Naked Close-Up Naked Close-Up

Naked Close-Up

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Descrizione dell’editore

Composer, artist, and co-Director of the San Francisco Tape Music Center from 1962 to 1966, Ramón Sender Barayón portrays the tenor of the times in the music and art world of San Francisco in the mid-1960s. A mixture of fact and fiction, history and imagination, he invents the Multi-Media Space-Time Lab as a center in which a group of musicians and a filmmaker explore new freedoms in music and film and try out new ideas. Real people, among them John Cage, Stu Dempster, Ken Kesey, Steve Reich, Terry Riley, and David Tudor, pass fleetingly through the Lab as, in fact, they passed through the San Francisco Tape Music Center. They add credence to the historical setting. But the group of artists who inhabit the Lab are imaginary amalgams of the San Francisco art scene at the time. They are cheerful, zany, creative, charming, and touching. They do wonderful things. Most important, they are serious about their work. They present models that, from today's perspective, opened up new ways to think about music. As one of the characters says towards the end of the book, "I don’t think any of us yet realize what a special thing the Lab has been.”  And that's the reality in the book. As Ramón Sender Barayón points out, "That's what this book is about. It's a about a special thing."


About the author:


Ramon Sender Barayón is a composer, visual artist and writer. He holds a B. Mus from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where he studied with Robert Erickson, and an M.A. from Mills College, where he studied with Darius Milhaud. He was the co-director, with Morton Subotnick, of the San Francisco Tape Music Center from 1962 to 1966, during which time he collaborated with composers and visual artists including Pauline Oliveros, Tony Martin, Joseph Byrd, Terry Riley, William Maginnis and many others. He also collaborated with Don Buchla in the design of the first Buchla synthesizers. In 1966, with Ken Kesey and Stewart Brand, he co-produced the Trips Festival, a three-day event that, in conjunction with The Merry Pranksters, brought together the nascent hippie movement for the first time.


Following 1966, he was a resident at Lou Gottlieb's Morning Star Ranch, then the Ahimsa Ranch. He lived and worked in and around Occidental, California, until 1979, then collaborated with author Alicia Bay Laurel on 'Being of the Sun'. In 1989, he founded the Peregrine Foundation, of which he was the administrator until 1999. He currently lives in San Francisco and works as an artist, musicians, and author.

GENERE
Arte e intrattenimento
PUBBLICATO
2012
1 ottobre
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
177
EDITORE
Intelligent Arts Inc.
DIMENSIONE
6,7
MB