---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2009 07:58:40 -0500
From: mIEKAL aND <[email protected]>
Reply-To: Theory and Writing <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Maryanne Amacher (1943-2009)

Maryanne Amacher (1943-2009)

http://www.artsjournal.com/postclassic/2009/10/maryanne_amacher_1943-2009.html

The music world lost one of its most bizarre characters today, and I say that 
with the utmost affection. Maryanne Amacher was an amazing composer of sound 
installations, who occasionally taught courses at Bard. I first encountered her 
in 1980 at New Music America in Minneapolis. She had, as was her wont, fitted 
an entire house with loudspeakers, and the staff was in a state of jitters 
because at opening time she was still obsessively running around and changing 
things. She was a tireless perfectionist. Years later I interviewed her for my 
history of American music. A Stockhausen student, she was absolutely 
inscrutable, so intuitive that pinning facts down was an insult to her spirit. 
My first ten questions having elicited no specific information, I finally asked 
whether her original sound sources were acoustic or electronic in origin. Her 
perplexed answer: "I really can't say." She was vagueness personified. Yet she 
was an incredible artist, and my son thought she was the best electronic music 
teacher Bard had. She typically wore bright red overalls and aviator goggles, 
and I'd be astonished if her wiry frame weighed 90 pounds. After one semester 
with her, one of my colleagues - an artistic and sympathetic soul, but I 
understood his frustration - said, "I feel like I'm on the set of You're a Good 
Man, Charlie Brown." She lived in a huge old house in Kingston that was 
cluttered wall to wall with papers, tapes, and technical equipment, among which 
one walked gingerly through narrow paths. You closed doors carefully, too, for 
fear the entire soggy house would fall down. But she was some kind of genius, 
and her spatially intricate sound installations, better appreciated in Europe 
than here, had to be heard live: there is no way to adequately document them on 
recording. As with La Monte Young, you felt that her ears were picking up 
things yours couldn't. She lived for her art. I heard a few weeks ago that 
she'd had a stroke, then from Pauline Oliveros that she was in a nursing home, 
and today she passed away. I do hope her work is well documented, because it is 
absolutely inimitable. We will never hear her like again.

--Kyle Gann


Maryanne Amacher & Thurston Moore at Tonic

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmglkEUHUO8

Amacher Archive Project

http://www.maryanneamacher.org/Amacher_Archive_Project/Amacher_Archive_Project.html
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