Barton McLean

Barton McLean (born 8 April 1938) is an American composer, performer, music reviewer, and writer.

Barton McLean
Background information
Born (1938-04-08) April 8, 1938
Poughkeepsie, New York
Occupation(s)Composer
WebsiteOfficial website

Life

Barton McLean was born in Poughkeepsie, New York, the son of John and Grace McLean, on April 8, 1938. He graduated from State University of New York (SUNY) Potsdam (BS 1960), Eastman School of Music (MM 1965), where he was a student of Henry Cowell, and Indiana University (DMA 1972). He taught music theory and double bass at SUNY (1960–66), while performing on double bass in jazz groups and the Hudson Valley Philharmonic Orchestra. From 1969–76 he taught music composition and theory at Indiana University South Bend. From 1969–76 he directed the Electronic Music Center at the University of Texas at Austin. In 1967 he married fellow composer Priscilla Taylor, and by 1974 they began professional touring as The McLean Mix, presenting their electro-acoustic music, which became a full-time occupation by 1983.[1]

Barton McLean setting up bicycle wheel
Barton McLean in performance

He created a series of solo instrument and stereo tape pieces, best known of which is Dimensions II (1974), championed by pianist David Burge,[2] who performed it extensively for several years. Another extensively performed set in this series, Dimensions III and IV for saxophone and stereo tape (1979) [3] was premiered by Albert Regni in concert at the University of Texas at Austin on November 15, 1979, and recorded by Regni on CRI Records in 1980, and is still actively performed today.

Created with a National Endowment for the Arts Composer Grant, McLean's Song of the Nahuatl, an electronic composition for eight channels of sound, was premiered at the University of Miami on March 24, 1978.[4] The Electric Sinfonia, an electronic work which uses a 16-tone octave scale, won an award at the International Bourges, France Electro-acoustic Music Festival in June 1983.[5] Along with many electronic works composed over the years, Barton McLean also developed the concept of the audience interacting intricately with instruments and live electronics in several installations.[6]

McLean's music is often based upon processes and sounds of the natural world, while using current electronic and recording technology. The result is considered to have both primitive and sophisticated elements.[7] Barton McLean's signature work is the audience-interactive installation RAINFOREST created in collaboration with wife and composer Priscilla McLean. It was staged and performed extensively throughout the USA, Canada, Europe, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast Asia from 1989 until 2013. In a darkened room a taped drone of recorded and synthesizer sounds and continuous projections of rainforest images provided an atmosphere in which members of the public were invited to perform vocally with microphones and on electronic and acoustic instruments.[8]

In 1994, McLean was awarded a New York State Council for the Arts grant to create an installation with a nostalgic Ray Bradbury feel, portraying the ancestors of the tiny village of Petersburgh, New York. Using blown-up photographs and stations set up with recorded speaking voices, instruments, and electronic sounds, Forgotten Shadows was premiered in the Veterans Memorial Hall, Petersburgh, on Oct. 14, 1994. The music was made into a recording that is unique to McLean's style.[9] A new direction in McLean's composing using a computer program written in Cycling '74 software Max/MSP allowed for the creation of Magic at Xanadu (MAX),[10] inspired by the Coleridge poem "Kubla Khan" and performed live on keyboards and computer by Barton McLean. Magic at Xanadu (MAX) was recorded at the Knickerbocker Theatre in Holland, Michigan in 2008 and became a feature of The McLean Mix tours through 2010. Currently, McLean is composing with and developing concepts on the Kyma system provided by Symbolic Sound.

The McLean Mix performed from 1974 to 2013, presenting their separate works and collaborations across the USA and internationally; in these concerts he played the piano or synthesizer, plus woodwinds, amplified bicycle wheel, invented instruments, percussion, and digital processors.[11] The McLeans live in Petersburgh, New York.

Awards

  • 1975–95 fifty five Meet the Composer Grants from MTC New York, New England, Midwest, Mid-America, Texas, West, and California during McLean Mix touring
  • 1976 National Endowment for the Arts Media Arts Grant
  • 1981 Dimensions III chosen as the American representative of the UNESCO-International Music Council-Rostrum International Festival
  • 1976, 1982 National Endowment for the Arts Composer Fellowships
  • 1979, 1981, 1983, 1985, 2002 MacDowell Colony Fellowships
  • 1983 The Electric Sinfonia awarded prize at International Bourges, France Electroacoustic Music Festival
  • 1986 Leighton Colony Banff, Alberta, Centre for the Arts Fellowship
  • 1986 New York Foundation for the Arts Composer Fellowship
  • 1990, 1994 NYSCA Decentralization Grants for multimedia installations
  • 1996 Universiti Malaysia Sarawak Research Grant for Borneo media installation
  • 1996, 2000 Virgil Thompson Foundation (for CRI Recordings)
  • 1997: Asian Cultural Council (Residency with Asian Composers League in Manila, Philippines)
  • 2004 American Music Center Composer Award
  • 2010 NYFA Fellows/Innova Award for complete CD production
  • 2011 NYSCA Community Arts Grant for audio/video production of Peter's People, Creating the Dream

Discography

  • Barton McLean, Orion Records ORS 75192, 1973
  • American Contemporary—Electronic Music, Composers Recordings, Inc SD 335, 1975
  • American Contemporary—David Burge and Lois Svard Burge, pianists, Composers Recordings, Inc 407, 1979
  • American Society of University Composers, Advance FGR-25S (LP), 1979
  • McLean: Electro-Symphonic Landscapes, Folkways Records (later Smithsonian) FTS 33450 (LP), 1979
  • Electronic Music from the Outside In, Folkways Records (later Smithsonian) FPX 36050 (LP), 1980
  • Music of a Timeless Earth. Folkways Records (later Smithsonian) FTS-33875 (LP), 1980
  • American Contemporary—Extended Saxophone — Albert Regni, Composers Recordings, Inc 431, 1980
  • Computer Music from the Outside In, Folkways Records (later Smithsonian) FSS-37465 (LP), 1983
  • Electro-Surrealistic Landscapes, Opus One Records Stereo 96 (LP), 1986
  • CDCM Computer Music Series Vol. 7, Centaur Records CRC 2047 (CD), 1990
  • Rainforest Images, Capstone Records (Parma) CPS-8617 CD, 1993, re-released 2011
  • Gods, Demons and the Earth, Capstone Records (Parma) CPS 8622-CD, 1995
  • The McLean Mix & the Golden Age of Electronic Music. Composers Recordings Inc (New World) CD 764. 1997
  • The Electric Performer, Capstone Records (Parma) CPS-8637 CD, 1997
  • Forgotten Shadows, Composers Recordings, Inc (CRI) CRI 846, 2000
  • McLean Mix Live!, MLC Publications (DVD), 2009
  • The McLeans Mix Three—3 Collaborations, MLC Publications (DVD), 2009
  • Barton & Priscilla McLean: Electronic Landscapes, EM Records, Japan, EM 1060 CD, 2009
  • Soundworlds, Innova Recordings 234 (CD), 2010
  • Peter's People—Creating the Dream, MLC Publications (DVD), 2011

Works

Selected works include:

  • Fantasia for Piano, 1968
  • Genesis, electronic, 1973
  • Spirals, electronic, 1974
  • Dimensions II for piano and recorded sound, 1974
  • Song of the Nahuatl, electronic, 1976
  • The Sorcerer Revisited, electronic, 1975, rev.1980
  • Dimensions III and IV for saxophone and recorded sound, 1979
  • A Lecture, speech improvisation featuring Trevor Wishart, with electronics, 1982
  • Etunytude, electronic, 1982
  • In Wilderness is the Preservation of the World for live performance, choir, narrators, soloists, taped wolves and eskimos, electronic sounds, audience singing, 1983
  • Pathways for symphonic winds and percussion, 1983
  • Rainforest, collaborative installation with Priscilla McLean for five performance stations, digital processing, recorded sound, and slides/video, 1989
  • Visions of a Summer Night electronic suite in 5 movements, 1989
  • Himalayan Fantasy, electronic, 1992
  • Rainforest Images I collaboration with Priscilla McLean, electronic, using rainforest sounds from 3 continents, 1993
  • Rainforest Images II, collaboration with Priscilla McLean and Hasnul Jamal Saidon, music and video, 1994
  • Earth Music, live electronics with 2 performers, 1993
  • Jambori Rimba, collaboration with Priscilla McLean for live performers and electronics, 1997
  • Happy Days for live electronics using music boxes, keyboards, flexatones, party instruments, acting,1997
  • Forgotten Shadows, electronic collage using many old time songs and instruments, 1998
  • Ritual of the Dawn for 6 piece chamber ensemble, 1998
  • Rainforest Reflections for orchestra, tape, two soloists, 1999
  • Rhapsody on a Desert Spring for MIDI violin, live performance with Korg Wavestation, 1999
  • Journey on a Long String, electronic, 2001
  • MILLing in the ENNIUM, electronic collage from installation of the same name, 2001
  • Magic at Xanadu, (MAX) live computer performance with MA/MSP, 2008
  • Concerto: States of Being for piano and electronics, 2009
  • Ice Canyons for live electronic performance with MAX/MSP, 2010
  • Jubilee for live computer performance with MAX/MSP, 2010
  • Peter's People Suite from video of the same name, 2012 [12]
  • !metaSinfonica, electronic music produced with the Kyma system, with video enhancement, 2013
  • Dreamscapes, electronic music produced with the Kyma system, with video enhancement, 2016
  • Night Conjurer, electronic music produced with the Kyma system, with video enhancement, 2016
  • Saxy Dreams, electronic and electroacoustic music produced with the Kyma system with video enhancement, 2017
  • Fantasia on a Bagpipe Tune: 'The Old Maid of the Mill Dust Reel', electronic and electroacoustic music, 2018
gollark: I mean, you can but it's much harder because you need to physically be elsewhere.
gollark: With companies or people or whatever, you can usually just go to a different one. You *can't* do that for governments.
gollark: They do not, at least, have legally binding power and the whole "monopoly on violence" thing going on.
gollark: If it's really easy to convert some new opinion into binding law, then people will do it lots and you get badness.
gollark: And I don't trust the government much either, because they tend to grow excessively and/or do stupid/powergrabby things.

References

  1. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edition, Vol.15, editor Stanley Sadie, Macmillan Publishers, London, 2001, p. 508.
  2. "Recital: By David Burge." New York Times, author John Rockwell, March 23, 1975.
  3. Dimensions III and IV by Barton McLean, The Saxophone Symposium, author Ronald Caravan, Fall, 1980, pp. 6–9.
  4. Barton & Priscilla McLean Folkways Electronics, author Jim Aikin, Keyboard Magazine (formerly Contemporary Keyboard), July, 1979, p. 92.
  5. "Centre National de Création Musicale". Institut International de Musique Electroacoustique de Bourges (in French). Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  6. New Directions in Music, 7th edition, author David Cope, Waveland Press, Prospect Heights, Illinois, 2000, pp. 124–5.
  7. Artists and Activists, author Joseph Dalton, The Troy Book Makers, New York, 2008, p. 71.
  8. Electric Sound, author Joel Chadabe, Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 1997, p. 331.
  9. Forgotten Shadows, author Graham Simpson, International Record Review, September 2000, p. 75
  10. Three DVDs from The McLean Mix, author Elizabeth Hinkle-Turner, Computer Music Journal, Fall 2010, Volume 34, No. 3, pp. 81–85
  11. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edition, Vol.15, editor Stanley Sadie, Macmillan Publishers, New York, NY, 2001, p. 508.
  12. The International Who's Who in Classical Music 2012
  • New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd edition, Volume 15, title "McLean, Barton (Keith)", editors Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell, author Barbara A. Petersen, publisher Macmillan Publishers, place London, year 2001, p. 508.ISBN 1-56159-239-0
  • New Directions in Music, 2nd edition, author David Cope, publisher W.C.Brown, place Dubuque, Iowa, year 1971, pp. 124–25. ISBN 0-697-03556-5
  • Artists and Activists, author Joseph Dalton, publisher The Troy Book Makers, place New York, year 2008, p. 71.
  • Electric Sound: The Past and Present of Electronic Music, author Joel Chadabe, publisher Prentice Hall, place Saddle River, New Jersey, year 1997, p. 331. ISBN 9780133032314
  • Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians 8th edition, title "McLean, Barton (Keith)", editor Nicolas Slonimsky, publisher Schirmer Books (Macmillan Publishers), place New York, year 1992, p. 1180.ISBN 0-02-872415-1
  • Hanging off the Edge-Revelations of a Modern Troubadour, 2nd edition, author Priscilla McLean, publisher iUniverse, place Lincoln, Nebraska, year 2006.ISBN 0-595-67527-1
  • The Electronic Arts of Sound and Light, author Ronald Pellegrino, publisher Van Nostrand Reinhold, place New York, year 1983, p 26.ISBN 0-442-26499-2

Barton McLean *Older Site

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