Rhys Chatham

Many people know Glenn Branca and oddly enough not Chatham, but actually Chatham invented the droning guitar symphonies and Branca got the idea from him when he participated on his Guitar Trio piece in 1977 and explored it afterwards with great results with his own symphonies. Hearing Guitar Trio live is a recommendation as described in an interview I gave for De Volkskrant (translated in English).

 

Besides being a musician, Chatham also owns the lable Table of the Elements at which many interesting experimental music appears from artists like John Cage, LaMonte Young, Neptune, Thurston Moore & Lee Ranaldo and many others.

 

Biography

Post-minimalist composer and New York downtown music figure Rhys Chatham was involved in music at an early age. He studied classical flute, and was already playing works by contemporary composers such as Luciano Berio and Pierre Boulez by the time he began studying composition (including serialism) in his early teens. Chatham started writing electronic works after meeting Morton Subotnick in college, and came into contact with Eliane Radigue, Maryanne Amacher, and Ingram Marshall, among others, at NYU's Studio for Electronic Music. Starting in the '70s, Chatham began composing in just intonation, and made a living tuning instruments, sometimes in trade for lessons, as he did with LaMonte Young. He played in Young's Dream House band and in a group with Tony Conrad during this time. Later in the '70s, Chatham began incorporating rock elements into his music and explored non-notated forms. The rock part of his work mainly focused on electric guitars, which he was inspired to love after seeing the Ramones play at CBGB's. Chatham's guitar works -- the first of which, ÒGuitar TrioÓ, was premiered in 1977 by a trio including Glenn Branca -- were played at high volumes, revealing the overtones, which can sound like voices, but also resulted in tinnitus for him by the early '80s. Chatham's better-known guitar works include "Drastic Classicism" (1982) for four guitars with alternate tunings, and the symphony "An Angel Moves Too Fast to See" (1989) for 100 electric guitars (with bass and drums). Performances of his large-scale works utilized guitarists including Bill Brovold (who went on to form Larval) and Robert Poss (Band of Susans). Chatham began composing for brass (such as "Factor X") in addition to guitar, and resumed notating his works. After years of living in NYC, he relocated to Paris. Chatham also began incorporating his trumpeting (often electrified, with effects) after about a decade of studying the instrument. You can hear his trumpet on Hard Edge (1999, Wire Editions) and Neon (1996, NTone), an album by Chatham and Martin Wheeler. In the late '90s, Chatham co-founded the group Septile with a Bronx DJ and ex-Swans drummer Jonathan Kane.

 

Discography

Factor X. CD, Moers Music, 1983

Die Donnergštter. CD/LP, Dossier Records ; Table of the Elements, Radium, 2006.

Neon. CD/LP, Ninja Tune, Ntone, 1996.

Septile. CD/LP, Ninja Tune, Ntone, 1997.

Hard Edge. CD, The Wire Editions, 1999.

A Rhys Chatham Compendium: 1971-1989. CD, Table of the Elements, 2002.

An Angel Moves Too Fast to See. 3xCD Box, Table of the Elements, 2003.

Echo Solo. LP, Table of the Elements, Azoth, 2003.

Three Aspects of the Name. LP, Table of the Elements, Lanthanides, 2004.

Two Gongs. CD, Table of the Elements, Radium, 2006.

An Angel Moves Too Fast to See. CD/LP, Table of the Elements, Radium, 2006.

A Crimson Grail. CD, Table Of The Elements, Radium, 2007.

Guitar Trio is My Life!, Box set of 3 cds Table Of The Elements, Radium, 2008

 

External Links

www.rhyschatham.net

Rhyschatham on MySpace

Table of the Elements on MySpace

 

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