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Dennis Tobenski on teamwork and community

Dennis Tobenski is a composer, vocalist, business owner, and blogger living in New York. Don’t worry, I’m not about to start preaching the Brooklyn scene as gospel, though what they are accomplishing there is impressive and, for what it’s worth, pretty rad. He’s been publishing a weekly series of articles titled The Composer’s Guide to Doing Business. They’ve been pretty insightful, and at the very least provide some good food for thought that all composers should take into account.

A good friend of ours here at the site, Ben Phelps, has been promising me a guest post on the idea of competition in the new music community, and how thinking we’re competing really hurts us. Really, when one of us does well, everybody benefits. Ben, I want my article! The reason I’m mentioning this today is that this week’s post in The Composer’s Guide to Doing Business deals with this pretty well, and although it doesn’t cover all of the bases Ben and I have discussed, it does make a great case for promoting each other and building a scene, and is certainly worth a read. Dennis says that, ultimately,

…concert music is not a zero sum game. We’re not really competing with one another – we’re in this together. And a rising tide lifts all boats.

He also offers up nice list of ideas, including:

• Linking to one another on your websites
• Mentioning one another in your newsletters
• Recommending each other’s scores to performers you know
• Recommending each other’s recordings to your own fan bases
• Placing score samples of one another’s works in instrumentationally-related scores of your own
• Guest blogging on each other’s websites

And goes on to explain how these ideas can benefit both you as a composer (or performer, or really as anyone interested in this) and the composers around you.

Check out the article over at dennistobenski.com/news/2012/05/17/the-composers-guide-to-doing-business-cross-promotion/. And hey, don’t forget to mention to him that you read it here.

Out West Arts has your May calendar set

Dude. I hadn’t updated the blog in a few days (largely do to working out a classical guitar arrangement of Wonderful Tonight for a friend’s wedding), and was just coming on to mention that a) wild Up have a show this weekend, and b) Crescent City, a completely insane looking “hyperopera,” opens tonight, but Brian over at Out West Arts has already done a pretty amazing job summing up what’s on for this month. So you should just read that. I think the only thing he’s missing is What’s Next? Ensemble‘s Fourth Annual Los Angeles Composers Project, coming up on June 1. But that’s not in May, so I’ll let him slide, this time.

Check out Out West Arts’ comprehensive listing of events worth attending at outwestarts.blogspot.com/2012/05/in-wings-may.html.

Interview: Jordan Nelson on New Music’s New Home

A little over a week ago I got an event invitation on Facebook for something called “Mama Fish & The Sun” at a warehouse space in east Hollywood/Los Feliz. I saw that my friends Maggie Hasspacher and Laura Kramer were on the program, so thought it was worth checking out. Well guess what? We’ve got a new concert series, LA, and it sounds like it’s going to be a rad one. Composer Jordan Nelson, who’s running the show, had time to answer a few questions below. The inaugural concert is tonight. Details are here.

Perhaps I’m out of the loop, but this is the first time I’ve heard of New Music’s New Home. Is this a new series? And what prompted you to start it?

This is indeed a brand new series!  The idea has been in the works, though, for a couple of years:  The series has grown out of the fact that I’ve been coming into contact with a number of really interesting, uniquely-minded and ambitious musicians and composers who share a desire to find new ways of interacting with their audience, be it by finding and/or creating a new kind of venue or, even more, a different style of ‘concert’.  The underlying and recurring theme, though, was that there is the really exciting set of performers and creators who want a new outlet for their work.

New Music’s New Home seeks to go one step further—the intention is to not only cultivate these new and different performance opportunities, but, also, with each NMNH, to expand the range of venues and types of performance events in which new music is heard.  Therefore, the series will be especially focused on premiering and prompting new projects, which we will then install in, well, really any ‘venue’ that our imagination can get behind.

On the website and poster (which is great, by the way) for this Friday’s show, you’ve got some details about the pieces by Laura Kramer and Sarah Gibson, but nothing about your own. What will we be hearing from you?

The concert this Friday, ‘Mama Fish & The Sun’, is going to feature two pieces of mine, both of which will be performed by guitarist extraodinaire Jack Cimo.  I wrote a set of pieces for solo classical guitar for Jack in 2008 entitled ‘Sun Songs’.   As part of his set on Friday night, Jack is going to play the third of the three pieces, ‘The Vapor As It Flew In Fleeces Tinged With Violet’.  Additionally, Jack is going to be be joined by the fantastic soprano Angie Engelbart in order to perform ‘Around the Throne the Thunder Rolls’.  The piece is actually the most recent of my pieces for guitar, and therefore it seems fitting to pair it with my first piece for the instrument, ‘Sun Songs’.

NMNH purports to produce events that are designed to take advantage of their unique venue and audience. How will this concert be taking advantage of the space at Yeaheavy?

We have a really wonderful opportunity present with our collaboration with and installation at Yeaheavy, and ‘Mama Fish & The Sun’ is definitely going take advantage of it!  One of the most exciting aspects of the collaboration is that, currently, the walls of the venue are showcasing a number of works by a quartet of really interesting and playful visual artists.  The paintings and illustrations, I think, will offer an interesting counterpart to the music, adding to the audience’s experience.  Furthermore, as the event will include downtime in which everyone can converse, move around the space, as well as get a refill from our wine and beer bar, I think the artwork will provide a fun conversation piece.

‘Mama Fish & The Sun’ is the culmination of a collaborative approach to the conception of the ‘performance’.  Conceived together with Yeaheavy, ‘Mama Sun…’ has taken into account the lighting, the seating, the staging, and the costuming.  Our hope and intent is that the event will augment the music and the performances with an additional layer of concept and theme.  Ultimately, though, we’re just excited to explore the sum of our ideas and creativity!

It’s cool to see a series focused on collaboration. What else do you have in store, or in mind, for us in the future?

Excellent question.  At this point, there are two NMNH events in the works, both tentatively slated for 2013.  The first will be centered around a single instrument: the piano, which will be absent from ‘Mama Fish…’.  The concert will feature works for solo piano, small chamber ensembles that include piano, and also some electroacoustic music for piano, including a collaboration between myself and composer/pianist Sarah Gibson.

Additionally, there is a second NMNH in the works which will be primarily about electronic music.  The event has already begun conscripting a variety of styles of music-by-computer, including a music-concrete-style, abstract sound installation to a turn-on-the-strobe-light, dance-electronica set; a wide range!

Anything else you’d like to add?

Well, if anyone would like more information on the event, please feel free to email New Music’s New Home at newmusicsnewhome@gmail.com.  Also, more information on Yeaheavy can be found at their website, www.yeaheavy.com.  Finally, you can find more details about ‘Mama Fish & The Sun’ by clicking the ‘Mama Fish…’ poster on the homepage of my own website, www.jordannelsonmusic.com.

Thanks so much for the interest in New Music’s New Home!  Looking forward to seeing you at ‘Mama Fish.…’

Thanks, see you tonight!

Interview: Composer Veronika Krausas on Misfits and Hooligans


This Saturday, Catalysis Projects and People Inside Electronics are collaborating to put on a show called Misfits and Hooligans at Beyond Baroque in Venice. I caught up via email with composer/the-brains-behind-it Veronika Krausas to talk about the show. While it’s nice to pretend I’m an objective journalist (I’m not), I’ve gotta say that the whole concept of this concert sounds completely awesome to me, and that I’m way excited about it, and think you should probably go. Thumbs up/high five, Veronika, I can’t wait.

The concert that your group Catalysis Projects is putting on with People Inside Electronics is called “Misfits and Hooligans,” and features music for all sorts of instruments that are often thought of as such. Aside from my being sad that melodica didn’t make the cut, this is really exciting. Where did the concept come from? And are you concerned about angering violists by including them on this?

AHHH … there are so many wonderful instruments that just didn’t make the cut … bagpipes, tuba, trombone, nose flute, banjo, and yes melodica. I think the violists are thrilled to be included.  Probably everyone not included is wondering how they can get into the club!  The question really should be – are you a misfit or a hooligan?  But then it depends which country you hail from because in the lands that enjoy soccer (aka as non-American football), a hooligan might have a slightly less savory connotation than a hooligan in my less aggressive-less violent-more mischievous-Edward Gorey-esque usage of the term.  Even so, I think I’m more of a misfit than a hooligan although I definitely appreciate musical hooliganism!

But, back to the concert!  The composer Daniel Rothman started a new music series at Beyond Baroque and asked me to organize a concert.  I enlisted my pals at Catalysis Projects, the visual artist, filmmaker, and writer Quintan Ana Wikswo, composers and performers Isaac Schankler and Aron Kallay (also of People Inside Electronics) to help with this extravaganza.  It started out as a ‘so what pieces do you have’? type of thing and slowly emerged as a collection of ‘interesting’ instruments and it went gloriously downhill from there!   On the program there are also some truly wonderful and crazy pieces for harpsichord by the French Baroque composer Joseph-Nicolas-Pancrace Royer, whose name alone is great!  (We’ve all adopted Pancrace as our Misfit or Hooligan middle name!)  Pancrace (as he is now known by his friends) was a contemporary of, and eclipsed quite a bit by, his pal Rameau!  I heard Arthur Omura play Marche des Scythes and it was one of those ‘AH HA’ moments for me with the harpsichord.  I drank the Royer Kool-aid and that was it.  I’m now officially hooked on the harpsichord.  It was such a wonderfully bizarre piece that it and 2 other of the pieces from Royer’s Première Livre de Pièces pour Clavecin are being performed on the concert.  He unfortunately only has one book of harpsichord pieces.

Aron Kallay is playing a gorgeous piece for toy piano and electronics by Tom Flaherty.  Isaac Schankler has this great duo for accordion and electronics called Chocolate Phase that he’s playing with Daniel Corral.  I’ve asked them to wear lederhosen but that idea didn’t go over so well.   He also has his wonderful viola piece Dear Mr. Edison.

My instruments are harmonica and double bass.  Let’s make the harmonica the misfit and the double basses will be the hooligans!  Jonas is a solo harmonica piece that the harmonica player Bill Barrett commissioned a few years ago and it’s finally having its premiere at this show along with a great text and film by Quintan Ana Wikswo called The Anguillidae Eater.  The text is about the migration of eels to the Coronian Spit in Lithuania (which is one of my favorite places in the world) with a surreal twist.  It goes perfectly with the harmonica music.  The piece is named after my grandfather Jonas, who loved harmonica and smoked eel and was Lithuanian.  He was probably more of a friendly hooligan that a misfit.  I still have his harmonica in my studio.

The musical hooligans are represented in my double bass trio called Gardens of Stone.    This piece was inspired by a poem by the Canadian writer André Alexis:

out of silence, to another silence

from sun and water, dry white salt.

time moves like that, crest to crest,

and our selves, yours and mine,

are what is left from sea …

You often compose for multimedia. What’s your approach to collaboration with other artists?

I’ve been so fortunate to have an amazing group of writers, film makers, artists, acrobats, and musicians around me that they’re always so inspiring.  The process always happens so naturally – someone suggests an idea (or I have an image or sound in my mind) and that small kernel just grows (often like a weed) and just emerges.  Somehow we’re always on the same sort of wave length when working on projects.

Art by Krausas's collaborator Reneé Reynolds

You’ve also done a good bit of work outside of music on your own. Did you study visual art, photography, or writing formally, or have you sort of picked it up over time?

I’ve only studied music but I am an accidental photographer, occasional book-maker, story writer, and filmmaker.  The great thing about ideas is that often they take on a non-aural form, which sometimes gets translated into music and other times into another art form.  I started to collect quite a few photographs of graffiti from all over the world and one year decided to put them into a book.  Definitely an accidental photographer.  Another friend (writer and artist Renée Reynolds)  and I started with the idea of an errata in a magazine and slowly this developed into a project of a limited hand-made book that had very divergent ideas of our interpretations of what is an errata.   The cover was floor tiles held together with duct tape – itself an errata of sorts.

 You’re actually the first composer I’ve interviewed who is on a university faculty. I’ve heard some composition professors say that they only get to compose in summer because teaching and the work associated with it take so much time. What’s the balance like, for you? And are you pleased with it?

Tough during the year but it’s like anything – you make time, especially when you’re inspired or have a deadline.  As those deadlines approach I’m sure my students notice the crazed look in my eyes…I teach at 8am so I’m not sure how much they notice at that hour!

Being that you’ve had works performed all over the place, how would you say LA compares or fits into the world scene for new music? Seems pretty strong to me, but I’ve never spent time in New York.

I never imagined myself living in LA and ended up here a little bit by accident.  Since arriving I have LOVED it.  The musical and creative environment is so vibrant that it’s really inspiring to live and work here.  There so much music and art and dance and performance going on, it’s just a little spread out!  And the weather is pretty darn great.

Anything on the horizon you can tell us about?

I’m off to Belgium in the fall – my chamber orchestra piece analemma is an official selection for the World Music Days.

Also, I’ve been asked to present my films at a series run by Gerry Fialka in the fall.  Although not a film maker – just an accidental one – I have worked with several really spectacular film and video makers (Quintan Ana Wikswo and Nana Tchitchoua – who runs the Tula Tea Room at the Museum of Jurassic Technology).  This event with feature some of the works I’ve done with them and my own ‘accidental’ foray into making a film.  A few years ago someone ran an idea for a short film by me and I offered what I thought was a good (and slightly quirky) suggestion.  They didn’t like the idea or even use it so I thought “it’s a great idea, I’m going to make it.” So I came up with 7 short and silly scenarios that became 7 intermezzi for film that I wrote and produced.  It was shot by Marc Lempert and the music was by friends.   A very fun project.

Thank you!

Get your tickets for this weekend’s show at brownpapertickets.com/event/235385. See you there!

Free Show Alert: Music of Anastassis Philippakopoulos tonight at the wulf

Man, we’ve had a ton of these this week! That’s a good thing though, especially for those of us who don’t want to drop $100 to hang out in a cemetery in Hollywood (can you tell I didn’t get Sigur Ros tickets?).

Tonight’s show comes courtesy of the wulf, which actually has a ton of events coming up, all of which are, and will always be, free. From their website:

04.20.2012 8:00 pm
Music of Anastassis Philippakopoulos
A selection of instrumental Songs and Five Piano Pieces by Anastassis Philippakopoulos. Performed by Mark So, William Powell, Kathy Pisaro and Christine Tavolacci. Also Michael Pisaro will play "24 petits préludes pour la guitare" by Antoine Beuger
.

Details are at thewulf.org/events.html.

A bunch of calendar updates, and two interviews, and BIG news are all on the way, so keep an eye out.

Free Show Alert: New Lens at Pasadena Conservatory, tonight at 8

Tonight at 8 at the Pasadena Conservatory, New Lens presents the Finisterra Piano Trio on the series’ inaugural run.

It’s a pretty sweet concept: as I understand it, they’re pairing old works that sound modern with new works that sound old, and keeping the program a secret until after the performance is finished.

Complete details are in the press release, available by clicking here (it’s a pdf). The Facebook page for the event is here.

Our first contest! Win tickets to Gabriel Kahane and LACO this weekend

You read it right, folks. The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra is premiering a new piece by Gabriel Kahane on Saturday and Sunday at the Alex Theatre and Royce Hall (and performing Ives’ Three Places in New England – YES), and we’ve got a pair of tickets to give away. To enter, just retweet the following tweet (yes, you have to be on Twitter):

The winner will be picked at random on Friday at 11 AM. Cool?

Free Show Alert: Mark Robson in Pasadena in Two Hours

I just received an email from the fine folks over at Piano Spheres that basically said “short notice, but Mark Robson is playing today at noon as part of Play Me, I’m Yours, at the piano at One Colorado in Old Town Pasadena.”

So if you’re somewhere over there on a lunch break (or don’t have a job – and you’re luckier than you think you are), and want to catch a Mark Robson concert for free, now you know where to do it.

Free Show Alert: Cal Arts Orchestra at Wild Beast tomorrow

If you can make it out to Valencia tomorrow night by 7:30, the Cal Arts Orchestra is premiering Andrew Tholl’s violin concerto, titled Asphyxiation, at The Wild Beast on their campus. Tholl himself is the violinist. The program also has works by Devin Maxwell, Roger Reynolds, Mike Fink, Michael Pisaro, and Anastassis Philippakopoulos. Should be a good time, to say the very least.

This is a good weekend for independent opera in LA

This Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, you can catch three (THREE!) operas – two by local composers – at clubs around town, and let me tell you, you really should.

Friday, our friends (yeah full disclosure, but they’re great musicians whether or not we’re friends) in What’s Next? Ensemble are presenting a double bill at Royal/T in Culver City. The shows are Michael Gordon’s Van Gogh and Shaun Naidoo’s Nigerian Spam. Tickets are available here.

Saturday and Sunday, Julia Adolphe’s psychodramatic chamber opera Sylvia gets its premiere at The Lost Studio in Hollywood. Julia wrote the libretto herself, and it seems like pretty heavy stuff involving young love with family friends and memories of the Holocaust. It’s $5, and I hear Saturday night is already sold out. I’ll be there Sunday, so say hello. Complete details are at sylviachamberopera.drupalgardens.com, and we’ll have an interview up here with Julia sometime shortly after the show.

See you this weekend.