Alvin Curran

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(b Providence ri, 13 Dec 1938). American composer. A pupil of Carter, he went to Rome and was a founder member of the group Musica Elettronica Viva (1966). He has written intimate pieces as well as big environmental works, including Monumenti (1982) and Maritime Rites (1984), which uses ships, foghorns and boats full of singers.



Biography

Alvin Curran is a contemporary American composer whose work incorporates multimedia, visual arts, improvisation, and written music. He studied with Milton Babbitt and Elliott Carter in the early '60s, but by 1965 found himself in Rome as co-founder of the pioneering touring electronic performance group Musica Elettronica Viva, with whom he worked until 1971. During this time, Curran also made significant contact with English composer Cornelius Cardew, whom he assisted, and Italian Giacinto Scelsi, whom Curran regarded as a mentor. After MEV parted company, Curran decided to remain in Rome, where he taught at the Accademia Nazionale d'Arte Drammatica until 1980; the bulk of his work with synthesizer and tapes dates from this time. In 1980, Curran was named the Darius Milhaud Professor of Composition at Mills College in Oakland, CA, a position he held until his retirement in 2006; Curran also maintained a residence in Rome during these years. Around 1980, Curran's focus began to shift again toward conventional instruments, and with the availability of MIDI technology beginning in the mid-'80s, Curran brought the electronics and installation elements back into his work. Since then he has been involved an extremely eclectic mix of projects, ranging from extended works for piano solo to works like Pozzulana (2005), scored for 10 laptops, 2 drum kits, electric bass, 4 voices, and 12 live instruments.

Curran's output is so varied that it is impossible to come away from his work with a unified impression. However, there is no disputing the care and skill he invests in each creation, and his works have been widely adopted by performers such as Kronos Quartet, The Bang On a Can All-Stars, Yvar Mishakoff, The EAR Unit, Ursula Oppens, and many others. Among the works that have gained him the most acclaim are the series of piano pieces entitled Inner Cities (begun 1991 and ongoing; by 2008 running to 13 in the cycle) and Crystal Psalms (1988) scored for six choruses and six sextets broadcasting from six different European nations, written in observance of the 50th anniversary of Kristallnacht. Curran cites as his personal favorite the piece Schtyx (1992), written for the Abel-Steinberg-Winant Trio. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis , Rovi

Discography

Currran: Crystal Psalms

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Animal Behavior

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Lost Marbles: Music by Alvin Curran

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Alvin Curran: Maritime Rites

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Alvin Curran: Solo Works - The 70s

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Alvin Curran playing the shofar in 2008.

Composer Alvin Curran (born December 13, 1938), is the co-founder, with Frederic Rzewski and Richard Teitelbaum, of Musica Elettronica Viva, and a former student of Elliott Carter. Curran's music often makes use of electronics and environmental found sounds.

Curran was born in Providence, Rhode Island. He was a professor of music at Mills College in California until 2006 and now teaches privately in Rome, Italy, and sporadically at various institutions. His works include solo performance pieces such as Endangered Species, TransDadaExpress, and Shofar; radio works such as Crystal Psalms, Un Altro Ferragosto, I Dreamt John Cage Yodeling at the Zurich Hauptbahnhof, and Living Room Music; large scale musical choreographic works such as Oh Brass on the Grass Alas, for 300 amateur brass-band musicians, and the Maritime Rites series of performances on and near water; sound installation works such as Magic Carpet, Floor Plan, The Twentieth Century, and Gardening with John; chamber music such as For Cornelius for piano, the trio Schtyx, the string quartet VSTO, the saxophone quartet Electric Rags II, the percussion quartet THEME PARK, a series of works for chorus SATB, and the work for chamber orchestra and video Circus Maximus; and many collaborative dance and theater works. Since 1996, Curran has worked on a growing series of solo piano pieces entitled Inner Cities, which together form one of the longest non-repetitive piano pieces ever written. Daniela Tortora has edited a book about his work, Alvin Curran Live in Roma (Die Schachtel 2010).

Contents

Selected discography

  • Songs and Views of the Magnetic Garden (1974 Ananda, reissue 1993) Catalyst Records
  • Fiori Chiari Fiori Oscuri (1975) Ananda No. 4
  • The Works (1978) Fore
  • Canti Illuminati (1980 Fore, reissue 2004) Fringes Recordings
  • Natural History (1982) Editions Gianozzo
  • Maritime Rites, ten environmental concerts produced for National Public Radio (1984, reissue 2004) New World Records
  • Field It and Lenz (1985) Radio Art Foundation
  • For Cornelius and Era Ora (1986), Ursula Oppens, Frederic Rzewski pianos, New Albion
  • Electric Rags II (1989) New Albion Records, with Rova Saxophone Quartet
  • Hyper Beatles (1990) Aki Takahashi piano, Toshiba-EMI/Angel
  • Il Clarinetto (1992) David Keberle clarinet/Curran electronics, BMG Ariola
  • Schtyx (1994) Abel Steinberg Winant Trio, with VSTO (string quartet) David Abel, Sharon Wood, Meg Tichener, Dina Weinschelbaum, CRI.
  • Animal Behaviour (1995) Tzadik.
  • Yvar Mikhashoff plays Alvin Curran: Piano Works (1995) Mode Records
  • Theme Park (1998) Tzadik.
  • Crystal Psalms (1999) New World Records
  • riverrun: voicings/soundscapes (1999) Klaus Schöning, editor, WERGO
  • The Things In Between (1999) Eve Egoyan, piano, Artifact
  • Time Tracks (1999) Jeanne Golan, piano, Albany Records
  • Apollo and Marsyas, Het Apollohuis 1980-1997: An anthology of new music concerts (2002) ACD
  • Inner Cities (2003), Bruce Brubaker, piano, Arabesque Recordings
  • Lost Marbles (2004) Tzadik.
  • Our Ur (2004), with Domenico Sciajno, Rossbin Production
  • ABO: Un Ritratto Sonoro (2004) Companion to the book, Lezione di boxe by Achille Bonita Oliva, Luca Sossella
  • Vindobona Blues (2005) Kunstradio OR
  • Toto Angelica (2005) I Dischi di Angelica.
  • Hesitation-Tango (2005) Aki Takahashi, piano, Camerata
  • Inner Cities (2005) Daan Vandewalle, piano, Long Distance Records
  • The Art of the Fluke (2007), with Cenk Ergün, TEAR Records
  • Hope Street Tunnel Blues (2007) Bruce Brubaker, piano, Arabesque Recordings
  • For Cornelius, Kees Wieringa, Do Records
  • The Stroke That Kills (2008) Seth Josel, guitar, New World Records
  • The Magic Carpet (2008), reissue of 1971 LP on SOURCE, music of the avant garde: Source Records 1-6, 1968-1971, Pogus Productions
  • Endangered Species (2010), ATOPOS Records
  • Under the Fig Tree/The Magic Carpet (2010), Die Schachtel
  • Alvin Curran: Solo Works - the '70s (2010), 3-CD set, New World Records
  • MMM Quartet - Live At The Metz' Arsenal (2012), with Joelle Leandre, Fred Frith, Urs Leimgruber, Leo Records

Discography with Musica Elettronica Viva

  • Friday (2008) reissue of 1969 Polydor LP by Alga Marghen
  • Spacecraft/Unified Patchwork Theory (2001) Alga Marghen
  • apogee - MEV/AMM (2005) Matchless Recordings
  • MEV40 (2008) 4-CD set with 40 years of music, New World Records
  • AMM/MEV: Live Electronic Music Improvised (2009) reissue of 1968 Mainstream LP by WERGO

Sources

External links


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Mentioned in

No World (Trio) Improvisations (1992 Album by Joseph Celli/Jin Hi Kim)
Wreckin' Ball (1994 Album by Hub)
Live Electronic Music Improvised (1968 Album by AMM/MEV)
Animal Behavior (1995 Album by Alvin Curran)
The Hub (Electronica Band, '70s-2000s)