1,722,425 research outputs found
Phill Niblock: Identity through instability
Despite this chapter's title, the raw materials of Phill Nilbock's music are based entirely upon stability. Each
piece uses only sustained tones performed by instrumentalists who are doing all they can to retain the
parameters of their note fixed. Scores, where they exist, project only stability. The grid below in Figure 1 is
the composer's score from Five More String Quartets (1993), where the players are directed to match each
tone as it is played through their headphones; the austerity of the frequency chart suggests the immobility of
these sustained tones. The intense dynamic of each tone in a piece does not alter throughout the piece, only
with variations in density. There is little to no transformation in the timbral quality of the instrument as natural
timbral envelopes are removed, and these tones are heard continuously throughout a piece: rhythm, as
denoted by sound framing silence, does not feature in Niblock's music
Phill Niblock: mínima expresión, máxima expansión
Phill Niblock (Anderson, Indiana, 1933) es el músico minimalista que nunca salió en la foto. Su nombre rara vez figura en los textos que hablan de los más aplaudidos Philip Glass, Steve Reich o Terry Riley, a pesar de que se le reconoce un papel importante dentro del minimalismo norteamericano surgido en los sesenta. ¿Las razones? Su desprecio absoluto por las estructuras musicales y cuarenta años de trabajo con sonidos puros. Con Niblock el minimalismo no ha perdido un ápice de su significado: el sonido como expresión mínima, como potencia que en cuanto se ordena pierde sentido. No es de extrañar que su nombre haya sido relegado a los márgenes de la música contemporánea ni que los músicos ruidistas se peguen por trabajar con él
(Randolph), Phill Carpenter Phill - Emancipation Index Record
Emancipation index record of (Randolph), Phill Carpenter Phill aged 80 yrs in 1846; certificate number (#436)
Phill Rawlinson
Phill Rawlinson, football player for Branch Agriculture College.Photograph
Minimalism, Technology and Electronic Music
The adoption of both recording technology and electronically generated sounds has led to new explorations of ideas initially conceived for acoustic instruments, and has itself generated radically pioneering concepts. The chapter identifies and explores the various progressive uses of technology since the rise of minimalism in the 1960s, and how technology has helped shaped the notion of similarity and repetition in prominent minimalist composers' approaches. The paradox of how technology has become a dominant feature for certain composers, yet steered others towards a focus on acoustic instruments (which provide a more humanistic quality) with technology acting in a supporting role, is discussed throughout.
An example of the different consequences technology has had is exemplified in the experiences of La Monte Young and Steve Reich. Whilst Young's instrumental work with the Theatre of Eternal Music led to the electronically-generated sine tones of the Dream House, Reich's experiences with tape loops and the Phase Shifting Pulse Gate encouraged him to return to working with acoustic instruments. His gradual transition from an interest in technology within the performance context to a dissatisfaction is explored, and how the technologies of later works rendered a stronger sense of humanity because of this.
Repetitive minimalism relies heavily on the well-documented early studio experiments of Reich and Terry Riley with tape loops in both Europe and the US. The chapter investigates the various influences between them, and how two composers who are all too often grouped together held significantly differing approaches to the use of technology in their music.
Other areas which tend to be more neglected are also discussed within the chapter, such as James Tenney's early process-based work with tape and computer compositions which parallels mainstream minimalist music in simplicity of structures designed to focus perception upon surface detail. The pioneering work involving technology in live performance from Alvin Lucier is also examined in relation to simplicity in process, alongside more recent work from Chiyoko Szlavnics and Peter Adriaansz.
Sustained tone minimalism since Young has developed significantly with the use of electronic means; amplification, the introduction of sine tone manipulation, synthesisers and software development have all enabled composers who are interested in gradual parametric change to gain superior control over their material. The music of Charlemagne Palestine, Phill Niblock, and Eliane Radigue is discussed in detail, in relation to the composers’ various employment of technology, their outlooks on its performative capabilities and its evolving influence over their compositional approach.
Recent trends in minimalist electronic music are also explored, with artists such as Richard Chartier, Ryoji Ikeda and snd providing a focal point for discussion on the capabilities of digital processing. As well as outlining the capabilities of the new technologies, importance is given to how these technologies enable artists to develop on compositional concepts which have existed since the beginnings of minimalism.The tendencies towards extreme sparsity, use of digital silence and finer creative control over surface detail show how these artists’ work operates from within a minimalist lineage, but also expands the conceptual and experiential possibilities of recent digital technologies
Lyn and Phill
Lyn and Phill before a billycart race, cars are parked alongside the road, Darwin, NT, 196?.Unknown.Date:196
White, Phill - Emancipation Index Record
Emancipation index record of White, Phill aged 45 yrs in 1846; certificate number (#217)
Phill Collier, Star-Telegram sports writer, bust shot
Phill Collier in a portrait pose.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/17456/thumbnail.jp
08.01.018: Portrait, "Fraternally yours Phill Jensen [Masonic]"
Portrait, "Fraternally yours Phill Jensen [Masonic]", inscribed in ink on front: b&w; 14.7 x 10.6 cm on mat 27.8 x 20.2 cm, London: USA Studios [19-
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