Earle Brown

Earle Brown (December 26, 1926 – July 2, 2002) was an American composer who established his own formal and notational systems. Brown was the creator of "open form,"[1] a style of musical construction that has influenced many composers since—notably the downtown New York scene of the 1980s (see John Zorn) and generations of younger composers.

Among his most famous works are December 1952, an entirely graphic score, and the open form pieces Available Forms I & II, Centering, and Cross Sections and Color Fields. He was awarded a Foundation for Contemporary Arts John Cage Award (1998).[2]

Life

Brown was born in Lunenburg, Massachusetts, and first devoted himself to playing jazz. He initially considered a career in engineering, and enrolled for engineering and mathematics at Northeastern University (1944–45). He enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in 1945. However, the war ended while he was still in basic training, and he was assigned to the base band at Randolph Field, Texas, in which he played trumpet. The band included saxophonist Zoot Sims. Between 1946 and 1950 he was a student at Schillinger House in Boston, which is now the Berklee College of Music. Brown had private instruction in trumpet and composition. Upon graduating he moved to Denver to teach Schillinger techniques. John Cage invited Brown to leave Denver and join him for the Project for Music for Magnetic Tape in New York. Brown was an editor and recording engineer for Capitol Records (1955–60) and producer for Time-Mainstream Records (1960–73).

Earle Brown (right) with pianist David Arden, August 1995

Brown's contact with Cage exposed David Tudor to some of Brown's early piano works, and this connection led to Brown's work being performed in Darmstadt and Donaueschingen. Composers such as Pierre Boulez and Bruno Maderna promoted his music, which subsequently became more widely performed and published.

Brown is considered to be a member of the New York School of composers, along with John Cage, Morton Feldman, and Christian Wolff. Brown cited the visual artists Alexander Calder and Jackson Pollock as two of the primary influences on his work. He was also inspired by author, Gertrude Stein, and by many artists he was personally acquainted with such as Max Ernst and Robert Rauschenberg.

Brown was married first to the dancer Carolyn Brown, who danced with Merce Cunningham from the 1950s to the 1970s, and then to the art curator Susan Sollins. Earle Brown died in 2002 of cancer, in Rye, New York, United States.[3]

Open form

A great deal of Brown's work is composed in fixed modules (though often with idiosyncratic mixtures of notation), but the order is left free to be chosen by the conductor during performance. The material is divided in numbered "events" on a series of "pages". The conductor uses a placard to indicate the page, and with his left hand indicates which event is to be performed while his right hand cues a downbeat to begin. The speed and intensity of the downbeat suggests the tempo and dynamics.

Brown's first open-form piece, Twenty-Five Pages, was 25 unbound pages, and called for anywhere between one and 25 pianists. The score allowed the performer(s) to arrange the pages in whatever order they saw fit.[4] Also, the pages were notated symmetrically and without clefs so that the top and bottom orientation was reversible.

Through this procedure, no two performances of an open form Brown score will be the same, yet each piece retains a singular identity, and his works exhibit great variety from work to work.[citation needed] Brown relates his work in open form to a combination of Alexander Calder's mobile sculptures and the spontaneous decision-making used in the creation of Jackson Pollock's action paintings.[5]

Notation

Although Brown precisely notated compositions throughout his career using traditional notation, he also was an inventor and early practitioner of various innovative notations.

In Twenty-Five Pages, and in other works, Brown used what he called "time notation" or "proportional notation" where rhythms were indicated by their horizontal length and placement in relation to each other and were to be interpreted flexibly. However, by Modules I and II (1966), Brown more often used stemless note heads which could be interpreted with even greater flexibility.

In 1959, with Hodograph I, Brown sketched the contour and character abstractly in what he called "implicit areas" of the piece. This graphic style was more gestural and calligraphic than the geometric abstraction of December 1952. Beginning with Available Forms I, Brown used this graphic notation on the staff in some sections of the score.

December 1952 and FOLIO

December 1952 is perhaps Brown's most famous score. It is part of a larger set of unconventionally-notated music called FOLIO. Although this collection is misconstrued as, historically, "coming out of nowhere", musical notation has existed in many forms—both as a mechanism for creation and for analysis. Brown studied what is now called Early Music, which had its own systems of notation; he was a student of the Schillinger System, which almost exclusively used graph methods} for describing music. From this perspective, FOLIO was an inspired, yet logical, connection to be made—especially for a Northeasterner who grew up playing and improvising jazz.[citation needed]

December 1952 consists purely of horizontal and vertical lines varying in width, spread out over the page; it is a landmark piece in the history of graphic notation of music. The role of the performer is to interpret the score visually and translate the graphical information into music. In Brown's notes on the work, he even suggests that one consider this 2D space as 3D and imagine moving through it. The other pieces in the collection are not as abstract.

Other activities

Works

  • Home Burial (1949), for piano
  • Three Pieces for Piano (1951)
  • Music for Violin, Cello & Piano (1952)
  • Perspectives (1952), for piano
  • Twenty-Five Pages (1953), for 1–25 pianos
  • Octet I (1953), for eight magnetic tapes and eight loudspeakers
  • Indices (1954), for chamber orchestra
  • Forgotten Piece (1954), for piano
  • Folio and 4 Systems (1954), for variable instrumentation
  • Indices [Piano Reduction] (1954)
  • Octet II (1954), for eight magnetic tapes and eight loudspeakers
  • Music for Cello and Piano (1955)
  • Four More (1956), for piano
  • The Kind of Bird I Am (1957), for orchestra
  • Pentathis (1958), for chamber ensemble
  • Hodograph I (1959), for chamber ensemble
  • Available Forms I (1961), for chamber orchestra
  • Available Forms II (1962), for two orchestras
  • Novara (1962), for chamber ensemble
  • From Here (1963), for chamber orchestra
  • Times Five (1963), for chamber ensemble
  • Corroboree (1964), for three or two pianos
  • Nine Rarebits (1965), for one or two harpsichords
  • String Quartet (1965)
  • Calder Piece (1966), for four percussionists and mobile
  • Module I (1966), for orchestra
  • Module II (1966), for orchestra
  • Event: Synergy II (1967), for chamber ensemble
  • Module III (1969), for orchestra
  • Small Pieces for Large Chorus (1969)
  • Syntagm III (1970), for chamber ensemble
  • New Piece (1971), for variable instrumentation
  • New Piece Loops (1972), for orchestra and chorus
  • Sign Sounds (1972), for chamber orchestra
  • Time Spans (1972), for orchestra
  • Centering (1973), for solo violin and ensemble
  • Cross Sections and Color Fields (1975), for orchestra
  • Wikiup (1979), sound installation for six independent playing devices
  • Windsor Jambs (1980), for chamber ensemble
  • Folio II (1982), for variable instrumentation
  • Sounder Rounds (1983), for orchestra
  • Tracer (1985), for chamber ensemble
  • Oh, K (1992), for chamber ensemble
  • Tracking Pierrot (1992), for chamber ensemble
  • Summer Suite '95 (1995), for piano
  • Special Events (1999), for chamber ensemble

Selected discography

  • The New York School (includes compositions by John Cage, Morton Feldman, Christian Wolff), hatART, 1993.
  • The New York School 2 (includes compositions by John Cage, Morton Feldman, Christian Wolff), hatART, 1995.
  • Four Systems, hatART, 1995. (With Eberhard Blum, flutist),
  • Synergy, hatART, 1995. (With Ensemble Avantgarde)
  • Earle Brown: Music for Piano(s), 1951–1995, New Albion, 1996. (With David Arden, pianist; John Yaffé, producer)
  • Brown: Centering: Windsor Jambs; Tracking Pierrot; Event: Synergy II, Newport, 1998.
  • American Masters Series: Earle Brown, CRI, 2000.
  • Earle Brown: Selected Works 1952–1965 (2006)
  • Folio and Four Systems (2006)
  • Earle Brown: Chamber Works (2007) DVD
  • Earle Brown: Tracer (2007)
  • Wergo Contemporary Sound Series, recorded from 1960–1973: Earle Brown – A Life in Music (3 CDs each): Vol. 1, Vol. 2, Vol. 3, Vol. 4, Vol. 5, Vol. 6

References

  1. ^ See a critical examination of this notational concept in Clemens Gresser, "Earle Brown's 'Creative Ambiguity' and Ideas of Co-creatorship in Selected Works", Contemporary Music Review, 26/3 (2007), pp. 377–394.
  2. ^ "Earle Brown :: Foundation for Contemporary Arts". www.foundationforcontemporaryarts.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
  3. ^ Ryan, David (22 August 2002). "Obituary: Earle Brown". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  4. ^ "Earle Brown – American composer". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  5. ^ Brown, Earle (2008). "On December 1952". American Music. 26 (1): 1–12. doi:10.2307/40071686. JSTOR 40071686. Retrieved 8 September 2024.
  6. ^ Allan Kozinn, "Earle Brown, 75, Composer Known for Innovation, Dies", The New York Times ( July 8, 2002).
  7. ^ Amy C. Beal, "An Interview with Earle Brown", Contemporary Music Review 26, nos. 3 & 4 (June 2007): 341–356. Citation on p. 356.

Further reading

  • Albertson, Dan (ed.). 2007. "Earle Brown: From Motets to Mathematics". Contemporary Music Review 26, issues 3 & 4
  • Hoek, D. J. 2004. "Documenting the International Avant Garde: Earle Brown and the Time-Mainstream Contemporary Sound Series". Notes 61, no. 2 (December): 350–360.
  • Nicholls, David. 2001. "Brown, Earle (Appleton)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.
  • Nyman, Michael. 1999. Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond, second edition. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Ryan, David. n.d. "Earle Brown: A Sketch". Liner notes essay. New World Records.
  • Welsh, John P. 1994. "Open Form and Earle Brown's Modules I and II (1967)". Perspectives of New Music 32, no. 1 (Fall): 254–290.
  • Yaffé, John. 2007. "An Interview with Earle Brown." Contemporary Music Review 26, issues 3 & 4

Read other articles:

Incendi dell'Attica del 2018incendioIl villaggio di Mati Tipoincendio boschivo Data inizio23 luglio 201812:03 (UTC+3) Data fine26 luglio 20186:00 (UTC+3) LuogoKinetaMatiNea MakriNeos VoutzasPenteliRafina Stato Grecia Periferia Attica Coordinate38°03′09″N 23°52′06″E / 38.0525°N 23.868333°E38.0525; 23.868333Coordinate: 38°03′09″N 23°52′06″E / 38.0525°N 23.868333°E38.0525; 23.868333 ConseguenzeMorti100[1] Feriti172 Beni distrut...

 

 

نافين أندروز معلومات شخصية اسم الولادة نافين وليام سيدني أندروز الميلاد 17 يناير 1969 (العمر 55 سنة)لندن، إنجلترا مواطنة المملكة المتحدة  الطول 1.73 سم العشير باربرا هيرشي (1998–2005)  الحياة العملية الأدوار المهمة سعيد جراح في لوست المدرسة الأم مدرسة جيلدهولمدرسة إيمانويل ...

 

 

Rai 1CaractéristiquesCréation 3 janvier 1954Propriétaire RaiFormat d'image 576i (SDTV) et 1080i (TVHD)Langue ItalienPays ItalieStatut Généraliste nationale publiqueSiège social RomeAncien nom Programma Nazionale (1954-1975) Rete 1 (1975-1982) Rai Uno (1982-2010)Site web rai.it/rai1DiffusionAnalogique  Oui, en Italie SD et en HDNumérique  Oui, en Italie SD et en HDSatellite  Oui, en Italie SD et en HDCâble  Oui, en Italie SD et en HDIPTV  Oui, en dehors SD et e...

American politician John Jackson McSwainMember of the U.S. House of Representativesfrom South Carolina's 4th districtIn officeMarch 4, 1921 – August 6, 1936Preceded bySamuel J. NichollsSucceeded byGabriel H. Mahon, Jr. Personal detailsBornMay 1, 1875Cross Hill, South CarolinaDiedAugust 6, 1936(1936-08-06) (aged 61)Columbia, South CarolinaResting placeSpringwood CemeteryGreenville, South CarolinaPolitical partyDemocratic PartyAlma materUniversity of South CarolinaPr...

 

 

Area of London, England For other uses, see Tower Hill (disambiguation). Human settlement in EnglandTower Hill10 Trinity Square, Tower HillTower HillShow map of City of London in 1300Tower HillLocation within Greater LondonShow map of Greater LondonOS grid referenceTQ333806• Charing Cross2 mi (3.2 km) WLondon boroughTower HamletsCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townLONDONPostcode dist...

 

 

Russian biathlete (born 1975) Olga MedvedtsevaFull nameOlga Valeryevna MedvedtsevaBorn (1975-07-07) July 7, 1975 (age 48)Borodino, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russian SFSR Soviet UnionHeight1.63 m (5 ft 4 in)Ski clubCSKA MoscowWorld Cup careerSeasons2000-2010Podiums37Wins10 Medal record Representing  Russia Women's biathlon Olympic Games 2002 Salt Lake City 10 km pursuit 2010 Vancouver 4 × 6 km relay 2002 Salt...

Salvador Agra Informasi pribadiNama lengkap Salvador José Milhazes AgraTanggal lahir 11 November 1991 (umur 32)Tempat lahir Vila do Conde, PortugalTinggi 1,66 m (5 ft 5+1⁄2 in)Posisi bermain PenyerangInformasi klubKlub saat ini BragaNomor 7Karier junior2005–2010 VarzimKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2010–2011 Varzim 29 (1)2011–2012 Olhanense 27 (4)2012–2013 Betis 10 (1)2013 → Siena (pinjaman) 9 (0)2013– Braga 19 (1)2014 → Académica (pinjaman) 14 ...

 

 

American IdolMusim 3PresenterRyan SeacrestJuriSimon CowellPaula AbdulRandy JacksonPemenangFantasia BarrinoTempat keduaDiana DeGarmoLokasi finalKodak Theatre RilisJaringan asliFox Broadcasting CompanyTanggal disiarkan19 Januari –26 Mei 2004Kronologi Musim← SebelumnyaMusim 2Berikutnya →Musim 4 Diana DeGarmo, runner-up American Idol musim ketiga American Idol Musim Ketiga adalah bagian dari acara realitas American Idol yang diselenggarakan negara Amerika Serikat pada tahun 2...

 

 

American race New York City MarathonThe TCS New York City Marathon logoDateFirst Sunday in November[1]LocationNew York City, U.S.Event typeRoadDistanceMarathon26.219 miles (42.195 km)Primary sponsorTCS (since 2013)[2]Established1970, 54 years agoCourse records2:04:58 Tamirat Tola (2023)2:22:31 Margaret Okayo (2003)Official sitewww.tcsnycmarathon.org The New York City Marathon, currently branded as the TCS New York City Marathon for sponsorship reasons, is an annual marath...

American college football season 2021 Iowa Hawkeyes footballBig Ten West Division championBig Ten Championship Game, L 3–42 vs. MichiganCitrus Bowl, L 17–20 vs. KentuckyConferenceBig Ten ConferenceDivisionWest DivisionRankingCoachesNo. 23APNo. 23Record10–4 (7–2 Big Ten)Head coachKirk Ferentz (23rd season)Offensive coordinatorBrian Ferentz (5th season)Offensive schemeMultipleDefensive coordinatorPhil Parker (10th season)Base defense4–3Home stad...

 

 

2016年美國總統選舉 ← 2012 2016年11月8日 2020 → 538個選舉人團席位獲勝需270票民意調查投票率55.7%[1][2] ▲ 0.8 %   获提名人 唐納·川普 希拉莉·克林頓 政党 共和黨 民主党 家鄉州 紐約州 紐約州 竞选搭档 迈克·彭斯 蒂姆·凱恩 选举人票 304[3][4][註 1] 227[5] 胜出州/省 30 + 緬-2 20 + DC 民選得票 62,984,828[6] 65,853,514[6]...

 

 

Membrane enclosed compartments in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria Granum redirects here. For the town in Canada, see Granum, Alberta. Cell biologyChloroplastComponents of a typical chloroplast 1 Granum 2 Chloroplast envelope 2.1 Outer membrane 2.2 Intermembrane space 2.3 Inner membrane 3 Thylakoid   ◄ You are here 3.1 Thylakoid space (lumen) 3.2 Thylakoid membrane 4 Stromal thylakoid 5 Stroma 6 Nucleoid (DNA ring) 7 Ribosome 8 Plastoglobulus 9 Starch granule Thylakoids (dark green) insi...

本條目存在以下問題,請協助改善本條目或在討論頁針對議題發表看法。 此條目需要編修,以確保文法、用詞、语气、格式、標點等使用恰当。 (2013年8月6日)請按照校對指引,幫助编辑這個條目。(幫助、討論) 此條目剧情、虛構用語或人物介紹过长过细,需清理无关故事主轴的细节、用語和角色介紹。 (2020年10月6日)劇情、用語和人物介紹都只是用於了解故事主軸,輔助�...

 

 

Fictional character from the X-Men franchise This article is about the Marvel Comics character. For the DC Comics planet, see Apokolips. Comics character ApocalypseApocalypse on Ariel Olivetti's variant cover ofCable (vol. 2) #15 (August 2009)Publication informationPublisherMarvel ComicsFirst appearanceCameo appearance: X-Factor #5 (June 1986)Full appearance: X-Factor #6 (July 1986)[1]Created byLouise Simonson (writer)Jackson Guice (artist)In-story informationAlter egoEn Sabah NurSpec...

 

 

City in Essex County, New Jersey, US City in New JerseyEast Orange, New JerseyCityEast Orange Fire Headquarters SealInteractive map of East OrangeEast OrangeLocation in Essex CountyShow map of Essex County, New JerseyEast OrangeLocation in New JerseyShow map of New JerseyEast OrangeLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates: 40°45′54″N 74°12′42″W / 40.765055°N 74.211655°W / 40.765055; -74.211655[1][2]Country U...

UK women's rights charity The Fawcett SocietyFawcett Society logoPredecessorLondon National Society for Women's SuffrageMerged intoLondon Society for Women's SuffrageFormation1953FounderMillicent FawcettHeadquartersVauxhallLocationLondon, EnglandServicesAdvocacyKey peopleJemima Olchawski (CEO) Fiona Mactaggart (Chair of Trustees) Dame Jenni Murray OBE (President)Websitewww.fawcettsociety.org.uk The Fawcett Society is a membership charity in the United Kingdom which campaigns for women's ...

 

 

French polymath (1749–1827) Laplace redirects here. For other uses, see Laplace (disambiguation). Pierre-Simon LaplacePierre-Simon Laplace as chancellor of the Senate under the First French EmpireBorn(1749-03-23)23 March 1749Beaumont-en-Auge, Normandy, Kingdom of FranceDied5 March 1827(1827-03-05) (aged 77)Paris, Kingdom of FranceAlma materUniversity of CaenKnown for   Work in celestial mechanicsPredicting the existence of black holes[1]Bayesian inferenceBayesian...

 

 

Hinxworth Place Hinxworth Place is a medieval manor house near Hinxworth, Hertfordshire, England. Formerly the Manor of Pulters, building was started c. 1390. The construction is of clunch with loose flint filling cavities in the lower part of the walls. There is 16th century decoration painted directly onto the stonework in one of the upper rooms. It was once owned by John Ward, son of Richard Ward, who was Lord Mayor of London for one month in 1484. After his death it passed to John Lambard...

Fee

Price to be paid for remuneration for services For other uses, see Fee (disambiguation). This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Fee – news · newspapers · book...

 

 

1950 film by R. G. Springsteen Singing GunsTheatrical release posterDirected byR. G. SpringsteenScreenplay byDorrell McGowanStuart E. McGowanBased onSinging Gunsby Max BrandProduced byAbe LymanMelville TuckerStarringVaughn MonroeCinematographyReggie LanningEdited byRichard L. Van EngerMusic byNathan ScottProductioncompanyPalomar PicturesDistributed byRepublic PicturesRelease date February 28, 1950 (1950-02-28) Running time91 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Singing Gu...