Monday 19 February 2018, 7.30pm
The great contemporary music ensemble, Apartment House, present two evenings of works by the late, great American composer, Julius Eastman, who has undergone a long overdue and much deserved popular and critical reapparaisal nearly three decades after his premature death in 1990.
PROGRAMME
- Discussion on Eastman's life and work with Christopher Fox
- Buddha (15')
- Stay On It (25’)
Buddha, existent as a vague one page sketch, is a mysterious piece, shaped on the page as an expanding oval ohm. Stay On It, is a crazy, Caribbean tinged, rollercoaster ride and again the only material to refer to is a hazy video of Eastman and colleagues performing in the 70’s and a score transcription. Apartment House’s version refers to the original video, and the work’s palpable invitation to an improvised and hallucinatory rite.
Performers: Elaine Mitchener voice (Stay On it) Mark Knoop keyboard, Kerry Yong piano, Gavin Morrison, Emma Williams flutes, Mira Benjamin violin, Anton Lukoszevieze cello, Simon Limbrick percussion
Julius Eastman (October 27, 1940 – May 28, 1990) was an African-American composer, pianist, vocalist, and dancer. He was among the first musicians to combine minimalist processes with elements of pop music. He often gave his pieces titles with provocative political intent, such as Evil Nigger and Gay Guerrilla. Eastman died alone at the age of 49 in Millard Fillmore Hospital in Buffalo, New York. No public notice was given to his death until an obituary by Kyle Gann appeared in the Village Voice, it was dated January 22, 1991, eight months after Eastman died.
The group, created by cellist Anton Lukoszevieze has been captivating audiences for nearly 30 years, with performances of avant-garde and experimental music from all over the World.
The ensemble has been a firm fixture on the British concert scene, with regular performances at Café Oto and as an associate ensemble of the Wigmore Hall.
Apartment House has released over 40 albums, many on the UK label Another Timbre. Current releases include Pauline Oliveros - Sound Pieces, Magnus Granberg - Evening Star, Vesper Bell and Morton Feldman’s epic and mesmerising Violin and String Quartet.