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!!YOSHI WADA {br}{br} |t [../files/articles/wada/wada_photo.jpg]{br}{small}{cap}{/cap}{/small}{br}{small}{/small}|t |t |t |t |t |t {small}{cap}"In the early 70s, I studied with La Monte Young, which was more like electronic music. Later on, Pandit Pran Nath came to New York. What he taught me was to be in tune and about intonation. I would sing myself with a tambura and just regular a cappella singing and practicing. I did that around 1973 and 1974, and I finally developed my own style of singing.{br}The turning point around that time was that I went to an Ethnic Music Expo in Queens, New York. There were Macedonian women singing. It was a small group, and they were singing in unison and in a very high pitch. It was a really piercing and traveling sound. I couldn't understand the words, but it didn't matter anyway about the meaning of the words. What impressed me was that they weren't trained musicians. Rather, they were likefarmers and peasants in the region. The meaning came from everyday life.{br}The Macedonian women singers sometimes sing farming tunes, something they have when they're working. I guess they were happy about singing and working at the same time. I wasn't working and singing, but it was a great feeling as a group activity. You're in tune with other people, singing.{br}After I heard this singing, I organized a three-man choir. Prior to that, we had a Macedonian woman singer showing us what to sing. After that, we developed our singing in unison. It was all improvisation. It wasn't easy to synchronize because we weren't trained singers ourselves, but slowly we got into it. This was based on my own notation, but still it was improvised completely."{br}{br} (From an interview by Marc Masters and Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, 8 March 2013){/cap}{/small}| {br}{br} |t [../files/articles/wada/wada_cd_appointedcloud.jpg|../files/articles/wada/1963_flynt_nomoreartb.jpg]{br}{small}{cap}{/cap} {/small}|t |t |t |t |t |t {small}{cap}"I heard the bagpipes in 1976 or 1977. I went to the Scottish Games. It was outdoors, of course. It was a competition and demonstration, and the first time I heard the whole thing was such a great experience. At the time, I met a bagpiper, Nancy Crutcher. She lived in New York, and I started taking lessons. I went to weekly bagpipe sessions in a church basement in Manhattan. I wasn't interested in marching band music, but I had to focus on that. Then I got into one of the Scottish classical styles called piobaireachd, which is a very old music that started around the 1700s or something. I really got into this music. After that, I started to compose bagpipe music in my notations. Then I started building bagpipes by myself, and then I started to perform with theinstrument myself in the 1980s.{br}Scottish bagpipe has two tenors and one bass-- three drone pipes-- and then the one chanter. If you put bagpipes together, it creates such a fine sound. I had been working on the overtone series from the beginning, so it made sense to me to follow the bagpipes. I felt it was the way to go with the overtone series. I also made a brass reed instrument to go with the bagpipe, and I was also singing with it. After that period passed, I got back to playing Scottish pipes with other people.{br}Initially, when I was making the bagpipes and reed instruments, it was different from the other instruments. In terms of sound itself, it may not be different, but in performing with it, it was a necessity to build it if I was going to perform and make scores with it. By making the instruments, it helped me compose the way I want."{br}{br} (From an interview by Marc Masters and Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, 8 March 2013){/cap}{/small}| {br}{br} |t [../files/articles/wada/wada_earthdrones.jpg]{br}{small}{cap}{/cap}{/small}|t |t |t |t |t |t {small}{cap}"That started in the earlier 70s. I was actually in construction, doing plumbing work to earn money. One day, I picked up a pipe and blew it, and it made an interesting sound. I had to get a much larger size pipes and begin experimenting. It was an unknown thing. I ended up with gigantic pipe instruments called Earth Horns. It was a really low pitch, a very extreme range, like a sheep demon being created. It was 30 to 60 Hz.{br}I organized an ensemble. It was quite interesting, because nobody had that kind of idea of building such instruments. The title of the piece was Earth Horns With Electronic Drone. Some of them I had to give up because they were so heavy-- steel pipes, after all. At one point, I couldn't carry them around anymore, so I stopped. The Emily Harvey Foundation in New York has a couple of the instruments, and I have a couple of them in San Francisco, too. In 2009, I did perform at the Emily Harvey Foundation with the Earth Horns."{br}{br} (From an interview by Marc Masters and Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, 8 March 2013){/cap}{/small}| {br}{br} |t [../files/articles/wada/wada_offthewall_1978.jpg|../files/articles/wada/1963_flynt_nomoreartb.jpg]{br}{small}{cap}{/cap}{/small}|t |t |t |t |t |t {small}{cap}"I don't think I differentiate between composition and improvisation. Improvisation could be a large part of a composition. To me, even for La Monte Young himself, improvisation is composition. It's different from the earlier pieces, but I do think most of his music is improvisation. Most of my music is improvisation, and composition is improvisation. Even if I have a score, it is improvisation. Now that I'm thinking about it, I made score for "Off the Wall". I had notation, but improvisation is part of it."{br}{br} (From an interview by Marc Masters and Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, 8 March 2013){/cap}{/small}| [../files/articles/wada/wada_offthewall_diagram.jpg] {br}{br} {html} <iframe src="//player.vimeo.com/video/55421049" width="900" height="675" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe> <p><a href="http://vimeo.com/55421049">Yoshi Wada Die Konsonanten Pfeifen from "Off the Wall" 1984</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/user14189310">Das Real Kellzo</a> on <a href="https://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p> {/html} {small}{cap}Yoshi Wada (bagpipes); Wayne Hankin (bagpipes); Marilyn Bogerd (adapted organ); Andreas Schmidt-Neri (percussions/timpani), recorded May 1984, Berlin.{br}On this album you can listen to the sounds of a five-octave range homemade organ pipe, connected with a central machine, spreading the sound all over the room, where the music is played, this is a loud and nearly metaphysical minimalist experience.{br}"...a bagpiping masterpiece which - similar to his previous release - celebrates and emphasises the bouncing of sound off a solid force: the physical nature of sound reverberating in a specialised environment. And let me say folks, it's an experience that transfers to vinyl pretty damn effectively - crank up the volume to the nine o'clock position and you'll find out what I mean. He built these unbelievable huge bellows which you pump with your feet to play the pipes, whose dimensions were more on the order of organ pipes than regular chanters. You wouldn't want to meet the Scottish chieftain who could actually lift such an instrument. This record is not as frightening as Crocodile, in fact I find it quite soothing, but the uninitiated should prepare for the full force of a massed angry wasp attack." - ED PINSENT{/cap}{/small} {br}{br} ---- {br}{br} [../files/articles/wada/wada_hetapollo.jpg] {br}{br} [../files/articles/wada/wada_lamentp.jpg] {br}{br} {br}{br} ----
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