Search - Linda Collins , Kitty Mraw , Ana Perez , Marjorie Anderson , Wharton Tiers , Michael Blair Beth Anderson :: Peachy Keen-O

Peachy Keen-O
Linda Collins , Kitty Mraw , Ana Perez , Marjorie Anderson , Wharton Tiers , Michael Blair Beth Anderson
Peachy Keen-O
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Jazz, New Age, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

This CD has pieces with an auctioneer, a Kentucky farm with birds & clover, a jazz dancer, a quivering, vibrating, sexually tinged piece full of women saying supplication, a saint dying in flames, a drum piece about fr...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Linda Collins , Kitty Mraw , Ana Perez , Marjorie Anderson , Wharton Tiers , Michael Blair Beth Anderson
Title: Peachy Keen-O
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Pogus
Original Release Date: 11/18/2003
Release Date: 11/18/2003
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Jazz, New Age, Classical
Styles: Electronica, Opera & Classical Vocal, Historical Periods, Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 760342103028

Synopsis

Album Description
This CD has pieces with an auctioneer, a Kentucky farm with birds & clover, a jazz dancer, a quivering, vibrating, sexually tinged piece full of women saying supplication, a saint dying in flames, a drum piece about frustration, mother/daughter miscommunication, a pipe organ, and punk rap with overtones of yoga. Many of Anderson?s compositions from 1973-1979 use words or parts of words to make either all or part of the music. Sometimes the music is derived from the words. Some of it is considered to be part of the genre known as text-sound. (The following is edited from Beth Anderson?s liner notes) Peachy Keen-O (1973): This electro-acoustic piece is for female voices, organ, electric guitar, vibraphone, large membranophones & metalophones, improvisatory dancers, peach light and pre-recorded tape. It is what my mother called "haunted house music". Tower of Power (1973): This organ piece is a graphic score. The recording on this CD is the first performance. The ideal playback of this piece would be "as loud an amplitude as possible, using both your ears and your equipment to decide". Torero Piece (1973): The phonemic part of this text-sound piece was derived from a paint-by-numbers scroll found in a used clothing store. The vowels and consonants were chosen because they exist in the Spanish language. (I had just heard ZAJ perform and I was very enthusiastic about them). The instruction for the reading part is to describe the most dramatic event or relationship in your life. Each performer writes his/her own speech. Joan (1974; 1977): In 1974 I made an oratorio about Joan of Arc using the translation of the text of her trial as the basis. I decoded the text into pitches and used a modulating coding system with instructions and free rhythm. The concert performance was amazing?. However I was not able to hear my modulating coding system clearly in all this, so I made the version of that piece that is on this CD. This fifteen-track all piano version of only the pitches was made in 1977. Ode (1975): "Ode" was created and mixed at the Queen's College and Wesleyan electronic music studios. I Can't Stand It (1976): When I first moved to New York I had a hard time getting used to how things were here and this piece is a direct response to that frustration. It was conceived for voice and drum set. Yes Sir Ree (1978): This text-sound piece is based on phrases used by Richard Levy and things his students mumbled about him. He used to scream various encouraging words and compliments at his students in the process of teaching his class and his philosophy seemed to be that dancing was to be enjoyed massively. Ocean Motion Mildew Mind (1979): This is a Punk realization of "ommm". The words begin "ocean, motion, mildew, mind" and continue "wishin', Titian, swishin', swine." Country Time (1979): This piece is a cut-up of an additive description of a walk around my family's farm in Kentucky in early summer with a poem I wrote about other experiences in Kentucky. It is for voice and percussion with or without birdcalls.
 

CD Reviews

Out there in Words and Music
John de Clef Pineiro | New York, New York United States | 05/05/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The French have an expression for it: à outrance, and has been applied to the art and ways of those who are "all out," "full out,"and "way out there." But, of course, in this "do your own thing/anything goes" aggressively eclectic cultural environment of ours, we have our own examples and icons; and in the hybridized twilight zone between the dominance of text and the hegemony of pitched sound, we find the collaged dimensions and medleys of Beth Anderson. Ms. Anderson's creative output spans an unusually wide gamut, encompassing the lyricism of new romantic music; to vocal works that include an opera, an oratorio, and choral pieces; to theater music, and chamber and orchestral works, as well as the text-sound pieces so well represented in this new CD. Viewed as a sonic retrospective of Ms. Anderson's vintage early work, this latest release, containing nine diverse works copied from her originally-recorded tapes, assails the complacent consciousness with sound bites of the mundane and overheard, a mother/daughter phonemic "reading," monolithic "organic" tone clusters, primeval rap, wails and rants, superimposed multi-track piano pitches, and the nasal inexorable semi-chant of an auctioneer. Except for the organ in the Tower of Power on the second track and the auctioneer on the last track, Ms. Anderson is a very effective principal or solo performer featured on the remaining tracks. Remarkably, the recordings on this CD are of very high acoustic quality despite the age of the original tapes, and one must actually read the liner notes to realize that these pieces were not originally recorded in digital audio. Not unlike the poetry of non-sequiturs and the metasensical, Anderson's work inhabits a realm of objectified reality, where the stuff of everyday life is fragmentized, compressed, and intensified through isolation to achieve an acute sensation of the moment in sound. That said, it can fairly be asserted that as a modality of perception, Anderson's work pushes beyond a familiar formalism, disheveling expectations and taking on the challenge of the incomprehensible. However, one might also be tempted to wonder whether Ms. Anderson is really a mischievous spirit with an "off-beat" sense of humor, and an intent to prompt amusement and encourage adventure. No doubt, this listening experience will be a "turn-on" for some, a "first" for many, and a mystifying puzzlement for most."