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Source: Music of the Avant Garde

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Music of the Avant-Garde
(aka
Source magazine)
EditorLarry Austin (1967–72)
Stanley Lunetta (1972–73)
CategoriesExperimental music
Circulation2,000
PublisherComposer/Performer Edition
Founded1967
First issue1967
Final issue
Number
1973
Issue #11
CountryU.S.A.
Based inDavis, CA, 1967–69
Sacramento, CA, 1970–73
LanguageEnglish

Source: Music of the Avant-Garde – also known and hereafter referred to as Source Magazine – was an independent, not-for-profit musical and artistic magazine published between 1967 and 1973 by teachers and students of the University of California, Davis, California. It emerged from the flourishing Californian musical experimentalism of the late 1950s-early 1960s, at UC-Davis and Mills College.[1] The 11 issues document new music practices of the period like indeterminacy, performance, graphic scores, electronic music and intermedia arts.

Origin

Source Magazine's board of editors first met in the New Music Ensemble, formed in 1963, an improvised music group led by UC-Davis music teacher Larry Austin[2] and comprising two of his students: Stanley Lunetta on drums and Dary John Mizelle on trombone, in addition to Wayne Johnson, bass clarinet; Art Woodbury, saxophone; and Richard Swift, keyboards, sometimes augmented by occasional visitors like flutist Jon Gibson or soprano Billie Alexander.

In the Spring of 1966, the group officially launched the Composer/Performer Edition imprint with the idea of publishing a catalog of graphic scores and avantgarde music related material by composers they felt close to, like Frederic Rzewski, Cornelius Cardew, Allan Bryant, or Jon Phetteplace of Musica Elettronica Viva.[3] In 1966, they sent a mailing of 5,000 invitations nationwide, calling for pieces in the form of original scores. Composer/Performer Edition published some of these music scores separately, but the team felt the need to collect the material they received in the form of a magazine titled Source. Austin, Lunetta, Mizelle, Johnson, Woodburry and administrative manager Paul Roberts formed the magazine's board,[4] with Austin becoming chief editor.

A twelfth issue was planned but never made it to printing due to lack of internal funding.[5]

Circulation

Each issue had a print run of 2,000 copies, although the first issue originally ran 1,000 copies before selling out and warranting an additional 1,000 copies.[5] According to chief editor Larry Austin, the spiral-bound, 10 34 x 13 12 inches landscape format was inspired by some of John Cage's graphic scores[6] as well as the benefit of being able to stand the magazine up on a piano or music stand when performing pieces.[7] Subscribers were composers, teachers, performers or libraries located in North America and Europe. The magazine was never subsidized or funded by any institution.[8]

Music content

Despite or thanks to its short existence, the scope of Source magazine appears both focused and wide-ranging. Emerging from a rejection of formal concert performance and traditional music notation, Source also included performance art and sound poetry in its coverage of avantgarde graphic scores, therefore expanding the very definition of music. It welcomed veterans like Harry Partch, Lukas Foss, John Cage or Morton Feldman, as well as young Turks of the avant-garde like Hugh Davies (b1943), Daniel Lentz (b1942) or Jerry Hunt (b1943).

Over the years, Source covered West Coast experimentalism of the 1960s (Gordon Mumma, Robert Ashley); American Minimalism (Steve Reich, Christian Wolff, Earle Brown); the birth of Sound Art as we know it (Alvin Lucier, Max Neuhaus, Annea Lockwood); improvised and indeterminate music (the ONCE Group, Musica Elettronica Viva, Toshi Ichiyanagi); Fluxus and performance art with Dick Higgins or Allan Kaprow; European sound poetry with the Fylkingen affiliated artists or Bernard Heidsieck; the British Systems music of Cornelius Cardew, Howard Skempton, Michael Parsons and Gavin Bryars.

Source also welcomed the use of advanced technology (electronic, video, communications) to expand music's scope.[9] The magazine published information on Don Buchla's newly built synthesizer,[10] Nam June Paik's first video experiments or Lowell Cross's video/laser light shows featured in issue #9, 1971.[11] The trend was perfectly in synch with the Art & Technology show[12] at Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1971, where contemporary artists were offered to partner with engineers and technicians of their choice.[13]

Specificities

  • Themed issues: Some issues of Source have overtly or underlying specific themes, like issue #3, January 1968, stressing the importance of groups in new music and including scores, interviews or essays by ONCE Group, Musica Elettronica Viva, Sonic Arts Union and New Music Ensemble; issue #8, July 1970, is on concrete and sound poetry, with a report on the Swedish scene from the Fylkingen festival and venue, and other independent sound poets like Bob Cobbing and Henri Chopin; issue #6, July 1969, is on Politics; issue #9 (1971) features circuit diagrams; issue #11 (1972) introduces Fluxus and intermedia.
  • Guest editors: a number of issues had guest editors who were invited to choose among the scores received by the magazine for possible inclusion, make their own suggestions of graphic scores to publish and bring their expertise on a specific field. Alvin Lucier included electronic experiments, in addition to the British Systems music forming the core of issue 10. Ken Friedman was asked to focus on Fluxus, performance and intermedia art in issue #11. John Cage took advantage of the skills of Source's resourceful printer, Doug Galbreath,[3] to create a version of Not Wanting To Say Anything About Marcel[14] printed on transparencies inserted in issue #7–8.
  • Accompanying LP recordings: several issues came with a pair of 10-inch records, a format chosen to fit with the magazine's format of nearly 11" x 14". These recordings collected sound works by artists included in the magazine with issues 4, 7/8 and 9. The two 10-inch LPs coming with issue #4 were subsidized by Columbia records, thanks to David Behrman, an A&R representative for Columbia in the 1960s.[15]

Notes

  1. ^ Bernstein (2008), Thomas M. Welsh, Chronology, p.265
  2. ^ Austin (2011), Introduction, p.1
  3. ^ a b Austin (2011), Introduction, p.2
  4. ^ Austin (2011), Douglas Kahn, Preface, p.x
  5. ^ a b Burg, William. "Sacramento's Source of the Avant-Garde". sacramentopress.com/. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  6. ^ Austin (2011), Introduction, p.3
  7. ^ Ginsberg, Maya (2011). DOCUMENTING THE AMERICAN EXPERIMENTAL TRADITION: A HISTORICAL EXAMINATION OF SOURCE AND SOUNDINGS (PDF). San Diego State University. p. 22. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  8. ^ Austin (2011), Douglas Kahn, Preface, p.xii
  9. ^ Romagny (2011), p.33-48
  10. ^ Bernstein (2011), p.163
  11. ^ Cross, web site, (2011)
  12. ^ Tuchman (1971), Report
  13. ^ Antin (2011), p.61
  14. ^ See John Cage's Wikipedia article
  15. ^ Austin (2011), Douglas Kahn, Preface, p.xi-xii

References

Appendix: Source Magazine issues content

Source #1 – January 1967
Contents:
Source #2 – July 1967
Contents:
Source #3 – January 1968
Contents:
Source #4 – July 1968
Contents:
Source #5 – January 1969
Contents:
Source #6 – July 1969
Contents:
Source #7 – January 1970
Contents:
Source #8 – July 1970
Contents:
Source #9 – Published 1971
Contents:
Source #10 – Published 1971
Contents:
Source #11 – Published 1972
Contents:
This page was last edited on 24 February 2024, at 00:12
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