Publications
Review: Americas: Essays on American Music and Culture, 1973-1980 by Peter Garland Print E-mail
Criticism

garland(American Music Volume 4, Issue 3, Fall 1986; revised March 2013, 2022)

The Fist-Shaking Iconoclast

Fourteen essays comprise Americas. There are short pieces on “American Piano” and “American Percussion.” There are tracts about literary nomads Paul Bowles (whose Selected Songs Garland issued in 1983), Jamie de Angelo, and B.. Traven. There are lengthy discussions of Conlon Nancarrow, Silvestre Revueltas, Harry Partch, and Lou Harrison. And there are three travel journals written in Mexico, an autobiographical respite from his cause. In general, the book shakes its fist on behalf of the experimentalist radicals of American music and their attacks on American musical propriety as if the New World has rejected our best and brightest composers.

Read more...
 
Unanswering the Question: Charles Ives Meets Charles Olson Print E-mail
Essays and Memoirs

cdeb024128a0546bfd209010.L(Perspectives of New Music. Double issue: Fall-Winter, Vol. 20, No. 1, 1981; Spring-Summer, Vol. 20, No. 2, 1982)

This essay started out of a desire to experience my own convergence with the music and writings of Charles Ives and the esthetics and poetry of Charles Olson. What began as a measure of my relationship with them became their relationship, in something larger, with each other. Furthermore, the same experience has always been counterpointed in my own work as a composer and writer. The legacy of the arts as being separable, by virtue of their expressive content, audience, differing perceptive modes, etc., has seemed to me to be an illusion propagated by some traditional casting of identity, of what art-forms "say."

How one form can say something, or one thing, better than another, the economic argument of the efficiency of art mediums. I feel that the genesis and experience of music and language are inseparable, if one can get beyond, if one can unanswer, the questions they supposedly address, to the exclusion of each other. They indeed converge in essence.

This essay, perhaps my first significantly original work, is available as a PDF download here.

 
Ive's "Alcotts" from the "Concord Sonata" Orchestrated Print E-mail
Web Exclusives

alcotts(University of New Mexico, Orchestration Project: 1979)

Orchestration of the third movement of Charles Ives's "Concord Sonata," "The Alcotts." Partial fulfillment of my Bachelor's of Music Degree in 1982.

PDF is here.

 
Mamamotormobile Print E-mail
Essays and Memoirs

riderfalling xgzy1j(Flash Nonfiction, January 1972)

Up the ramp, the radio’s on, we view round for lights and the lights remain and let us in.

Look at us, driving the Interstate, driving the flat curve of the earth.

Look at us, leaving the city, heading west through the state, into the Horse-Trader’s dialect.

Look over us, mamamotormobile, for we’re going home with high beams on in the frozen hare’s eyes.

We’re going home with the tire wheel grazing low, the steering wheel grazing lower and tickling our tired waists.

Read more...
 
Reading Arthur Rimbaud 1971 Print E-mail
Essays and Memoirs

RimbaudReading Arthur Rimbaud

These are impressions of many poems and prose pieces of Arthur Rimbaud, French poet and early surrealist, 1854 to 1891. He died, aged 37. Thirty pages' worth . . . as a PDF, here.

 
Thomas Larson Vita Print E-mail
Web Exclusives

large past1987 Surfing-on-Acid 0Thomas Wallin Larson

**

Education:

Masters of Arts in English and American literature from the University of California, San Diego, 1986.

Graduate courses in music at the University of California, San Diego, 1982 and 1983.

Bachelor of Music, University of New Mexico, 1982.

Teaching:

Faculty (retired), Ashland University Low-Residency MFA Program in Creative Writing, 2010 - 2017: program development, residency and online classes, thesis advisor, post-thesis editor.

Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 Next > End >>

Page 56 of 57