Dance great Cunningham dies at 90



A statement from the Cunningham Dance Foundation said the New
York-based dancer “died peacefully in his home of natural causes” on
Sunday.

He formed the Merce Cunningham Dance Company in 1953 and choreographed nearly 200 works for it.

Although he used a wheelchair by the end of his career, Cunningham danced on stage well into his 80s.

‘Kind and hospitable’

The
statement said he “revolutionised the visual and performing arts, not
for the sake of iconoclasm, but for the beauty and wonder that lay in
exploring new possibilities”.

Radiohead have paid tribute to the dance star, calling him “kind and hospitable”.

In a statement posted on their website, the band said: “We are very sad to hear about Merce Cunningham’s death.

“Merce invited us to take part in his Split Sides project, in October 2003.

DANCING WITH CUNNINGHAM
Steve Schifferes
Steve Schifferes, BBC News reporter


I
studied the Cunningham technique as a student at Bennington College in
Vermont with many of his key disciples, and later briefly took some
classes with Cunningham at his Westbeth studio in New York’s Greenwich
Village.

Cunningham was mesmerising in person and as a dancer –
especially the expressiveness of his gestures, with his feet almost as
expressive as his hands.

His technique, involving loosening up
the lower back and making movement more free-flowing, was a relief to
those who studied the tensed movements of his previous mentor, the
great modern dancer Martha Graham, whose story-telling approach to
dance he also rejected.


“It was a collaboration of music and dance, but one where each of
the elements – set, costume, choreography and music – were randomly
combined, to create a performance around chance.”

They added
that Cunningham had showed them how “discipline and focus can create
the space for an unexpected moment, when something new can suddenly
exist: such a contrast to the scripted world of rock”.

‘Great artist’

Judith
Fishman, chairman of the Cunningham Dance Foundation, said: “Merce was
an artistic maverick and the gentlest of geniuses.

“We have
lost a great man and a great artist, but we celebrate his extraordinary
life, his art, and the dancers and the artists with whom he worked.”

In
April, Cunningham celebrated his 90th birthday with the premiere of new
work Nearly Ninety – set to new music from Led Zeppelin’s John Paul
Jones and Sonic Youth – at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, in New York.

Last month, Cunningham set up The Living Legacy Plan, aimed at continuing his teachings in the future.

As
part of the plan, Cunningham’s work is to celebrated by his company
with a two-year world tour culminating in a final performance in New
York.

Toss of coin

Born just after World War I in a small town near Seattle, Cunningham loved to dance as a child.

From
1939 to 1945, he was a soloist in the company of Martha Graham,
regarded at the time as one of the foremost pioneers of modern dance.

He
presented his first New York solo concert in April 1944, with music
from composer John Cage, who became his life partner and frequent
collaborator until Cage’s death in 1992.

Merce Cunningham

Cunningham formed his own dance company in 1953

In a radical move, the couple decided to end the traditional
marriage of movement and music, saying that both arts should exist
independently even when sharing the same space.

Cunningham also abandoned conventional storytelling through ballet to focus entirely on the poetry of dance.

He
even tossed coins or threw dice to determine steps, saying the use of
chance was “a present mode of freeing my imagination from its own
cliches”.

He was hugely admired by other dancers and worked with visual artists such as Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol.

Cunningham’s work has been presented by the New York City Ballet, Zurich Ballet and the Rambert Dance Company among others.

Among
the accolades he received over his long career included the Kennedy
Center Honors in 1985 and the National Medal of Arts in 1990.

Call for Submissions: Journal SEAMUS Vol. 21, No. 1

Call for submissions:

Journal SEAMUS invites submissions for Vol. 21, No. 1 of the journal.

Journal SEAMUS is the official publication of the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the United States. The Society is devoted to the support, study, and development of electro-acoustic music.

For Vol. 21, No.1, we are making an open call to all facets pertinent to electro-acoustic music. This is includes, for example, compositional techniques, technical topics, signal processing and sound synthesis, analysis, historical studies, musicology, cultural studies, aesthetics, acoustics, interviews, new interfaces, and musical mathematics. The editors encourage contributions from all members of the electro-acoustic music community, including composers, theorists, musicologists, technologists, engineers, scientists, and aestheticians. Students are encouraged to submit articles.

A special section we will add to forthcoming issues starting with Vol. 20, No. 2 is the “Tips and Tricks” section in Journal SEAMUS. This section will provide information for our community with the latest (and old alike!) tricks, need-to-knows, tutorials, and other “tricks of the trade” such as compositional strategies, programming tips, hacks, DSP topics, hardware, recording tips, miking techniques, performance must-knows, and the like.

Manuscripts must be submitted electronically. Main articles generally are of 2,000 to 6,000 words. Microsoft Word is the preferred format; however, files can also be saved in RTF format with an accompanying PDF version. Manuscripts should be written according to the Chicago Manual of Style. Footnotes should be numbered consecutively and gathered at the end of the manuscript. Graphs, charts, and musical examples should be sent as separate attachments for ease of layout. Please include a brief biography and photograph (60 words or less).

Articles in electronic format should be submitted to the Managing Editor Iroro Orife at iroro@defchild.com <mailto:iroro@defchild.com>. For announcements/reviews of books, music, and other publications please contact Assistant Editor for Publications Brent Reidy at brent.c.reidy@gmail.com <mailto:brent.c.reidy@gmail.com>. For event related articles direct email to Assistant Editor for Events Rachel Foote at foote.rachel@gmail.com <mailto:foote.rachel@gmail.com>. Items for “Tips and Tricks” should be sent to Editor Tae Hong Park at park@tulane.edu <mailto:park@tulane.edu>.

Articles must be received no later than September 1, 2009 for possible inclusion in this edition; articles received after that time may be considered for future editions. Thank you very much.

Sincerely,
Tae Hong Park

Editor, Journal SEAMUS

Call: CEMC/EMSAN Day 2009

ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PARTICIPATION


CEMC/EMSAN Day Colloquium
28 octobre 2009, MusicAcoustica Festival, Beijing

EMSAN – International Network of Electroacoustic Music Studies in East Asia

For the second consecutive year, an EMSAN colloquium will be organised in collaboration with CEMC and the Musicacoustica festival.
This year, the EMSAN/CEMC Day will revolve around two themes:

Theme 1
Visions of the Future of Electroacoustic Music in Asia

How will Electroacoustic Music evolve in Asia?
Which trends, which hopes, which efforts are carried out by composers, performers, educators and institutions?
How is the future different from what can be expected in other parts of the world?
How does the strong and ancient cultural past of Asia plays a role in shaping the future?

The presentations will discuss practical, theoretical or esthetical aspects of these visions of the future. They will later be published in the online Proceedings of the EMSAN/CEMC Day.

Theme 2
Panel discussion: Projects of Publications on Electroacoustic Music in Asia

EMSAN has been asked to supervise two publication projects. The first will be a book published in English in the United States by Electronic Music Foundation. The second will be an issue of a professional journal and will also be in English.

Comprehensive texts on the growth and the trends of Electroacoustic Music in Asia would be extremely important: although the development of this music in other parts of the world has been rather well documented (namely Europe and North America), little has been written on Asian Electroacoustic Music.

This book will gather chapters relative to each participant country. Two themes are envisioned: 1) An historical account of the development of Electroacoustic Music in each country of region, and 2) questions of esthetics, musical thought and musical techniques relevant to each country or region. The chapters will be published in English but could also be included in publications in their original languages. If necessary, they could be written in their original language before being provided to Electronic Music Foundation in English.

Each country or region will have a correspondant who will be responsible for the local contributions. It is expected that the editorial structure will be defined during the meeting. The book is expected to appear in 2012 in the EMS Media book series of Electronic Music Foundation (New York).

The contributions for the professional journal will be of a different nature. The will focus on particular issues such as musical works, composers or specific musical trends. Care will be taken to balance the contributions from the different countries and regions.

Organisation

The EMSAN/CEMC Day colloquium will take place during the Musicacoustica Festival week (26-30 Octobre 2009), Central Conservatory, Beijing, China.

Participation is free. To present a paper, please send a short abstract to:
marc.battier@paris-sorbonne.fr (in English)
Also, send a photo and your short bio to:
xinyuan_yuanyuan@yahoo.com.cn

Please send us your proposal before Septembre 20  so that we can include it in the Festival brochure. Thank you.

For information on the Musicacoustica Festival, please write to:
mungozhangruibo@gmail.com
or
xinyuan_yuanyuan@yahoo.com.cn

We are looking forward to seeing you in Beijing for the Festival and the EMSAN/CEMC Day colloquium.

ZHANG Xiaofu 张小夫 and Marc BATTIER

Links:
http://www.musicacoustica.cn/
http://cemc.ccom.edu.cn/
http://omf.paris-sorbonne.fr/EMSAN/