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Since January 2005, Music From Other Minds has presented new and unusual music by innovative composers and performers from around the world. Produced weekly for KALW 91.7 FM San Francisco by Charles Amirkhanian and the Other Minds staff, and aired at 8pm every Sunday, Music From Other Minds aims to open up radio listeners to experimental classical work by living and recent composers. We bring you the latest in contemporary music from around the world, and some glimpses into the past, to give a context for today’s music.

Follow this link for information and track listings from programs prior to program 501.
Follow this link to download a complete list of works played on MFOM up to program 702.

Previous Programs

Program 737: Nordic Experimentalists

On this program, we’ll hear music by composers from the Nordic region. Included are Norwegian composers Jan Martin Smørdal, Kristine Tjøgersen, Øyvind Torvund, and Tone Åse; Danish composer Simon Steen-Andersen; Sten Sandell and Hanna Hartman from Sweden, and Icelandic composer Bára Gísladóttir. Host Joseph Bohigian is joined by American violinist and writer Jennifer Gersten, who is living in Norway researching music by several of these composers.

Program 736: Stasis Places

On this edition of Music from Other Minds, Charles Amirkhanian visits some STASIS PLACES—those special zones where composers explore the tension between stillness and movement—displaying them through beautifully original sounds and forms.

Tune in to hear Ingram Marshall‘s Fog Tropes and Gradual Requiem plus the Living Earth Show’s recording of Samuel AdamsLyra.

Program 735: Improvisors and Poetry

A profusion of improvisors, mostly from the Bay Area, combining and recombining in overlapping groups. Forget the Venn diagram, just enjoy the magic as Gino Robair, Tania Chen, Henry Kaiser, Tom Djll, Wadada Leo Smith, François Wong, William Winant, Cheryl Leonard, Kyle Bruckmann, Theresa Wong, Fred Anderson, Hamid Drake, Harrison Bankhead, Andrew Raffo Dewar, John Butcher, John Shiurba, Fabrizio Bozzi Fenu, and Bryan Day spin their ephemeral creations. Plus, in celebration of Poetry Month, some spoken word, invented languages, and poetry by Sterling Plumpp, Michael Rothenberg, David Mahler, Beth Anderson, Ron Heglin, Lorin Benedict, and Phil Minton.

Program 734: Ernst Krenek (1900-1991), Part 2

Richard Friedman presents a second program with the music of the Austrian/American composer Ernst Krenek (1900-1991). Born in Vienna, by the time he was 28 Krenek was infamous as part of the modernist avant-garde in Weimar Germany. Coming to the US in 1937 and settling in Los Angeles and eventually Palm Springs, Krenek composed over 240 works, including 5 symphonies, 8 string quartets, and 22 operas. In this program we’ll hear one of his most radical yet rarely performed works, Horizon Circled, from 1967, which demonstrates his unique mastery of serialism and complex structures and procedures. The second hour features his nearly hour-long Second Symphony, composed when he was 23 and a masterpiece of exuberance and originality.

Program 733: World Listening

On this Music from Other Minds, field recordings from around the world. Tune in to hear sound documents originally captured for KPFA’s World Ear Project (1970-1987) by Charles Amirkhanian, Pauline Oliveros, Martin Koenig, and Randy Magnus. Also on the program, two recordings by Formant (Henry Birdsey and Austin Larkin) that utilize multiple high powered microphones placed in large PVC tubes pointed at sound sources, leading to abstracted phonographic impressions of the locations in which they were taken.

Program 732: Invented Instruments

This program features music written for non-traditional instruments invented by the composer or performer. These invented instruments range from adaptations of familiar instruments to large contraptions that take up an entire room. The program includes Daphne of the Dunes by Harry Partch written for an array of his invented instruments, 342 by Paul Dresher for Quadrachord, Hurdy Grande, and Marimba Lumina, an interview with sound-sculptor and composer Trimpin, and Elemental View by Ellen Fullman, inventor of the Long String Instrument.

Program 731: Contemporary Music from Ukraine

Alla Zagaykevych is at the forefront of electroacoustic music in Ukraine. She teaches at the National Music Academy in Kyiv. We’ll hear three pieces by Zagaykevych using recorders, cellos, and electronics. Andrey Kiritchenko is the founder of Nexsound Records and director of the Nexsound Festival. The program features several stylistically diverse pieces by Kiritchenko.

Picturing the Invisible: Focus 1 by soprano saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom comprises eight sparse duets with percussionist Allison Miller, bass player Mark Helias, and Miya Masaoka playing koto. Dutch pianist Wolfert Brederode composed Ruins and Remains in 2018 for piano, string quartet, and percussion, to mark the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I.

Program 730: Ernst Krenek (1900-1991)

Born in Vienna in 1900, by the time he was 28 Ernst Krenek was infamous in his native Vienna as part of the modernist avant-garde in Weimar Germany and Austria, along with Kurt Weill, Hans Eisler, and Paul Hindemith, eventually emigrating to the US in 1938. He composed over 240 works including 22 operas, 5 symphonies, and 8 string quartets. With much of his music becoming available on CDs, Richard Friedman presents an introduction to his work.

Program 729: Just (Intonation) Keyboards

On this Music from Other Minds, Liam Herb plays works by Terry Riley, Michael Harrison, C.C. Hennix, Kyle Gann, and La Monte Young for just intonation keyboard instruments.

Tune in Sunday at 8pm to KALW 91.7 FM in the San Francisco Bay Area to hear it live.

Program 728: Music for Microphones

Microphones are often viewed as neutral, passive tools for solely reproducing acoustic sounds rather than as active devices that are instruments in their own right. The expansion of technology into our everyday lives has made microphones ubiquitous and, according to composer and sound artist Cathy van Eck, these devices are designed to be invisible to the listener, “‘inaudible’ in the final sound result.” Despite this hidden nature of the contemporary, omnipresent microphone, composers and singers use microphones in compositional and structural ways that have had a decisive effect on the writing and performance of music. On this program, we’ll listen to music that centers the microphone as an instrument by Steve Reich, Takehisa Kosugi, Pierre Henry, Diamanda Galás, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Robert Ashley.

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