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An American Aboriginal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2010

Extract

Perhaps because America is a new country, her more significant composers tend to be radicals and experimentalists. Among the grand old men of American music one thinks of Charles Ives—the closest approach America has made to a major composer: to a lesser degree of Carl Ruggles and of Wallingford Riegger: and of the still active Edgar Varèse whose works, ignored in the twenties, are having so potent an influence on the music of the mid-century. All these men are known of in England, though we have little first-hand acquaintance with the sound of their music. Another senior experimentalist, Harry Partch, is not, however, even a name to us; and although this is in part due to the fact that he is a peculiarly American phenomenon, what he stands for has relevance to the modern world as a whole. It is time we became aware of him: this article is an informal introduction.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1963

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References

* All the works of Partch here referred to are recorded in whole or part by GATE 5; Records, Sausali to, California. ‘Gate 5’ was a notice on a shipyard in San Francisco Bay. Aft erthe war people moved into barges, ferries, and stilt-houses in this area; among them Harry Partch, who wrote music, built instruments, organized rehearsals and made records here. Gate 5 has also an occult meaning in ancient mythologies, for the City of culture had four tangible and visible gates, and also an invisible, intangible gate which could be entered only metaphysically. This is the gate to illusion. Partch has now returned to Sausalito, after sundry migrations between universities.