• Outside Music Inside the Golden State

  • By: Eliot Burk
  • Podcast
Outside Music Inside the Golden State  By  cover art

Outside Music Inside the Golden State

By: Eliot Burk
  • Summary

  • Interviews with creators of experimental, contemporary classical, noise, freely improvised, or otherwise outsider music in California. A podcast by Eliot Burk. Artwork by Z.A. Stenger.
    © 2023 Outside Music Inside the Golden State
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Episodes
  • Jeremy Haladyna
    Jan 6 2023

    Interview originally recorded March, 2021. 

    Eleven trips to the Mayan region and an investigation of some 35 years into Precolumbian thought have indelibly marked and changed the work of this U.S.-born composer. Haladyna’s Mayan Cycle now stretches to thirty-five highly distinctive pieces, including such titles as Zaquico’xol, El Llanto de Izamal, The Maya Curse Pedro de Alvarado, Pok-ta-Pok, 2012, The Oracle of 13 Sky, Copal, and the Jaguar Poems.   Among the most novel features of the Cycle is its frequent use of Jeremy's original scales (three in total) derived from the ingenious math of the Mayan calendar.

    Jeremy, an accomplished keyboardist and conductor, served as director of UC Santa Barbara’s Ensemble for Contemporary Music for sixteen years (2003-2019) and created much of the Mayan Cycle during that time.  He holds prizes and academic qualifications from three countries. A laureate of the Lili Boulanger Prize and diplômé of the history-rich Schola Cantorum on Paris' Left Bank, he also holds an advanced degrees from the University of Surrey (U.K.) and the University of California. He taught undergraduate composition to scores of young composers at UCSB from 1990-2019 (29 years) after being named to its permanent faculty in March, 2000.  He is now Emeritus Faculty.  His own past teachers include William Kraft, Karl Korte, Eugene Kurtz, Jacques Charpentier, Peter Racine Fricker, John McCabe, Sebastian Forbes, and Joseph Schwantner.

    Pieces, in order heard:
    Pok-ta-Pok
    Maya Zodiac

    https://www.mayancycle.com/
    https://music.ucsb.edu/people/emeriti/jeremy-haladyna

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Joel Feigin
    Dec 26 2022

    Interview originally aired July 5, 2021. 

    Joel Feigin is an internationally performed composer, whose operas, chamber, orchestra, and piano works have been widely praised for their “very strong impact, as logical in musical design as they are charged with emotion and drama.” (Opera Magazine).

    Feigin’s opera, Twelfth Night, based on Shakespeare’s comedy, was produced in North Carolina, Chicago, and southern California, where it was hailed as a “glittering masterpiece” by critic Dan Kepl.  Excerpts had also been featured at New York City Opera’s VOX Showcase series and Opera America’s New Works Sampler.  Mysteries of Eleusis, Feigin’s first opera, written on a Guggenheim Fellowship, was commissioned and premiered by Theatre Cornell; on the international stage it was featured at the Moscow Conservatory (Russia) and repeated at the Russian-American Operatic Festival.

    Instrumental commissions include a Fromm Commission for Aviv: Concerto for Piano and Chamber Orchestra, written for Yael Weiss, as well as piano commissions from Leonard Stein and Margaret Mills. Ms. Mills included two of Joel’s works on her album Meditations and Overtones (Cambria Recordings).  Feigin’s most recent CD (released on MSR Classics) presents the large-scale chamber work Lament Amid Silence, featuring violist Helen Callus.  Concerts devoted solely to Feigin’s music have been given in Russia and Armenia, and in New York at Merkin Hall and Lincoln Center’s Bruno Walter Auditorium.  Honors include a Mellon Fellowship, a Senior Fulbright Fellowship, and the Dimitri Mitropoulos Prize in Composition at the Tanglewood Music Center.

    Dr. Feigin studied with Nadia Boulanger at Fontainebleau and with Roger Sessions at The Juilliard School. An accomplished pianist and accompanist, Feigin studied with Rosina Lhevine, and worked at the Metropolitan Opera in New York with Nico Castel.

    The Joel Feigin Collection at the New York Public Library of the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center opened in 2011. A student of Zen Buddhism, Feigin is Professor Emeritus of Composition at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

    Pieces, in order heard:
    Surging Seas, for string orchestra: 1. Allegro maestoso (excerpt)
    Two Songs from Twelfth Night: No. 1 O Mistress Mine (Allegretto grazioso)
    Surging Seas, for string orchestra: 1. Allegro maestoso (full movement)

    http://joelfeigin.com/


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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Anaís Azul
    May 7 2022

    Peruvian immigrant Anaís Azul (they/them) is a California based singer-songwriter, composer, and teaching artist. Described as “stunningly honest and vulnerable,” their artistry engages with music as a tool for community building, cross-genre collaboration, and collective healing.

    Azul writes music that is in conversation with looped vocal harmonies, classical melodies, and Latin American singer-songwriter traditions. Their songs are bilingual (Spanish and English) and about mental health, queerness, facing harsh realities and finding inner peace in spite of chaos.

    Photo by Erica Yi.

    Interview initially published 12/27/2020.

    Music featured:
    Mi Piel
    Healing
    Anxiety (Live @ the HER house)
    Cello Trilogy of Time
    Paz (Cathartic Conundrum)
    Soledad (Cathartic Conundrum)

    https://anaisazul.com/
    YouTube Channel
    Spotify
    http://www.instagram.com/anaisazul
    https://twitter.com/anaisazulmusic
    https://www.facebook.com/anaisazulmusic/

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    58 mins

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