Music by Douglas Henderson played at EM-hören:
Details on the pieces:
The Nature of the 102nd Thing (of 10,000) and The 103rd Thing (2001/2003) (11)
The conception for the piece began in the summer of 2001 at the Centre de Creation Musicale Iannis Xenakis (CCMIX) in Paris, where discussions of Julio Estradas imaginaries and Iannis Xenakis exploration of the unimaginable sparked the idea of creating a fully spatialized work in which the fundamental compositional trajectories and imperatives would be directed by the construction of shapes and vectors in space, wherein the nature of the sound composition would develop from the dictates of a kind of sonic holography. I am always looking for ways to turn my ideas about musical structure and inside out, to explore beyond the limits of what I can imagine, and I settled on a structural means to achieve this. Realizing that any pitch/time, or frequency/amplitude system or algorithm will inevitably land me in something familiar, I decided to adopt an extra-musical foundation, and to follow it with my best compositional instincts, but to trust the initiating idea fully until given reason to do otherwise. These are the first two of what will eventually comprise nine movements.
(pages of illustrations) (2005) 1214
is a portrait of gusts of wind through a tree, and a meditation on the nature of representative art in sound. The human organism is a far superior analyst to microphones and tape decks. When I listen carefully to wind in a tree, I can sort out the parts, I can hear the ripples of the foliage and understand the positions of all the elements of the tree. I can see every leaf, and in this piece I performed every leaf, using over 7000 recordings to experience individually each aspect of the tree. Focus, depth of field, the illuminated night sky behind a groomed birch, bluish and crisp as razors -- I wanted to capture that whole impression and to deliver it. The song of a gust is as compelling as any sonata; however, even a sophisticated recording offers none of this, it is the mind and the ear that are able to sort the parts and to find the narrative in them -- the microphone merely documents the whole, generalizing all into an enigmatic hiss. For this project I wanted to return the minds limitless focus to the realm of artifice, and then back to a new, impossible reality. It is first my dream of the tree, and then the trees dream of us.
Music from Empty Holes (2003) 3100
is a 4 channel electroacoustic work revealing the secrets of enclosed spaces. An empty milk jug in a rainstorm, empty drain pipes at the top of a windy hill, and the interior of a woodstove are the basis for studies of resonance, both sonic and phenomenological. The piece culminates with the sound of 65 bottles of different sizes, left strewn about after a wedding, being filled slowly with water and layered one atop the other. The harmonic structure gradually separates from their sense of bottleness, dividing into a hail storm of harmonic percussion against a background of wavering identity.
It is inspired by a paragraph from Chuang Tzu, a Chinese philosopher of the 6th century BC. I had wanted for years to take on the challenge of working from this text, and a stay at a friends farm finally broke the ice.
?In sleep men's spirits go visiting; in waking hours their bodies hustle. With everything they become entangled. Day after day they use their minds in strife sometimes grandiose, sometimes sly, sometimes petty. Their little fears are mean and trembly; their great fears are stunned and overwhelming. Joy, anger, grief, delight, worry, regret, fickleness, inflexibility, modesty, willfulness, candor. insolence -- music from empty holes, mushrooms springing up in dampness, day and night replacing each other before us....?
Chuang Tzu
Biography:
Douglas Henderson’s current work is focused on multi-channel electroacoustic sound installations, sound-producing sculptural installations and scores for modern dance. He has been presenting work in and around New York City for more than 23 years with a variety of musicians, including Elliott Sharp, John Zorn, Zeena Parkins, and Ikue Mori. He has composed music for numerous modern dance pieces including works by choreographers David Zambrano, Jennifer Monson, Mia Lawrence, Nina Martin, Tim Feldmann and Jeremy Nelson, as well as for Ricochet Dance (London, UK) Phoenix Dance Theatre (Leeds, UK) and Wildadance, Copenhagen DK. He has toured extensively in the U.S. and in Europe performing original work.
He studied music composition and theory with Joan Tower, Milton Babbitt, Paul Lansky, and J.K. Randall. He received his Doctorate in Music Composition from Princeton University, his Bachelor's degree in Music from Bard College and a classical recording certificate from the Aspen Music Institute. He recently chaired the Sonic Arts Department at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and conducts master classes in electroacoustic composition, sound design, multi-channel audio and recording arts. He was a 2002 Artist in Residence at Harvestworks, NYC, a 2004 Dance Theater Workshop ARM Fellow, and a guest artist for Cabinet Magazine (NYC) and for Resonance Magazine (London).
He received a 2005 Rockefeller Foundation Multi-Arts Program Award for work with choreographer Luis Lara Malvacías, and the New York Dance and Performance Award ("Bessie") for his work on Kriyas (1998). His performances and installations at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Performance Space 122, The Kitchen, Diapason Gallery, Dance Theater Workshop and Sadlers Wells Theatre have enjoyed the support of grants from Meet The Composer, the Mary Flagler Cary Trust, The Lila Wallace/Reader's Digest Fund, Creative Time, the Rockefeller Foundation and the New York State Council for the Arts, and been included in festivals from New Music America in New York, to the Seoul International Festival of Computer Music in South Korea.
He also designs and builds experimental instruments, such as the double-necked and 8-string guitars employed by Elliott Sharp and the electric harps employed by Zeena Parkins.
Education, Awards
2005 Art in General Commission for Tickertape, a multichannel site piece for the Bloomberg
LP building
The Whitney Museum of American Art Commission for creation and presentation of
(pages of illustrations)
The Rockefeller Foundation Multi-Arts Program Award for collaboration with
Venezuelan choreographer Luis Lara Malvacias on Channel Sur
2004 Artist Resource Media Lab Fellowship at Dance Theater Workshop, NYC.
Long Island University commission for Icebreaker, a multichannel site piece for their downtown Brooklyn Campus
2002 Artist in Residence at Harvestworks, NYC
1999 Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Recording Program Grant for the double CD of
compositions for modern dance entitled an ear for a leg, a collection of works by seven
New York composers (including Henderson).
1998 The New York Dance and Performance Award ("Bessie") with composer Guy Yarden for
music composed for Kriyas , in collaboraton with choreographer Mia Lawrence.
Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Commissioning Award for Kriyas .
1991-2004 Numerous Meet The Composer grants for public performances of works.
1991 PhD in Music Composition from Princeton University, Princeton NJ.
1990 New York State Council of the Arts Commissioning Grant for A Palace of Mud and
Straw, a part acoustic, part electronic work for mixed sextet.
1989 Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Recording Program Grant with Guy Yarden for the
recording of Exquisite Corpses from PS122, a set of collaborative scores for 31
improvising musicians.
1987 Meet the Composer Commissioning Award for Ground Fault, a score for electronic
interface with mixed quartet.
1982 BA in Music Composition at Bard College, Annandale -on-Hudson NY.
Selected Gallery Installations, etc.
2005
Nov. AUX - Technical Breakdown, (Copenhagen, DK): giving up the ghost
Installation in listening kiosks in Copenhagen
Oct. Art in General at Bloomberg LP, (NYC): Tickertape
Multichannel site installation
Aug. vertexList Gallery, NYC: giving up the ghost (2005),
a dream like she loves you (2005), Footfalls (2005)
Solo show of 3 new sound works.
2 person show for the month, with painter Cecilia Galiena (I).
Interactive sound/scupture installation.
2002
Apr. Cabinet Magazine: Sodapop, Lbs/sq.in.
2 pieces included on mag.s sound art CD collection alongside works by Pauline Oliveiros and Yasunao Tone.
2001
Feb. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston MA: What Could Replace Opus?
A sound installation work employing 8 piano-wire strings, 35-65 feet long, stretched across the atrium 25 feet in the air , activated by computer-controlled motors and using the building structure as a resonant body.
Selected Performances
2005
Apr. Clemente Soto Velez, NYC: Channel Sur
Electro-acoustic work for dance for choreographer Luis Lara Malvacias.
Mar. Museo Carcova, Buenos Aires, Argentina: Channel Sur
Electro-acoustic work for dance for choreographer Luis Lara Malvacias.
Memorial Gallery, Curitiba Brazil: Channel Sur
Electro-acoustic work for dance for choreographer Luis Lara Malvacias.
Danspace Project, NYC: If/Then
Sound design for choreographer Richard Seigel.
Feb. Performance Space 122 NYC: They are not Falling
Multi-channel electro-acoustic work for dance in collaboration with composer Guy Yarden. Choreography by Alejandra Martorell
2004
May. The Makor Theater, (92nd Street Y), NYC: Music for 50 Carpenters
Score for 50 performers, hammers nails, and toolbelts.
Apr. Clemente Soto Velez, NYC: Sampling Views from an Awkward Space
Composition and performance for choreographer Luis Lara Malvacias.
Mar. Clemente Soto Velez, NYC -- Integration Festival, NYC:
im Off
Score for classical guitar, for choreographer Melanie Maar.
Bridge of Fools
Score for classical guitar, for dance by choreographer Jeremy Nelson.
Music from Empty Holes (excpt) and Requiem for a Penny
Concert presentation of multichannel sound works
2003
Nov. Danspace Project, NYC: Bridge of Fools
Score for classical guitar, for dance by choreographer Jeremy Nelson.
June WKCR 98.9FM NYC: Sonic Reconstructions
2 hour special on Henderson's electro-acoustic works.
Apr Clemente Soto Velez, NYC:
Link Venezuela
Score for guitar and electronics for choreographer Luis Lara Malvacias and the Latino Americano Dance Festival.
Mar Saddler's Wells, London (UK): The Fact That it Goes Up
Electro-acoustic work commissioned by Phoenix Dance Theater, UK in collaboration for dance work by Jeremy Nelson. Premiere performance at Saddler's and extensive spring season tour throughout the UK.
Jan Dance Theater Workshop, NYC: Half Urge
Electro-acoustic work for 4 channel sound installation, in collaboration with choreographer Jeanine Durning (of the David Dorfman Dance Co.).
2002
Oct Danspace Project, NYC: Sight Unseen
Scored electro-acoustic work for 4 channel sound installation, in collaboration with dance work choreographed by Jeremy Nelson.
Sept Seoul Internationnal Computer Music Festival, (Seoul S. Korea): The Nature of the 102nd Thing of 10,000
Premiere Performance of electro-acoustic surround-sound work in Seoul, South Korea
Dansescene, Copenhagen (DK): A Pocketful of Lies
Composition and sound design for choreographer Helen Saunders.
May Dansescene, Copenhagen (DK): Projekt Guernica.
Commisioned surround-sound, electro-acoustic score for modern dance work by choreographer Tim Feldmann, in collaboration with composer Guy Yarden.
2001
Sept Leo Koenig Gallery, NYC: The Minute Counters
Improvisations with artist David Scher and installation work by European artist collective "Gelatin"
June Tafelhalle, Nurnberg (D): Morphyllactic
Scored electro-acoustic work for dance. Choreography by Luis Lara, Jeremy Nelson
May Danspace Project, NYC: Step Right Up
Scored electro-acoustic work for multi-dimensional sound installation, in conjunction with dance work choreographed by Curt Haworth.
April Tanzfabrik, Berlin (D): Morphylactic
Scored electro-acoustic work for dance. Choreography by Luis Lara, Jeremy Nelson
2001
Feb Greenspan Center, NYC: 1200 Food Installation
Stuctured, collaborative multi-media improvisation - Dance, Installation and Music with Luis Lara, Jeremy Nelson, David Watson, Melanie Maar, Levi Gonzalez,Judith Sanchez Ruiz
Ricochet Dance Theater, London (UK): Zippo
Scored electro-acoustic work for dance. Choreography by Jeremy Nelson, performed by the Ricochet Dance Company.
2000
Nov La Puerta, Barcellona (S): Collage
Scored electro-acoustic work for dance. Choreography by Luis Lara, Jeremy Nelson
Oct Danspace Project, NYC: Painstake
Scored electro-acoustic work for dance. Choreography by Luis LaraLuis Lara
Feb Gallapagos, Brooklyn NY: an ear for a leg
Improvisations with Jeremy Nelson for CD release concert.
Discography
Resonance Magazine - Sound Art Issue Icebreaker
Cabinet Magazine - Failure Issue Sodapop and Lbs/sq.in.
An Ear For A Leg (double CD) Zoar Records ZCD18
Cobra BBC Recording of John Zorns famous score Hat Hut Records
State Of The Union 2001 Elliott Sharp's curation for Electronic Music Foundation, tracing current trends in electronic music EMF-CD-028
Translucency (CD) with saxophonist Gitta Schaeffer AMF-Music 1033
Curb Your Dogma (CD) Spongehead Triple X Records 51073-2
Infinite Baffle (CD) Spongehead Triple X Records 51096-2
Krackhouse Comes Alive (CD) Sordide/Sentimentale CD015
Exquisite Corpses from P.S.122 (CD, Cass.) ?What Next? WN0002
Exquisite Corpses from the Bunker (LP) Heartpunch 007
LSDC&W, A Eugene Chadbourne Retrospective Fundamental SAVE19/20
Audiologie #4 Vox Man Records 54
The Hank Gonzalez Orchestra Parachute 077
with Eugene Chadbourne.
Links:
Resonance Magazine:
http://www.sixsitesforsound.net/audio.htm
and
http://www.sixsitesforsound.net/magazine.htm
Cabinet Magazine:
http://cabinetmagazine.org/art/cds/syntaxerror.php
The Whitney Museum of American Art:
http://www.whitney.org/information/press/180.html
Diapason Gallery:
http://www.diapasongallery.org/archive/03_04.html