Episodes

  • Episode Eighteen - Music in Motion No. 2
    Oct 8 2024

    Episode Eighteen is a continuation of Music in Motion, a project created by the Relache Organization in partnership with the Atlantic Center for the Arts. Between 1995 and 2001 the Relache Ensemble and four other ensembles, each dedicated to the creation and performance of contemporary music, collaborated with five presenting organizations in five cities throughout the U.S. The intent was to collaborate with composers to create new works while interacting with a potential audience as the work was in development. An overarching goal was to enhance the audience for new musical works while expanding the repertoire of each ensemble. Phase One comprised the first three years. Phase Two comprised the second two years and introduced an interactive computer program named The Virtual Concert. A total of thirty composers participated in the project. One of those was Mary Ellen Childs whose work “Parterre” was written for the Relache Ensemble. It is the featured work on Episode Eighteen. Episode Nineteen of the Relache Chronicles will feature music and commentary by Mark Weber.

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    34 mins
  • Episode Seventeen - Music in Motion No. 1
    Sep 13 2024

    Episode Seventeen – Music in Motion & Arturo Marquez

    Music in Motion was a project created by the Relache Organization in partnership with the Atlantic Center for the Arts. Between 1995 and 2001 the Relache Ensemble and four other ensembles, each dedicated to the creation and performance of contemporary music, collaborated with five presenting organizations in five cities throughout the U.S. The intent was to collaborate with composers to create new works while interacting with a potential audience as the work was in development. An overarching goal was to enhance the audience for new musical works while expanding the repertoire of each ensemble. Phase One comprised the first three years. Phase Two comprised the second two years and introduced an interactive computer program named The Virtual Concert. A total of thirty composers participated in the project. One of those was Mexican composer, Arturo Marquez. In collaboration with the Relache Ensemble while in residence at Arizona State University West in Phoenix he created a work titled “Octeto Malandro.” Episodes Eighteen and Nineteen will feature other musical works from Music in Motion.

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    28 mins
  • Episode Sixteen - Lois V Vierk
    Jul 21 2024

    Lois V Vierk is a unique voice in the recent history of music in America. She has composed stunning works for multiples of the same instrument that are technically complex and yield a mesmerizing aural experience. Among these is “Manhattan Cascade” for accordions, composed, recorded and performed widely by Guy Klucevsek, former Relache Ensemble member, composer and pioneering accordionist. (You can hear Guy’s music on Episode Four of The Relache Chronicles.) This episode of The Relache Chronicles features a work Lois composed for the Relache Ensemble in 1992 titled “Timberline.” Lois and members of the Relache Ensemble are in perfect synch with one another. Prior to the recording of “Timberline” is a conversation with Lois, Laurel Wyckoff, Joe Kasinskas and Joseph Franklin to discuss her influences and some of the events that led to her creating “Timberline.”

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    40 mins
  • Episode Fifteen - Robert Ashley
    Jun 5 2024

    Episode Fifteen – Robert Ashley

    “Since he began composing and performing in the late 1950s, Robert Ashley has created a wholly original body of work. Continuously productive, his oeuvre encompasses nearly all versions of music and music/sound performance from instrumental and electronic compositions to film music and music videos to multi sectioned, intermediated staged operas. Ashley has also written essays and scores, and published books as well as dozens of audio and video recordings.” This from the opening paragraph of an article written by Arthur Sabatini for Performing Arts Journal in 2005, reveals a snapshot view of Robert Ashley’s profoundly creative life.

    Throughout the history of experimental music – especially in the United States - there have been many extraordinary artists whose lives interacted with one another in dynamic ways. From John Cage to Morton Feldman; from Philip Glass to Terry Riley; from Robert Ashley to Alvin Lucier…all shared a unique perspective on music, sound, and performance throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Episode Fifteen of The Relache Chronicles features the work of one of the most fascinating artists from the fascinating genre known as “New Music,” Robert Ashley. Better known for his theater works, operas, if you will, we at The Relache Chronicles will focus on two works that define Bob’s exploratory interests: sound production and technology and instrumental/timbral contrasts within the context of performance. Specifically, we’ll hear excerpts from “The Wolfman,” created in 1964, and a complete recording of “Outcome Inevitable,” composed for the Relache Ensemble in 1992.

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    46 mins
  • Episode Fourteen - Annson Kenney
    Apr 26 2024

    Episode Fourteen - Annson Kenney

    Annson Kenney was a dynamic presence in Philadelphia from the mid-sixties until his death in late 1981. A visual artist, writer, performer, and composer, Annson was a difficult man to pin down. Although initially trained in music, his imagination and introspection led him far from his role as a contrabass player. In the 1970’s Annson designed a remarkable series of works using classic luminous tubing (neon tubes) that explored a variety of linguistic concepts. Still, he continued making performative works for himself and members of the Relache Ensemble with whom he had close working and personal relationships. On this episode we’ll listen to some of those sonic works and learn about Annson through commentary by his friends and collaborators who share their memories and insights to his life and work.

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    42 mins
  • Episode Thirteen - James Tenney and Critical Band
    Mar 5 2024

    Critical Band, an extraordinary composition by James Tenney has been described as a “sound poem,” and an “aural flower” slowly unfolding as the pitch tableau becomes evident and clear to the listener. John Cage, a long-time friend of Jim Tenney’s wrote him after hearing the premiere performance a congratulatory note, “…if this is harmony, I take back everything I said to you in the past.” (John and Jim had two quite different concepts of Western harmony.) The world premiere of Critical Band is the single work to be heard and discussed on this episode of the Relache Chronicles, performed by the Relache Ensemble in 1989. It has been described by former members of Relache as the most profoundly important work composed for the group. Listen carefully as you find your way to the critical band, an aural phenomenon that is both revealing and soothing.

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    35 mins
  • Episode Twelve - Bill Duckworth
    Jan 27 2024

    William Duckworth – known as Bill to his friends – was a composer, educator and author who wrote for contemporary ensembles and soloists throughout a busy compositional career in the mid to late twentieth century. He was a professor of music at Bucknell University and published five books on twentieth century music and theory. At the time of his passing in 2012, Bill was developing large scale interactive digital works for the internet in collaboration with his wife, Nora Farrell, a computer software designer. He is best known for “The Time Curve Preludes, a work for piano solo and “Southern Harmonies” for choral ensemble. On this episode of The Relache Chronicles we will discuss and listen to an early work of Bill’s titled “Pitch City Breakdown” for amplified piano and “Simple Songs About Sex and War “for mezzo-soprano and synthesizer. Both works are played and sung by members of The Relache Ensemble, with whom he often collaborated.

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    38 mins
  • Episode Eleven - New Music America 1987 Philadelphia (3 of 3)
    Nov 24 2023

    Episode 11

    Episode 11 is the third of three episodes of music and commentary from the New Music America Festival 1987 in Philadelphia, produced and presented by the Relache organization. Sound installations and outdoor performances in some unlikely locations have been part of New Music America festivals throughout the eleven-year history of the festivals. For this episode we have selected three outdoor events and one example of computer influenced works by composer-installations artists Alvin Curran, Bob Goldberg, Joel Chadabe and the collaborative team of Christopher Janney and Joan Bingham. From the bowels of Philadelphia’s Broad Street Subway station to the Delaware River waterway, these works celebrate the diversity of musical events that were part of New Music America 1987 – Philadelphia.

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    29 mins