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Diamanda Galás

 
Artist: Diamanda Galás
Diamanda Galás

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  • Born: August 29, 1955, San Diego, CA
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Avant-Garde
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Divine Punishment," "Plague Mass (1984 End of the Epidemic)," "La Serpenta Canta"
  • Representative Songs: "Let My People Go," "Double-Barrel Prayer," "Do You Take This Man?"

Biography

A fiercely confrontational avant-garde performer noted for her wailing, four-octave vocal range, Diamanda Galas was born and raised in San Diego, California. The daughter of Greek Orthodox parents, her singing was roundly discouraged, although her prowess as a classical pianist was nurtured; ultimately, her strict upbringing resulted in a reckless, drug-fueled youth prior to her entrance into the University of California's music and visual arts program.

Galas made her performing debut in 1979 at France's Festival d'Avignon, which led to an invitation to assume the lead role in composer Vinko Globokar's politically-charged opera Un Jour Comme un Autre. In subsequent solo performance-art pieces like Wild Women With Steak Knives and Tragouthia apo to Aima Exon Fonos, Galas further honed her unique, shattering vocal style, inspired by the Schrei ("shriek") opera of German expressionism (a form employing a system of four microphones and a series of echoes and delays).

Galas made her recorded debut in 1982 with The Litanies of Satan, a provocative work comprised of a vocal adaptation of a poem by Charles Baudelaire. After the prison-themed performance piece Panoptikon (documented on a self-titled 1984 release), she began developing a trilogy of albums known collectively as The Masque of the Red Death; released independently between 1986 and 1988 as The Divine Punishment, Saint of the Pit and You Must Be Certain of the Devil, the three records catalogued Galas' litany against the AIDS epidemic, which claimed her brother, playwright Philip-Dimitri Galas, in 1986.

With 1990's The Singer, she made her first subtle advances into the realm of pop music; reprising some of the same gospel material which snaked through The Masque of the Red Death, the record also featured her covers of Willie Dixon's "Insane Asylum" and Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "I Put a Spell on You." 1993's Vena Cava, an a cappella effort, preceded 1994's The Sporting Life, a collaboration with former Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones. A record of Galas' 1994 radio work Schrei X followed in 1996, in tandem with her first book collection, The Shit of God. She returned two years later with Malediction and Prayer. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Diamanda Galás

Galás performing in 2008.
Background information
Born August 29, 1955 (1955-08-29) (age 54)
Genre(s) Experimental, Blues, Avant-garde
Occupation(s) Vocalist, keyboardist, composer
Website www.DiamandaGalas.com

Diamanda Galás (born August 29, 1955) is a Greek- American-born avant-garde performance artist, vocalist, keyboardist, and composer.

Known for her expert piano as well as her distinctive, operatic voice, which has a three and a half octave range, Galás has been described as "capable of the most unnerving vocal terror"[1]. Galás often shrieks, howls, and seems to imitate glossolalia in her performances. Her works largely concentrate on the topics of suffering, despair, condemnation, injustice and loss of dignity. She has worked with many avant-garde composers, including Iannis Xenakis, Vinko Globokar and John Zorn.

Contents

Biography

Galás was born to Greek Orthodox parents. Raised in San Diego, California, she studied both jazz and classical music from an early age, training which reveals itself throughout all her work. She studied a wide range of musical forms, as well as visual-art performance, before moving to Europe. There she made her performance debut at the Festival d'Avignon in France in 1979, performing the lead in the opera, "Un Jour comme un autre", by composer Vinko Globokar, based upon Amnesty International's documentation of the arrest and torture of a Turkish woman for alleged treason.[citation needed]

Her work first garnered widespread attention with the controversial 1991 live recording of the album Plague Mass (1984 - End of the Epidemic) in the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York. With it, Galás attacked the Roman Catholic Church (and society in general) for its indifference to AIDS using biblical texts. In the words of Terrorizer Magazine, "The church was made to burn with sound, not fire."[2]. Plague Mass was a live rendition of excerpts from her Masque Of The Red Death trilogy which began as a response to and indictment of the effects of AIDS on the "silent class". After production of the trilogy's first volume began, Galás' brother, playwright Philip-Dimitri Galás, contracted HIV, which inspired the artist to redouble her efforts, resulting in the development of the aforementioned performance. During the period of these recordings, Galás had we are all HIV+ tattooed upon her knuckles; an artistic expression of disillusionment and disgust with the ignorance and apathy surrounding the AIDS epidemic. Her brother, who died during the trilogy's final production, reportedly appreciated her efforts.

In 1994, Galás collaborated with Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones, a longtime admirer of the singer. The resultant record, The Sporting Life, while containing much of Galás's trademark vocal gymnastics, is probably the closest she has ever come to rock music, and is composed nearly entirely of original material.

Galás also performs as a blues artist interpreting a wide range of songs into her unique piano and vocal styles, beginning with Let My People Go, from volume 3 of the Masque trilogy, You Must Be Certain of the Devil. This aspect of her work is perhaps best represented by her 1992 album, The Singer, where she covered the likes of Willie Dixon, Roy Acuff, and Screamin' Jay Hawkins while accompanying herself on piano. For that album, she also recorded several traditional songs as well as the rarely heard Desmond Carter-penned version of Gloomy Sunday. Many of the traditionals recorded for The Singer were historically sung by the black slaves of the southern United States. Galás, however, sung these songs for the daily struggle of People With AIDS (PWAs). Galás used many of her selections both within and outside of blues repertoire resulting in numerous song cycles: Reap What You Sow, Malediction and Prayer: Concert for the Damned, Frenzy: Concert for Aileen Wuornos, Burning Hell, La Serpenta Canta, Songs of Exile, Guilty Guilty Guilty, Les chansons malheureuses, Valentine's Day Massacre, and You're My Thrill. Some song selections have sometimes been categorized as "homicidal love songs". She also focuses on the death penalty. The above mentioned "Frenzy: Concert for Aileen Wuornos", was dedicated to the executed serial killer, and features cover versions of Phil Ochs's "Iron Lady" and Hank Williams' "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry".

Galás has published one book, 1996's The Shit of God (ISBN 185242432X). It contains many of her original writings, and was published because, she says, many people cannot understand her on the records.[citation needed]

In 1997, Galás contributed her voice to the CD Closed on Account of Rabies, a double disc tribute to Edgar Allan Poe with various musicians, including Iggy Pop, Debbie Harry and Marianne Faithfull lending their voice to the tales of the legendary horror author. Galás read "The Black Cat" which became the longest recording on the compilation, reaching 36 minutes and 58 seconds.

In 2000, Galás worked with Recoil (former Depeche Mode member Alan Wilder's solo project), contributing her voice to the Liquid album. She's the leading vocalist on the album's first single, "Strange Hours", for which she also wrote the lyrics, but she can be heard on "Jezebel" and "Vertigen" as a backing vocalist.

In 2005, she was awarded Italy's prestigious Demetrio Stratos International Career Award.

In late 2003, Galás released the album "Defixiones, Will and Testament: Orders from the Dead," an 80-minute memorial tribute to the Armenian, Greek, Assyrian and Hellenic victims of the Turkish genocide. "Defixiones" refers to the warnings on Greek gravestones against removing the remains of the dead.

As of July 2007, Galás continues to tour her latest song cycles. Her newest record, Guilty Guilty Guilty, was released on Mute records on April 1, 2008. You're My Thrill is also set for release on Mute; however, a firm release date has not been made available.

Galás has interpreted poetry by Charles Baudelaire (on The Litanies of Satan), Paul Celan, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Henri Michaux, Gerard de Nerval, César Vallejo, Siamanto, and Adonis (on Defixiones).

Film work

She was the voice of the dead in The Serpent and the Rainbow, along with providing the song which closes the film, a cover of the Schwartz-Dietz song "Dancing in the Dark." "Le treizième revient" and "Exeloume" appear on the soundtrack to Derek Jarman's The Last of England. She also contributed her voice to Francis Ford Coppola's film Dracula (1992) as a group of female vampires. Excerpts from Galás' "I Put a Spell On You", "Vena Cava", "The Lord is My Shepherd", and "Judgement Day" appeared in Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers.

Critical response

Susan McClary wrote in her 1991 book, Feminine Endings: Music, Gender, and Sexuality, that Galás "heralds a new moment in the history of musical representation", after describing her thus: "Galás emerged within the post-modern performance art scene in the seventies ... protesting... the treatment of victims of the Greek junta, attitudes towards victims of AIDS... Her pieces are constructed from the ululation of traditional Mediterranean keening ... whispers, shrieks, and moans."

Discography

References

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