| I'M AMONG THE PASTORAL FOOTHILLS OF THE Sierra Nevada Mountains in rural Camptonville, Calif., spending an afternoon at Terry Riley's Sri Moonshine Ranch. What does the godfather of modern minimalism have in store for me today? A batch of salsa, of course. Riley and his wife Ann have been making salsa every summer for 25 years and have their industrious cooking process down to a science. Using hot chilies grown on their farm as well as peppers from neighbors and friends in New Mexico, they chop, stir and boll impressive amounts of organic tomatoes, onions, cilantro and other ingredients I'm not at liberty to divulge. The net result is 18 vacuum-packed jars of Riley salsa, aptly dubbed "Hot 2000." After lunch, we retire to Riley's upstairs workspace, where two grand pianos sit side by side. it's here, far from urban and social distractions, where Riley composes music. One of Riley's recent projects has him paired with the Kronos Quartet working for NASA. Thanks in no small part to Kronos leader David Harrington, Riley is commissioned to compose music based on radio waves collected by the Voyager space shuttle. "[NASA] has done a couple of music projects before," explains Riley. "This one is based on Voyager's exploration, which flew by all of the planets. on board Voyager was a device called the Plasma wave Receptor, which was invented by a Dr. Gurnett in Iowa. This [device] Is able to receive radio waves the planets themselves broadcast, and each planet has a different sound wave." Riley is the perfect candidate for NASA's space-age string quartets. Here on Earth, he's spent his time creating music light years ahead of his peers. Riley made his giant leap in the '60s with In C, a towering obelisk of a composition that cast an influential shadow over Philip Glass, Brian Eno and Pete Townshend (remember the intro to "Baba O'Riley" from. Who's Next?) and blurred the boundaries between classical music, avant-garde experimentalism and trance-inducing improvisation for all who followed. |
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"THE WAY TIME PASSES AND THE WAY THE MIND |
| BORN IN COLFAX, CALIF., IN 1935, RILEY WAS A barrelhouse piano prodigy by the time he arrived at San Francisco State College in the mid-'50s. One of Riley's early peers was Pauline Oliveros a groundbreaking performer/composer who remains active in
progressive music circles. "When we were going to school together, Terry was a really hot pianist," recalls
Oliveros. "it was quite clear that he was an enormous talent and had music coming out of his pores." In 1959, Riley left San Francisco State, enrolling at the University of California at Berkeley and eventually becoming a member of the San Francisco Tape Music Center, an illustrious workshop on Divisadero Street that became a prime gathering place for Northern California's avant-garde community. Along with filmmakers, dancers and artists, Riley forged relationships with a list of musicians that now reads like a post-classical/avant-electronic/Eastern-drone who's-who. Besides collaborating with Oliveros, Riley exchanged ideas with young composers like Morton Subotnick, Steve Reich and Ramon Sender; even future Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lash was hanging around. Most importantly, Riley encountered La Monte Young at Berkeley. If Riley is the founding father of modern minimalism, Young is the genre's designated granddad. When the two met in 1960, Young had already developed his ideas on extended tones and how musical time can pass with a minimum of sound. During the '60s, Riley, Tony Conrad and the Velvet Underground's John Cale were part of Young's Theater Of Eternal Music, and the group's droning, drug-fueled performances would often last through the night. "Terry Riley is the most harmonious musician to work with I have ever known," says Young. "I appreciate it more and more over the years, although we don't have as frequent an opportunity to perform and rehearse together. We really were able to capitalize on this in the Theater Of Eternal Music because there was so much co-creativity encouraged in the group." The '60s were a period of heady discovery for Riley. Outgrowing the honky-tonk piano, he began experimenting with tape manipulations and employed a tapedelay device called the time-lag accumulator. Some compositions reflected the use of psychedelic drugs, like the mesmerizing tape-loop construction "Mescalin Mix." "I went to Europe for a couple of years after I got out of Berkeley," recalls Riley. "That's when I had a big period of bringing my ideas into focus and got to work with Chet Baker in Paris. The Tape Music Center had gotten started, and when I came back, I reconnected with Pauline and Morton. There was a lot of work I'd been doing, including (music for the 1963 theater production) The Gift with Chet Baker. I found, through accident, that tape loops build up this long form. I'd sit there listening as this loop was repeating over and over, creating a whole musical form. The way time passes and the way the mind works when it focuses on an object, it's like a meditation. A tape loop is a kind of mantra." Both "Mescalin Mix" and his work on The Gift involved sonic fragmentation and the stretching and slackening of time via now-primitive tape technology. Whether looping tape through two recorders or extending lengths of ribbon out of his window, around a wine bottle and then back into a tape machine, Riley was at the forefront of experimental music. ![]() ALL THIS WORK, HOWEVER, PALED AT THE DEBUT OF Riley's most memorable composition, In C. A seminal work with its nonstop pulse, repetitive themes and interlocking modal melodies, in C was devised by Riley during a bus trip and written out in the space of two days. -in 1964, I'd been working on all these electronic pieces," says Riley. "I'd [also] written In C, but it had never been performed. So I took all this stuff down to the Tape Music Center. I met Steve Reich and John Gibson. They put together this pick-up band, and In C was recorded," In C took Riley's hypnotic tape-loop concepts and brought the repetitive motif back to traditional acoustic instrumentation. The cosmic sound cycle gradually blossoms into a shimmering aural experience with 53 recurring figures. Crediting Young with the spirit of in C but not the content, Riley is proud of the resilient piece, which has been performed all over the world. There are Canadian and Italian versions, a 25th anniversary concert
recording and even a rendition by the Shanghai Film orchestra using traditional Chinese instruments. in the '70s, a 15-piece rock band performed In C; in the '80s, there was an all-guitar performance; and last year's Lincoln Center Festival featured an electronic version with Robert Moog playing synthesizer. CBS Records released Riley's most distinguished rendering of In C in 1968, and while there have been countless interpretations, the clarity and precision of this vintage performance remains unmatched. "In C is a perfect masterpiece," says Young. "I compare it with the theme from the Funeral March in
Mahler's Fifth Symphony and Schoenberg's opening theme in Verklärte Nacht. Terry influenced not only Steve Reich, Philip Glass and their protégés, such as John Adams, but his influence spread out to certain European rock groups, such as Daevid Allen's Gong, Can and Tangerine Dream. in the case of these rock groups, I think sometimes Terry was the direct link." "THE MAGIC AND POWER OF THE SOUNDSCAPE THAT TERRY CREATED IN CONCERTS DEFIED ALL EXPLANATION OR UNDERSTANDING." -Tony ConradScoring a three-album deal with CBS for the label's Masterworks series, Riley recorded his classic version of In C with an accomplished group of musicians including Stuart Dempster on trombone,
Jon Hassell on trumpet and pianist Margaret Hassell playing the C-note "pulse." It quickly galvanized Riley's reputation as a serious composer, but it was marketed toward the younger record-buying public. CBS pitched In C and Riley's enthralling follow-up album, 1969's A Rainbow In Curved Air, as psychedelic- rock brain candy, advertising them alongside other Masterworks synth oddities like Walter Carlos' Switched On Bach and Subotnick's Touch. |