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Alvin Lucier was born in 1931 in Nashua, New Hampshire. He was educated in
Nashua public and parochial schools, the Portsmouth Abbey School, Yale,
and Brandeis and spent two years in Rome on a Fulbright Scholarship. From
1962 to 1970 he taught at Brandeis, where he conducted the Brandeis
University Chamber Chorus which devoted much of its time to the
performance of new music. Since 1970 he has taught at Wesleyan University
where he is John Spencer Camp Professor of Music.
Lucier has pioneered in many areas of music composition and performance,
including the notation of performers' physical gestures, the use of brain
waves in live performance, the generation of visual imagery by sound in
vibrating media, and the evocation of room acoustics for musical purposes.
His recent works include a series of sound installations and works for
solo instruments, chamber ensembles, and orchestra in which, by means of
close tunings with pure tones, sound waves are caused to spin through
space.
Mr. Lucier performs, lectures and exhibits his sound installations
extensively in the United States, Europe and Asia. He has visited Japan
twice: in 1988 he performed at the Abiko Festival, Tokyo, and installed
MUSIC ON A LONG THIN WIRE in Kyoto; in 1992 he toured with pianist Aki
Takahashi, performing in Kawasaki, Yamaguchi and Yokohama. In 1990-91 he
was a guest of the DAAD Kunstler Program in Berlin. In January 1992, he
performed in Delhi, Madras, and Bombay, and during the summer of that year
was guest composer at the Time of Music Festival in Vitaasari, Finland.
He regularly contributes articles to books and periodicals. His own book,
Chambers, written in collaboration with Douglas Simon, was published by
the Wesleyan University Press. In addition, several of his works are
available on Cramps (Italy), Disques Montaigne, Source, Mainstream, CBS
Odyssey, Nonesuch, and Lovely Music Records.
In October, 1994, Wesleyan University honored Alvin Lucier with a five-day
festival, ALVIN LUCIER: COLLABORATIONS, for which he composed twelve new
works, including THEME, based on a poem by John Ashbery and SKIN, MEAT,
BONE, a collaborative theater work with Robert Wilson. In April, 1997,
Lucier presented a concert of his works on the MAKING MUSIC SERIES at
Carnegie Hall and in October of the same year his most recent sound
installation, EMPTY VESSELS, was exhibited at the Donaueschingen Music
Festival in Germany. Recently, DIAMONDS for three orchestras was
performed under the direction of Petr Kotik at the Prague Spring Festival,
1999.
In March 1995, REFLECTIONS/REFLEXIONEN, a bi-lingual edition of Lucier's
scores, interviews and writings was published by MusikTexte, Koln.
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