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Joseph Byrd

NYC 1960–1963

Label: New World Records

Format: CD

Genre: Electronic

In stock

€13.50
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Recordings of works by Joseph Byrd, student of Morton Feldman and John Cage and frontman for The United States Of America, are finally available by the American Contemporary Music Ensemble via New World Records.
Byrd collaborated with a number of Fluxus artists in the 1960s, and also formed Joe Byrd And The Field Hippies, recording psych-rock album The American Metaphysical Circus in 1969. This release, Joseph Byrd NYC 1960–1963, recorded by contemporary music ensemble ACME, includes new recordings of "Animals", "Loops And Sequences" (written for Charlotte Moorman), "Water Music" (written for Max Neuhaus), "Four Sound*Poems" (each of which is dedicated to a woman from the experimental art scene at the time), plus "String Trio, Densities I".

"The imaginative and carefully crafted music of Joseph Byrd (b. 1937) assumes an astonishing variety of guises: he was an integral part of the experimental arts scene in New York and Los Angeles in the 1960s and he founded the psychedelic rock band The United States of America, and its successor Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies, to name just the most salient. Byrd's career resists easy categorization because his collective activities encompass a broader sound world than is typically admitted within the confines of a single genre. In this sense, Byrd possesses the spirit of radical exploration that has long characterized composers of the American experimental tradition. He initially moved to New York in 1960 to study with John Cage, but among the most influential of his experiences during this period were his two lessons with Morton Feldman, whose delicately floating music enchanted the young composer. The works on this recording provide a rich musical document of Byrd's activities in New York between 1960 and 1963, when he studied with Feldman, served as an apprentice to Cage, and participated in the Fluxus group. Crafted with technical precision, all of the works were designed to explore the 'singularity of sound' that was central to Byrd's lessons with Feldman. When Byrd's music was performed at Carnegie Recital Hall in the spring of 1962, Eric Salzman of The New York Times described the concert as a 'thimbleful of tiny sounds' that were 'generally just this side of the threshold of inaudibility.' Initially, the 'thimbleful of tiny sounds' assembled on this recording may not appear to anticipate the extraordinary diversity of Byrd's subsequent work, but they reveal the key to his early studies and the foundation of his artistic development. As with much of Feldman's music, the low dynamic levels and subtly shifting timbres and textures persuade the listener to attend to the sounds more carefully, thereby enriching the perceptual experience."

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Animals (1961)
Loops and Sequences (1961)
Three Aphorisms (1960)
Densities I (1962) for viola solo with 4 treble instruments
Four Sound*Poems (1962)
String Trio (1962)
Water Music (1963) for percussion solo and electronic tape
Prelude to “The Mystery Cheese-Ball” (1961) for antiphonal rubber balloons

Details
Cat. number: 80738-2
Year: 2013