, which we subsequently recorded for
New World Records, with both Eleonor and me performing.
For
the 2001 and 2002 festivals, in response to our growing audience and a
need to have a more accessible space, we moved to the Angel Orensanz Center
on the Lower East Side. These two festivals showed continuing expansion
and an ever-broadening aesthetic reach, as we strove to bring together
the many strands of musical life among young composers.
Guest
groups included Gamelan Son of Lion, the turntable quartet the X-ecutioners,
Essential Music, The New Millennium Ensemble and the world-renowned Nouvel
Ensemble Moderne from Montreal.
Memorable
moments included a performance of David Crumbís ìThe Whispererî by Aaron
Jay Kernis and Evelyne Luest on two pianos; Carla Kihlstedt in her first
public performance of her work for herself on violin and voice simultaneously;
a world premiere work for shakuhachi and digital audio by Frances White;
and Phil Klineís tribute to a city in pain, ìShadow Traffic,î which brought
together hundreds of people carrying boomboxes throughout the Lower East
Side, in a procession to the Orensanz center where violinist Todd Reynolds
delivered the moving coda
Commissionees
on the 2001 and 2002 festivals included Gee-Bum Kim, Lansing McLoskey,
Kotoka Suzuki, Randy Nordschow, Oliver Schneller and Mortiz Eggert, whose
spatialized piece, ìThere was a building (or, the 58th Street Broiler)î
featured texts by celebrated cartoon essayist Ben Katchor and vocalist
Theo Bleckmann with quadraphonic audio. This piece and Suzukiís major
work for Carla Kihlstedt and digital audio were our commissions on the
ever-popular Solitary Confinement concerts.
The
2002 festival also included the ìUrban Epicsî concert, featuring longer-form
works by John Fitz Rogers (his 45-minute electric guitar monosymphony
ìTransitî), Carolyn Yarnell and Anthony Gatto. That year also brought
us the virtuosic piano epic ìPoundî by James Matheson, who was later to
become our first-ever Executive Director, in 2005.
The
2002 Festival included our first Young Composer Reading Sessions, in which
Maestra Lorraine Vaillancourt and the Nouvel Ensemble Moderne gave generous
work sessions over to several composers just starting to develop large-ensemble
compositional works.
We
organized discussion groups for young composers as well as bringing together
some of the leading figures from the composer service organizations, including
a professional panel from ASCAP, BMI, Meet The Composer, the American
Music Center and the American Composers Forum. Anne Midgette of The
New York Times moderated a discussion on the more conceptual side
of composing.
The
2003 Festival began a new tradition with our first-ever Guest Curator
Randy Nordschow. Eleonor and I had become increasingly aware that, although
deeply committed to an omnivorous ideological and esthetic representation
on the festival, we were not on our own able to encompass as much conceptual
breadth as solo curators. We knew we needed to augment our curatorial
team. Randy brought with him years of experience curating events in the
sound-art and gallery-based music of the San Francisco Bay Area scene.
We
turned over one of our events to him. It was in the form of an exhibit
entitled ìSetting the Tone,î at the Gale Gates art space in DUMBO, Brooklyn,
which ran for a whole month. The opening occurred during the festival
week, with simultaneous live performance of an extended aleatoric work
for solo saxophone by Choh-Shih Hoh (performed by Andy Laster), and live
laptop and VJ performances by VJ Pillow, James Duhamel and Roddy Schrock.
The
commissioned work was Joe Diebesí ìSound Field,î an installation of fabricated
sunflowers that emitted sound interactively. Other works in the exhibit
included young gallery artists who worked in or with sound media, including
Duncan MacDonald, Charles Gute, Bernhard Gal and Kurt Coble, whose ìP.A.M.
(Partially Artificial Musicians) Bandî featured retro-tech robotics in
an actual rock band format that took requests.
The
three bona fide concerts on the 2003 Festival found another new home,
at St. Peterís Church in Chelsea, long celebrated for its fantastic acoustics.
Guest performers included Philadelphiaís premier ensemble Rel’che, the
String Orchestra of New York City (SONYC) and bass clarinetist extraordinaire
Michael Lowenstern. Commissionees on the concerts included Roshanne Etezady,
Jeff Herriott and Michael Gatonska, whose ìTransformation of the Hummingbirdî
was subsequently performed at Weill Recital Hall and recorded on the Albany
label by SONYC.
Solitary
Confinement IV included performances by composer-bagpiper Matthew Welch
and percussionist-composer-video artist Greg Beyer. Gordon Beeferman became
the first composer-improviser to do an extended live improvisation on
the festival, with percussionist Jeff Arnal, and gave another bonus improvised
performance on John Schaeferís ìNew Soundsî program at WNYC. SONYC gave
three works their first readings at Miller Theatre as part of the Reading
Sessions program, and George Steel moderated the composersí discussion
group at the Kitchen.
The
2004 Festival continued the Guest Curator program with Nicholas Brookeís
ìEx Machina,î a concert at Paula Cooper Gallery that celebrated work created
by composers who are also instrument builders or tinkerers.
From
Mari Kimuraís ìGuitarbot,î a virtuoso, if robotic, duo partner, to Dan
Trumanís Lobster, an instrument that looks more like a space ball than
a music-making device, these creators operate at the edges of practical
musicianship, resulting in magnificent displays of sound color and unique
performance vocabulary never before heard or seen on the festival. The
different musical ëanimalsí were situated around the audience, who were
seated on the floor so that they could rotate around to the different
events as the concert unfolded.
Guest
groups over at the remaining concerts at St. Peterís Church included counter)induction,
the Vox Vocal Ensemble, conducted by George Steel, and Duo Violoncellissimo,
all the way from the Ukraine. Commissionees included Sungji Hong, Panayiotis
Kokoras and Chris Arrell. The Vox Vocal Ensemble offered a vocal-choral
Reading Session. Peter Knellís ìSeven Last Wordsî featured violinist Peter
Stein from Germany, who played rich, sometimes lyrical and sometimes gritty
audio ìtableauxî to accompany seven sacred paintings by the violinistís
own father, Rolf Stein.
In
2005 the Guest Curator role was expanded to bring in a festival-long concept
developed in collaboration with composer-improviser-conductor Mick Rossi.
The festival itself donned a subtitle, the Monster Composer Rally. Three
concerts over two weekends featured the 10-member MATA Monster Micro-Orchestra,
an ensemble of exceptional performers who are well-versed in improvisation,
aleatory, and modern ìclassicalî performance practices.
The Commissionee Posse, comprised of eight young composers chosen through
the annual submission and review process, came to New York for the duration
of the festival. Each composed a work for the the Micro-Orchestra over
the course of just one week. The first concert of the festival featured
existing works from the submission pool, works by members of the M-O themselves,
and other historical reference works that exploited the particular gifts
of the players.
These concerts were a ëstudy labí for the Commissionee Posse, who used
the information they got in rehearsals and the performance to help them
write effectively for the players. Between the concert weekends, Commissionees
were able to learn more about the players and their instruments in clinics
with specific players. They were given space to work intensively during
the week, and opportunities for exchanges with each other in the evenings.
The two final concerts featured the unveiling of the eight commissioned
works that were developed over the course of the week.
A new partnership formed around the Monster Rally process, with the renegade
arts organization chashama, which brokers partnerships between unused
commercial space in midtown Manhattan and experimental arts organizations.
Two of their storefront spaces, on 42nd Street and 44th
Street respectively, were given over to the spectacle of composers at
work on their pieces for the entire week. This Composers Petting Zoo introduced
thousands of people in their everyday lives to the idea of composers as
people among us, who write music as part of their daily routines.
At
this writing, MATA is heading into its Ninth Festival, and it has undergone
some big changes. Eleonor Sandresky, now living in Budapest, Hungary,
where she is pursuing a whole new set of musical and personal adventures,
has become our first Artistic Director Emeritus, and I am soon to follow,
at the end of the 2006-07 season. Eleonor and I will remain active on
our fearless and powerful, creative, whimsical, visionary Board of Directors,
which guides us into the future in partnership with Executive Director
James Matheson and Curator Chris McIntyre, who together will determine
the shape of festivals to come.
It
has been a wild ride, and judging from the energy that is surging around
the 2007 MATA Festival, the story has only just begun. Thank you to everyone
who has contributed so generously, through their music, their creative
energy, their material and moral support, to MATA. You are the compass
by which young composers guide their first steps into the field.