Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Peter Evans, Trumpet...


Peter Evans, Phil Skaller (fellow UCSD Grad Student), Jeff Kaiser: Stone Brewing Company

Trumpet player Peter Evans visited UCSD this week.

I had the pleasure to hang out with this true, multi-faceted virtuoso (who is comfortable in notated and improvisational environments) over the last two days. Turns out that we both not only love the trumpet, but beer as well! After making the pilgrimage that any beer lover wants to make when visiting here (Stone Brewing Company where we tasted different vintages of the Old Guardian Barley Wine, Russian Imperial Stout, and the Vertical Epic Ale-including the red wine casked version), we also took in the Abyss, Idiot IPA (double ipa) and Anderson Valley Oat Stout at the campus pub (Porter's Pub). Lots of time to talk about art, trumpet playing, and, erm, beer. Highlights of the last two days: Peter's duo concert with Anthony Burr, and the chance to play a 20 minute improvised trumpet duo with Peter in front of 70 undergrad students and trumpet legend Ed Harkins (one of my heroes). An exciting couple of days...

Video of the wonderful Ed Harkins and Phil Larson below....

Friday, January 18, 2008

Bobby Fischer, 1943-2008




Bobby Fischer, the greatest chess player of all time, has passed away after a long illness. A true tragedy, he basically went nuts and became an outspoken anti-semitic crazed racist. He died at the age of 64, the same number of squares on a chess board...

Read the BBC obit here.


Read his Wikipedia entry here.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

New Quarter...

Well, after one quarter of graduate school I look crazy pretentious like this:



Out sailing off the coast of San Diego with Jim Connolly on his sailboat and he snapped that pic of me while I was manning the tiller...it was a blast, makes me want to get a boat.....

I think that photo is hilarious. Don't worry, I'm still the same guy on the inside, but suit jackets with turtlenecks aren't far behind. Maybe a well-trimmed full beard. And a beret. That photo will be on the cover of my new book "Memoirs of a Dishwasher" and mocked by my pal Kris Tiner for a long time..."Ceci n’est pas une pipe?"

Wonderful first quarter, school was great, but also the non-school stuff. I met George Lewis and heard him lecture...played gigs and presented papers (University of Wisconsin, Madison...presented to the wonderful musician Stephen Dembski's class, also played and presented at ISIM held at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL). AND a wonderful gig in Eugene, OR in December with the killer improviser Sabrina Siegel.

This quarter, in addition to my coursework, I will be playing and presenting in Minneapolis (at the University of Minnesota) as a member of Guerino Mazzola's Quartet with Heinz Geisser and Sirone.

I will also be in Philadelphia and New York performing and recording with my friend David Bartel, a Max/MSP head who plays drumset as well.

Looking forward to it all....

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Papa Malick Faye, Walter Thompson....more

Grad school is turning out to be everything and more that I hoped for. Seminars this week were the best yet, building on an already excellent track record. In addition, Papa Malick Faye was visiting lecturer at the class I TA. Amazing, 900 years of continuous family history as musicians. Truly a wonderful class. I danced in front of the whole class of around 200 people, at the encouragement of the Professor, my friend Jason Robinson. Needless to say: I should not dance. Fellow CSEP PhD student Ben Power said of my participation, That is the closest thing to dancing that I've seen without actually being dancing. Thanks.



Also: On Tuesday, the founder of Soundpainting, Walter Thompson, came and gave a demo to the undergrad conducting class here at UCSD. I volunteered to play in the group (with Mark Dresser, Phil Skaller, and others) and had a blast. An incredibly intricate system that allows for loose or precise control over an improvising ensemble. (Thanks, Phil, for the photo!)


Walter Thompson, Jeff Kaiser

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Dinner with Philip Glass

Roger Reynolds of UCSD's music department, was gracious and generous enough to invite some grad students over to his house to have dinner with Philip Glass. Composer/Conductor and chair of the music department Rand Steiger was also present, as was new faculty member, composer Lei Liang. I took a few blurry photos of myself and some friends. Just quick, blurry pics with a cell, but fun. Glass was delightful, entertaining, and as intelligent and interesting as you would expect.


Glass, fellow students Alec Hall, Bryan Christian, unknown, Anna Thorvaldsdottir


Four new reviews in Cadence for pfMENTUM

Cadence magazine, by the way, has a lovely new quarterly version. Highly recommended reading.

Sorry about the scans, don't have time to re-type them right now.

Click here to see them full page.



Gove review by Robert Iannapollo





And,even when reviewers are not overtly fond of our discs, tehy still write interesting and entertaining stuff. Stuart Kremsky is a WONDERFUL writer/reviewer. Enjoy the way he dialogues about the Transhumans:

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Nero fiddled...we played chess...


Will, Jeff, Ben

To pass the time during the campus closure due to the fires, pianist Will Fried, and traditional Irish musician Ben Power and myself have been hitting the board...you've got to do something to keep occupied, these fires are a horrible tragedy....

Monday, October 08, 2007

Answer to Job premier...

I've written a new work for choir and electronics titled Answer to Job.

It will be premiered amidst works by Beethoven, Ives and Handel by the wonderful conductor Dr. Wyant Morton and the CLU Choir.

They are quite fantastic, I hope you can make it.

Friday, October 19, 8pm
California Lutheran University Choir, Dr. Wyant Morton, Conductor
Held at the California Lutheran University Chapel
60 W. Olsen Road
Thousand Oaks, CA 91360
Click HERE for directions
There is no charge for admission, donations will be accepted.

I am grateful, as always, to Wyant Morton, who has been an incredible support over the last few years since commissioning my Alchemical Mass for the Ojai Camerata. It is an honor and privilege to have him as a friend, and as a musical compatriot.

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I have included the complete program notes below. An edited version will appear in the printed program. I got a little wordy...

FYI, I created the software with Max/MSP. It is a few simple objects used to multiply, transpose, reverse and spatialize the choir (which is divided into eight groups). It is a lot of fun.

If someone wants to see the score, please feel free to email me.

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Anger is a short-lived madness. —Horace

Job is a book that is intriguing to children and adults alike for its wild ride. It reads like a contemporary horror story: A powerful Being (God) allows—even encourages—horrible and vile things to be done to a devout and faithful servant. This Being then turns angry when questioned about it by the servant, and finally tries to make up for it by doing nice things for the servant. In other words: this is a Being who acts unpredictably, sometimes benevolent, sometimes wrathful, sometimes the gentle and listening friend in the coffeehouse, sometimes the braggart in the pub. (“I created Leviathan!”) A great story, but one that has handed a big problem to theologians: This crucial question of “whence evil?” A question that has been fought over by people of faith, but one whose paradoxical answers have provided inspiration for visual artists, musicians, and writers to wrestle with: the idea of God as a complexio-oppositorum, an enantiodromia where the superabundance of good produces its opposite in equal amounts.

My favorite work about the book of Job is C.G. Jung’s Answer to Job (where I get my title from). Dark, mystical, full of the author’s strong feelings for the subject matter—there is no waffling about: Jung says what he feels. He delayed releasing it, as he was “quite conscious of the probable consequences, and what a storm would be raised.” But he was, in his words, “gripped by the urgency and difficulty of the problem and was unable to throw it off. Therefore, I found myself obliged to deal with the whole problem, and I did so in the form of describing a personal experience, carried by subjective emotions. I deliberately chose this form because I wanted to avoid the impression that I had any idea of announcing an ‘eternal truth.’”

I wonder how many other artists and writers have been led to struggle with the Book of Job through a difficult personal experience, as that is what led me to the work in late 1994. Attracted to the edginess and vitriol of Jung’s work, I began work on an oratorio based on his words in earnest. I immersed myself in Job, surrounded myself with William Blake’s illustrations of the book, and read all that I could about Job, from theology to psychology. The work evolved until an entire wall of my studio was covered with graphs, musical notes, literary notes, illustrations et al. As I buried myself in this story of the dark side of God, I grew darker and more isolated. I also felt that this was a personally important work that must be finished. The sketches grew, the composition was going to be around two hours long involving choir, electronics and more. Almost a year into the work, further difficulties arose in my life that pushed me further into the composition. I stopped interacting as much with the outside world, except to work as little as possible to make ends meet, stopped applying for grants, slowed down my performance schedule, stopped visiting people but for a few friends, basically was obsessed with the story. And angry. Really angry.

At the same time, I was using the I Ching as a device for brainstorming. John Cage and others had before me, so nothing new there. One day at my studio, on pause from composing, I received hexagram 29 (no changing lines) several times in a row. Statistically, this is extremely anomalous. Add to that the contents of the hexagram it was startling. A classic reading would call 29 “The Pit” or, “The Abyss.” And would say something like: “A dark hour. Don’t linger. A time of unavoidable danger.” Or in mid 20th century non-classic lingo: “Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!” It was indeed a personally dark hour, and I was indeed lingering. But the hexagram is not all bad; it promises if you are sincere, you will have success. Not being one for oracles, I ignored the I Ching. Until I received hexagram 29 (no changing lines) again the next day. It was like a slap in the face, an intervention by a book. I was not sincere, I was angry and obsessed. I took down my charts and all, folded them up, and put them in a file cabinet. I totally stopped working on the project. And it felt good to put it away. Although the idea for the work remained in the back of my mind, I was no longer acting on it.

Recently, in 2006, I wanted to create a new choral work, so I do what I always do: go through my bookshelf, files, poke around and look for something interesting. I found my copy of Jung’s Answer to Job with its old notes in the margin. Which led me to my files. I decided to tackle Job again, but from a slightly different perspective: I would presume the audience knew the story, and focus only on the content of Job confronting God, and God’s reaction. But I would also add to Job’s words, words from Tertullian, Horace, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, Jeremiah, and Isaiah. I would treat it as an excerpt from a larger work, keep it around fifteen minutes, and try to enjoy wrestling with the psychology of the religious contents of the confrontation, not the minute details of the tragedy. I did enjoy it. What remains, is a short work, Job talking to God, and God responding. I hope you enjoy it as well.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Oh yes, irony indeed.....

The latest from Tiner: featuring an Angry Vegan mug and taco meat grease.

http://kristiner.blogspot.com/2007/08/oh-irony.html

Monday, July 23, 2007

I'm selling my RV...!

Shocking, I know.



My lovely 24 ft 1984 TIOGA. I'm sad, but I just won't be able to afford storing it while in college.

I need to get back to SD (I'm in Ventura), so no decent offer refused.

Really.

Click here for info and pics:

http://www.jeffkaiser.com/rv/