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Harry Partch
Experimental / Classical / Other

This thing began with truth, and truth does exist.



ENCINITAS, California
United States

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Last Login:  12/18/2009
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   Harry Partch: General Info
Member Since7/27/2008
Band Websitehttp://www.corporeal.com/cm_main.html
Sounds Like
Record LabelCRI, Gate 5 Records, Innova Records, Columbia Records, etc.
Type of LabelMajor


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   About Harry Partch
Harry Partch
1901 – 1974

Harry Partch was born in Oakland, California. His parents had been Presbyterian missionaries in China who endured the Boxer Rebellion. Two years after his birth, they moved to Arizona to homestead, but never for long in any one place; after age fourteen, in fact, Partch never stayed more than three years in any single residence. He roamed all over: Hawaii at age twenty, the Midwest and East and back to Northern and Southern California.
At age twenty-nine, Harry Partch gathered up fourteen years of music he had written, based on what he called the "tyranny of the piano" and the twelve-tone scale, and summarily burned it in a big iron stove. American music wasn't really American but was only a facsimile of European convention and fashion. Serialism was only another step along this path, a path Partch wasn't interested in taking. He felt he was only an imitator of the tradition he found dumped on him, without ever questioning the ideas that lay beneath it or its ability to express the confluence of oceanic, non-Western minisounds he heard in the world around him. For the next four and a half decades, most of the time working in virtual obscurity, Partch devoted his entire life to the production of those sounds. A true maverick or visionary in the eyes of contemporary students, Harry Partch was derided by musicologists for most of his life, often called “The Don Quixote of Music.” Only very late in life did he acquire a belated but significant international reputation as both a major musical composer and as an innovative genius. When he died in 1974, he had built around thirty instruments and had devised complex theories of intonation and even of performance to accompany them. His legacy has crested problems equally complex. It has constituted, in music circles, almost a national debate.

Partch's early compositions, dating from the 1930's, are all vocal, with small instrumental accompaniments. They are masterpieces of Americana, employing the language in a natural style uninfluenced by European traditions.

During the late 1940's, however, Partch began to compose for larger groupings of instruments and performers. There were several reasons: he was starting to design and building new instruments to support his harmonic and melodic theories, he was interested in a wider 'orchestrational' palette, and he was beginning to develop his sense of the corporeal performance, which included instruments that had both an aural and a physical presence.

It is difficult to separate the unique sounds of Partch's music from the strange and beautiful instruments that give all his works their special qualities. The Partch instruments are not only performed upon; they, too, perform. Besides being co-conveyors of his music, along with singers and dancers, they are also striking sculptural works employed in the stage design. They are the vehicles of his creativity, around which Partch has designed his own notation system.

Composer as well as theorist, Partch gradually evolved his array of instruments as his musical concepts expanded. One of his earliest, dating from 1930 but preceded by other experiments, is the Adapted Viola, a viola with an extended fingerboard that is played between the knees.

Two lyre-like instruments, Kitharas I & II, date from 1938 and have twelve hexads per instrument; glass rods produce gliding tones on four of the chords.

Also dating from 1945 are two Chromelodeons, reed pump organs tuned to the complete 43-tone octave with total ranges of more than five acoustic octaves. His very precise and expandable multi-tone scale is painted on the keys of his Chromelodeon in a variety of colors and then numbered, as well, for identification in producing exactly desired musical combinations. All his other instruments are keyed, of fixed pitch only, to his 43-tone scale. His own musical language has frequently only the staff itself in common with other written music.

Notation for the Diamond Marimba is arranged to resemble the shape of the instrument, with the exact position to be played shown at the exact time and place in the music. The luminous Cloud-Chamber Bowls have the numerical value of their precise resonance pained on them and are so indicate in the score. The giant marimba Eroica sends out deep, compelling tones that are felt as well as heard, and so noted. Another stringed instrument is the Surrogate Kithara, with two banks of eight strings, and having sliding glass rods under the strings for stopping. Two Adapted Guitars also use a sliding plastic bar above the strings; one tuned to a six-string 1/1 unison, the other tuned to ten-string chord whose higher three notes are but a few vibrations apart.

Providing contrast to the strings and organs in Partch's orchestra is his percussion. The highest is the Eucal Blossom, its dry, brittle pitches produced by solid lengths of bamboo. The oldest percussion is the Diamond Marimba, 1946, its thirty six blocks arranged diagonally in major and minor hexads. Its exact opposite, the Quadrangularis Reversurn, is arranged in reverse order to the Diamond Marimba with two rows of additional tones on each side of the diamond. The Bamboo Marimba (Boo) is constructed of ascending rows of hollow bamboo closed at one end; a tongue is cut in the opposite end and struck with a stick. The Bass Marimba, made famous to film audiences in Henry Mancini’s score to “Hatari” has important lower range tones, while the subbass Marimba Eroica enables one to feel musical tone; it consists of four bars, the lowest eight feet long and vibrating at 22 cycles per second.

The Mazda Marimba is made up of tuned light bulbs severed at the socket, while the bright, piercing timbre of the Zymo-Xyl is reproduced by suspended liquor bottles, auto hub caps, and oar bars. The Spoils of War consists of artillery shell casings, Pyrex chemical solution jars, a high wood block and Iow marimba bar, spring steel flexitones (Whang Guns), and a gourd guiro. Japanese Buddha bells attached to gourd resonators and mounted on a cucalyptus branch are collectively called the Gourd Tree; to the player's right are two Cone Gongs, airplane fuel tank sections Partch salvaged from Douglas Aircraft surplus in Santa Monica.

The most fragile of all the instruments are the Cloud-Chamber Bowls, Pyrex chemical solution jars cut in half, suspended on a rack, and hit on sides and tops with soft mallets. Each bowl has at least one or more inharmonic overtones, and if broken are almost impossible to duplicate, due to the nature of inharmonic overtones. A Japanese Koto, with its characteristic bending tones, is also employed, tuned to the Partch system.

Every sound produced by the instruments is a tone in Partch's tuning and consciously used as such in acoustic relationships. Notation for each instrument is different; nothing is left to chance.

Throughout, the timbre of all the instruments that Partch has built for his orchestra is mellifluous rather than harsh, consonant rather than unrelated. As a result, the intricate rhythms and harmonies the composer employs to evoke dramatic response, to be emotionally stirring an exciting and deeply moving, never become violent.

In 1964 he came to San Diego, first to Del Mar, then to Encinitas, and finally to a small, wood-frame, two-bedroom house on Felton Street near Adams in Normal Heights.

As each new instrument appeared, transporting them became increasingly difficult. Partch once complained about this manger of materialism in a letter. After he was asked to make a long-distance trek with the instruments for a performance, he complained that "this is exceedingly difficult." He then poked a sharp, satirical barb at another musical innovator, know for his experiments with "found instruments." "Hell, I'm not like John Cage. All Cage needs is a gong, a carrot juicer, and a toothbrush."

Harry Partch was a hell-raiser, and iconoclast, a hobo, a visionary, a Bacchic monk, some say a schizophrenic, a mass of complexities, a dove and a great white shark. In one area he was totally consistent: he detested any single ruling attitude or tradition, about which he said, "The extent to which an individual can resist being blindly led by tradition is a good measure of his vitality."

Though no two people can agree completely about the character of Harry Partch, there are several areas of intersection, which are best summed up on the words of Danlee Mitchell. "Harry was a very responsible person. He could scream at people toward the end of his life for doing dumb, immature things. He would fly off the handle -- but not for long or too deeply – when people wouldn't carry out a job in the most efficient amount of time. He was a completely unrepressed individual, never holding back any reaction to his environment, never suppressing anything. And yet you always knew where you stood with Harry. His tantrums would end, and later he would apologize to you with an equal amount of concern and care. Harry would never use something like guilt as a weapon of power. In fact, he hated all games of that sort. He was probably the most sane person you'd ever run across, and his fierce dedication never worked to the detriment of someone else. Harry labored his whole life on his own vision, knowing it would never be embraced as a musical fashion. He continued anyway, always faithful to his principles and to his method of disciplined belief."

The message of Harry Partch, for musicians and nonmusicians alike, is that there are still choices to be made and independent paths to pursue. On several occasions near the end of his life, Partch contended that he did not want people to consider his work the only worthy destination but rather one viable direction deserving serious scrutiny among many.

Partch left his legacy -- instruments, scores, recordings, videos and writings -- in the care of SDSU's Danlee Mitchell, one of Partch's most trusted friends.

This biography was created from liner notes and excerpts from an article in the San Diego Reader - Volume 9, No. 38, September 25, 1980 by Jeff Smith

- John Beal

(Used with permission from John Beal)

Please visit Corporeal Meadows, the Official Partch site.
http://www.corporeal.com/

Discography

Albums

The World of Harry Partch (Columbia Masterworks MS7207, 1969, out of print) "Daphne of the Dunes", "Barstow", and "Castor & Pollux", conducted by Danlee Mitchell under the supervision of the composer.

The Harry Partch Collection: Volume 1 (Composers Recordings Incorporated (CRI) CD 751)

The Harry Partch Collection: Volume 2 (Composers Recordings Incorporated (CRI) CD 752)

The Harry Partch Collection: Volume 3 (Composers Recordings Incorporated (CRI) CD 753)

The Harry Partch Collection: Volume 4 (Composers Recordings Incorporated (CRI) CD 754)

Newband: Partch, Cage, La Barbara, Drummond (Mode 18)

Newband Plays Microtonal Works by Partch, Pugliese, Drummond, Rosenblum, Monk (Mode 33)

Newband: Dance of the Seven Veils (Music & Arts 931)

Just West Coast - Microtonal Music for Guitar and Harp (Bridge 9041) John Schneider (guitar) with Amy Schulman

Enclosure II: Harry Partch (Early Speech-Music works) (Innova 401)

Enclosure V: Harry Partch (On a Greek Theme) (Innova 405)

Enclosure VI: Harry Partch (Delusion of the Fury) (Innova 406)

The Seventeen Lyrics of Li Po (Tzadik, 1995)

Revelation In The Courthouse Park (Tomato Records TOM-3004, 2003)

Videos
"The Dreamer That Remains: A Study in Loving" (New Dimension Media, Inc: VHS-video, NTSC format)

"Enclosure I: Harry Partch" (Innova 400, VHS) Four films by Madeline Tourtelot

"Enclosure IV: Harry Partch" (Innova 404, VHS) Delusion, Music of HP

"Enclosure VII: Harry Partch" (Innova 407, DVD) Delusion, Dreamer, Bonus Album, Revelation

"Enclosure VIII: Harry Partch" (Innova 399, DVD) Four Films by Madeline Tourtelot: "Music Studio," "Windsong," "U.S. Highball," and "Rotate the Body in All Its Planes," with "The Music of Harry Partch" KEBS-TV documentary, "Barstow" and "Castor and Pollux".

1995 - Musical Outsiders: An American Legacy - Harry Partch, Lou Harrison, and Terry Riley. Directed by Michael Blackwood.

Books: Genesis of a Music: An Account of a Creative Work, Its Roots and Its Fulfillments by Harry Partch (Da Capo Press, 1979)

Bitter Music: Collected Journals, Essays, Introductions, and Librettos by Harry Partch (University of Illinois Press, 1991)

Other important books:

Harry Partch: A Biography by Bob Gilmore Yale University Press, 1998

Enclosure III (Innova 402: 5-lb artbook) by Dr. Philip Blackburn

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Thank you to the Harry Partch Foundation for keeping the legacy alive.


   Harry Partch's Friend Space (Top 40)
Harry Partch has 765 friends.
 Loch Raven 


 Lou Harrison 


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 ianmdavis 


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 Luc Ferrari 


 Michael Zerang 


 MR DORGON 


 The Why Because 


 Matt Weston 


 Joe Vitale 


 Nietzsche 


 Fred Lonberg-Holm 


 Partch 


 UAKTI 


 Minutemen 


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 Nathan Hubbard 





Harry Partch's Friends Comments
Displaying 25 of 48 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
Christophe Meulien

Christophe Meulien



Nov 8 2009 9:52 PM

Bonjour,merci beaucoup!Vive la musique!J'ai un coffret de la musique de mr Partch en 33 tour!Desllusion of the fury...Great job!
Cute Structure Network

Cute Structure Network



Nov 8 2009 9:52 PM

Ales+Usher


! thanks !
CSN
Nicolas Battus

Nicolas Battus
Online Now!


Oct 11 2009 6:47 PM

greetings from france!
 


*nico*
Mike7Productions

Mike7Productions



Sep 19 2009 5:17 PM

Thanks for the add!!



Mike
JACK DUPON

JACK DUPON



Sep 2 2009 7:14 AM

No glory for heroes, Pas de gloire pour les héros

Jack Dupon

à la coopé en juin vue par leur copine

MARIE...

Coopérative de Mai

Jack Dupon

live at "La Coope" in june filmed by their good friend

MARIE...

Carnivaleros

Carnivaleros



Aug 25 2009 5:39 AM



Urban Sax

Urban Sax



Aug 22 2009 7:44 AM

Thanks for the add
----------------------


------------------------------------------------------------
The Simple Carnival

The Simple Carnival



Jul 18 2009 1:07 AM

Thanks for the add! :)

Humberto Luis Schenone

Humberto Luis Schenone



Jul 15 2009 6:49 PM

Thanks for the add.
I really enjoyed listening to Harry's works
MaryPickford

Mary Pickford



Jun 23 2009 9:22 AM

Thanks for the Add Comment Graphic

Thanks for the Add Comments and Graphics - Layouts

Photobucket

Yuichi Onoue(尾上祐一)

Yuichi Onoue(尾上祐一)



Jun 18 2009 11:11 AM

Harry Partch is my idol!!

Yuichi Onoue
Japanese handmade musical instruments player



Falloe

Falloe



May 30 2009 3:31 AM

Thanks
Alessandro Podestá

Alessandro Podestá



May 14 2009 10:23 PM

An amazing mind, full of ideas, unique and esencial. Thanks for all your work.
Jack Beals

Jack beals



Apr 25 2009 12:16 AM

Thank you!

Photobucket


Kyle Haish

Kyle Haish



Apr 23 2009 9:22 AM

this one's for a friend i never met but whom i will meet in my future
TAKLAMAKAN

TAKLAMAKAN



Apr 14 2009 6:03 PM

respect!

:=)

ČISTI SAJNS FIKŠN / CLEANING SCIENCE FICTION (COMPILATION)




FREE DOWNLOAD:

http://www.archive.org/details/CleaningScienceFiction
Kwisþ

Kwisþ



Apr 15 2009 9:38 PM




Robert Lipfriend

Robert Lipfriend



Apr 5 2009 9:37 PM

Many thanks for the add!
Great sounds...
All the best
R
Dal Suono Sommerso

Dal Suono Sommerso



Mar 13 2009 6:20 PM

WE LOVE YOU
bullsparrow

bullsparrow



Mar 3 2009 12:27 AM

funny you would have CAGE on top friends list.
PARTCH hated CAGES music!
TODOUNO

TODOUNO



Feb 23 2009 10:51 AM

BEST VIBRATIONS FOR 2009 FROM TODOUNO---mental health/special children music & art movement from Argentina.

LONG LIVE SOUND!!!
Chris Kubie

Chris Kubie



Feb 23 2009 7:51 PM

Thank you for the add and creating the Harry Partch tribute site.
Nice job.
Peace,
Chris Kubie
The Big Drum In The Sky Religion

The Big Drum In The Sky Religion



Feb 22 2009 8:12 PM

we are dwarfs standing on the shoulders of giants, trying to see past the horizon. mr. partch, you are one of the giants.
アイスクリームマン / ICECREAM MAN

アイスクリームマン / ICECREAM MAN



Feb 20 2009 1:31 AM

Thanks for the add.
riccardo nova

riccardo nova



Feb 19 2009 6:47 AM

deeply studying Genesis of a music...I am becoming a ratio as well -:)) so inspiring....I am reading all those ratios/numbers like they were characters in a thrilling novel ...
Thanx
R
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