Mark So (born June 14, 1978 in
Syracuse, NY) is an American
experimental composer
A composer is a person who writes music. The term is especially used to indicate composers of Western classical music, or those who are composers by occupation. Many composers are, or were, also skilled performers of music.
Etymology and Defi ...
and
performer living in
Los Angeles
Los Angeles ( ; es, Los Ángeles, link=no , ), often referred to by its initials L.A., is the largest city in the state of California and the second most populous city in the United States after New York City, as well as one of the world' ...
. His works, numbering over 800 (including a group of about 300 concerning poems of
John Ashbery
John Lawrence Ashbery (July 28, 1927 – September 3, 2017) was an American poet and art critic.
Ashbery is considered the most influential American poet of his time. Oxford University literary critic John Bayley wrote that Ashbery "sounded, in ...
), are mostly text-based and influenced by
New York School aesthetics,
Fluxus
Fluxus was an international, interdisciplinary community of artists, composers, designers and poets during the 1960s and 1970s who engaged in experimental art performances which emphasized the artistic process over the finished product. Fluxus ...
, and the
Wandelweiser composers collective.
His work has been described as using disparate media to explore ordinary situations in various open frames of perception and action, typically proceeding through simple methods of recording/transcription/reading, as well as changing experiences of silence. As critic Petra Hedler notes, "Mark So strongly embraces the phenomenon of the just barely audible, taking up a broad palette of sound-producing devices (including glasses, stones)." Artist/writer
Madison Brookshire elaborates:
there are not just sounds and silences, the sounds are stretched over the silence, just barely there. They do not supersede the silence; they are parallel to it, moving along with it. And at times, impossibly, even the silence itself can be stretched too thin. The piece breaks and you are simply, profoundly in the room or in the environment. The tightrope snaps and you can no longer pretend to float above or beyond the world. There are often moments of great beauty in a So piece, but there are never moments of transcendence.
Drawing a contrast with composer
John Cage, he continues:
Cage made it his project to reveal that music could be any sounds in any order. This involves an equivalence—one thing is like another—that negates value judgment. So goes further: any sounds in any order, but instead of an equivalence between them, there is a radical disparity. Cage famously made an enemy of harmony, but in a sense, he used silence in all of his pieces after ''4′33″
''4′33″'' (pronounced "four minutes, thirty-three seconds" or just "four thirty-three") is a three- movement composition by American experimental composer John Cage. It was composed in 1952, for any instrument or combination of instruments ...
'' as a kind of harmony—the sounds of the environment always “fit” inside a Cage piece. In So, the silences are dissonant. There are layers of silence and they are in contrast if not outright contest.
On July 10, 2006, So collaborated with composer
James Orsher, artist
Michael Parker and 16 area musicians to bring about a 3-hour performance of
James Tenney
James Tenney (August 10, 1934 – August 24, 2006) was an American composer and music theorist. He made significant early musical contributions to plunderphonics, sound synthesis, algorithmic composition, process music, spectral music, microto ...
's ''In a large, open space'' (1994) at the
Cold Storage temporary art facility in downtown Los Angele
On September 23, 2007, So participated in a worldwide performance of Hungarian-Swiss composer
Istvàn Zelenka's ''Phontaine'' (1997- ), organized by fellow composer
Jürg Freybr>
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/nowiki>So gave the first performance of Christian Wolff (composer)">Christian Wolff's ''Small Preludes'' (2008-9) at CalArts">
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[2
/nowiki>So gave the first performance of Christian Wolff (composer)">Christian Wolff's ''Small Preludes'' (2008-9) at CalArts on October 24, 200
[3
/nowiki>] He appears on two CDs of music by composer Michael Pisaro
Michael Pisaro (born 1961 in Buffalo, New York) is a guitarist and composer. A member of the Wandelweiser Composers Ensemble, he has composed over 80 works for a great variety of instrumental combinations, including several pieces for variable i ...
released o
Edition Wandelweiser Records
as a pianist on
' ''and contributing a sine tone to a realization of
' produced by Joseph Kudirka
Joseph is a common male given name, derived from the Hebrew Yosef (יוֹסֵף). "Joseph" is used, along with "Josef", mostly in English, French and partially German languages. This spelling is also found as a variant in the languages of the m ...
. More recently, So has pursued unique collaborations with artists working beyond the field of music, including a performance-based study conceived with artists Julie Tolentino and Stosh Fila and done in Los Angeles in 2010; a pair of notebook scores with poet Eileen Myles
Eileen Myles (born December 9, 1949) is a LAMBDA Literary Award-winning American poet and writer who has produced more than twenty volumes of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, libretti, plays, and performance pieces over the last three decades. No ...
—his ''(IDLE.) 51 THINGS TO DO WITH TWO HANDS for Eileen Myles'' and her ''Moving whole heart for Mark—''which they performed together in 2011 in New York and Los Angeles; and a series of multi-media performance environments with artist Rick Bahto
Rick may refer to:
People
* Rick (given name), a list of people with the given name
* Alan Rick (born 1976), Brazilian politician, journalist, pastor and television personality
* Johannes Rick (1869–1946), Austrian-born Brazilian priest and my ...
and later, with Bahto and musician Julia Holter
Julia Shammas Holter (born December 18, 1984) is an American singer-songwriter, record producer, composer, artist and academic, based in Los Angeles. Following three independent album productions, Holter released ''Tragedy'' as her first official ...
, realized in various Los Angeles venues, includin
the wulf.
Jancar Jones Gallery
and MOCA (2011-2013). Describing the first of these ventures, a performance entitled "Slides & Sides—Still Lifes, Donuts, Twice Around, Palms" presented by So and Bahto a
the wulf.
in October 2011, critic Liz Kotz writes:
For more than four hours, Bahto used two 35mm slide projectors to cast two series of images—of Los Angeles area doughnut shops and cacti—onto walls, floors, and ceiling, in constantly varying rhythms and configurations, while So played a tape (''Twice Around,'' comprising different field recordings) and performed his notebook, ''A Book of Palms'', at the piano. With four tracks of (apparently unrelated) material being activated in different ways, the evening nonetheless created a compelling whole.
So's music was featured in the week-long retrospective ''mark so: late early works'', which took place at UC Santa Barbara
The University of California, Santa Barbara (UC Santa Barbara or UCSB) is a public land-grant research university in Santa Barbara, California with 23,196 undergraduates and 2,983 graduate students enrolled in 2021–2022. It is part of the Un ...
and environs in fall 2007, and explored a variety of work across diverse locations (many of them outdoors) and sometimes extreme durations (up to 6 hours
[4
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/nowiki>In 2009, So published ''BANGS'', a book detailing Swiss composer Manfred Werder"><_a><br>_nowiki>.html" ;"title="">[4
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/nowiki>In 2009, So published ''BANGS'', a book detailing Swiss composer Manfred Werder's ongoing performance (begun in August, 2006) of So's 2005 composition ''BANGS [to Manfred Werder]'', including the score, correspondence between the two composers over the course of the realization, reflection upon the process, and photographs of salient incidents. His three-opera Heliogabalus cycle (2009–10), combining Antonin Artaud
Antoine Marie Joseph Paul Artaud, better known as Antonin Artaud (; 4 September 1896 – 4 March 1948), was a French writer, poet, dramatist, visual artist, essayist, actor and theatre director. He is widely recognized as a major figure of the E ...
's ''Heliogabalus'' with a text of his own and scored for 1, 2 and 3 amplified readers, premiered a
the wulf.
in Los Angeles in February 2010; the performers were So, Julia Holter
Julia Shammas Holter (born December 18, 1984) is an American singer-songwriter, record producer, composer, artist and academic, based in Los Angeles. Following three independent album productions, Holter released ''Tragedy'' as her first official ...
and Tashi Wada. So composed the original music for Gabor Kalman
Gabor J. Kalman (December 12, 1929 – December 10, 2022) was a Hungarian-American physicist, academic, and author. He was a Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus at Boston College.
Kalman lead research focused on Strongly Coupled Coulomb Sy ...
's documentary film ''There Was Once...'', which went into limited release in 2011.
Since 2011, So has created numerous works for audio cassette. These tapes, typically comprising multiple layers of time that alternate between segments of taped sound and segments advanced without recording sound, have taken on diverse functions, from stand-alone pieces to multi-channel backgrounds in more complex performance settings. ''Reading 'Illuminations' eadings 41' (2011), So's scenario for 4 audio cassettes and two readers using John Ashbery
John Lawrence Ashbery (July 28, 1927 – September 3, 2017) was an American poet and art critic.
Ashbery is considered the most influential American poet of his time. Oxford University literary critic John Bayley wrote that Ashbery "sounded, in ...
's new English translation of Arthur Rimbaud
Jean Nicolas Arthur Rimbaud (, ; 20 October 1854 – 10 November 1891) was a French poet known for his transgressive and surreal themes and for his influence on modern literature and arts, prefiguring surrealism. Born in Charleville, he sta ...
's ''Illuminations'', was commissioned for the 2011 AxS Festival and premiered by So and Julia Holter
Julia Shammas Holter (born December 18, 1984) is an American singer-songwriter, record producer, composer, artist and academic, based in Los Angeles. Following three independent album productions, Holter released ''Tragedy'' as her first official ...
in October 2011 at Pasadena
Pasadena ( ) is a city in Los Angeles County, California, northeast of downtown Los Angeles. It is the most populous city and the primary cultural center of the San Gabriel Valley. Old Pasadena is the city's original commercial district.
Its ...
's Art Center College of Design
Art Center College of Design (stylized as ArtCenter College of Design) is a private art college in Pasadena, California.
History
ArtCenter College of Design was founded in 1930 in downtown Los Angeles as the Art Center School.
In 1935, Fr ...
. The tape components of this piece were later released on a cassette fro
Recondite Industries
in 2012, paired with So's keyboard notebook ''A Book of Palms''. In October 2012, So performed his piece ''Into Silence - readings 23 or John Cage' (2007), a 6 hour, 15 minute solo reading, during th
John Cage Festival
at the Florida State University, situated among three tape sources playing through a total of nine cassettes. This scenario expanded to four tape sources and 15 tapes when So next performed ''Into Silence'' at Michael Strogoff Gallery in Marfa, TX
Marfa is a city in the high desert of the Trans-Pecos in far West Texas, between the Davis Mountains and Big Bend National Park. It is the county seat of Presidio County, and its population as of the 2010 United States Census was 1,981. The city ...
, in June 201
[5
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/nowiki>Between these events, he collaborated with composer Michael Winter (composer)">Michael Winter on a performance a
the wulf.
during morning twilight of March 31, 2013, in which Winter's ''minor third abstract'' (2011) for solo piano slowly gave way to a two-channel realization of So's tape ''though we haven't read it, we know there is a script [“The End of New England” by Eileen Myles] readings 44'' (2012). Reviewing this performance, writer Stuart Krimko observes:
Several iterations of spring were cropping up: there was the spring that appeared in the essay, and another that So read out loud on the tape as he uttered the phrase And look at this, it’s Spring." and the most tangible one that was taking place in real time, on an early Sunday morning at the end of March. Together, they emphasized that coincidence and heightened attention are dependent upon one another, and that in concert they can take hold of the senses and direct them to their own ends, revealing unexpected beauty, symmetry, and congruencies of form. This is the kind of awareness that arises when art is treated as an active agent of simile, a force intent on bringing disparate things into proximity.
So attended Pomona College
Pomona College ( ) is a private liberal arts college in Claremont, California. It was established in 1887 by a group of Congregationalists who wanted to recreate a "college of the New England type" in Southern California. In 1925, it beca ...
and CalArts
The California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) is a private art university in Santa Clarita, California. It was incorporated in 1961 as the first degree-granting institution of higher learning in the US created specifically for students of bot ...
. His main composition teachers were Michael Pisaro
Michael Pisaro (born 1961 in Buffalo, New York) is a guitarist and composer. A member of the Wandelweiser Composers Ensemble, he has composed over 80 works for a great variety of instrumental combinations, including several pieces for variable i ...
, Tom Flaherty and Annetta Kaplan.
Recordings
Publications
* So, Mark. "text , composition - scores and structure after ''4'33"''" in ''The Open Space Magazine'', Fall 2013/Winter 2014 (46-51).
* So, Mark. from "text , composition - scores and structure after ''4'33"''" and 2 scores, performance documentation, commentary in Lely, John and Saunders, James. ''Word Events: Perspectives on Verbal Notation'', Continuum, 2012 (58, 60, 353-9).
* So, Mark and Werder, Manfred. ''BANGS'', lulu.com, 2009.
* So, Mark. "nearing/hearing" in ''Everybody Loves Difficult Music'' (Orsher, So and Roberts, eds.), Machine Project, 2007. (companion volume to the series ''Everybody Loves Difficult Music'' and ''You Too Can Play Difficult Music'' at Machine Project
Machine Project was a Los Angeles based not-for-profit arts organization and community event space.
History
Founded by Mark Allen, Machine Project launched in 2003 with its inaugural show, ‘Tom Jennings - Story Teller,’ an installation produ ...
br>
and ''The Open Space Magazine'', Fall 2008 (119-123).[''The Open Space Magazine'', Fall 2008.]
Notes
External links
Mark So homepage
Mark So artist page at ARTslant
Mark So scores page at UploadDownloadPerform
Mark So audio page at Soundcloud
Mark So audio page at Soundclick
{{DEFAULTSORT:So, Mark
American male composers
21st-century American composers
Living people
Musicians from Syracuse, New York
1978 births
21st-century American male musicians
Pomona College alumni