Category Archives: tj anderson

Tufts Composers: Memory Leaves – Pages Present and Past

From Tufts Music Events page:

A Concert Honoring Lois Anderson and TJ Anderson, Jr., Austin Fletcher Professor of Music, Emeritus took place on Friday, December 3, 2021 evening.

Tom Adams has sensed and appreciated Lois and TJ Anderson through the generous gesture of a donation to the Tufts Music Department directed toward supporting the new work of Tufts Composers. Memory Leaves celebrates Tom’s gift by featuring TJ’s newest works alongside music by young artists who are inspired by Anderson’s achievements. Tom understands that by mentoring and celebrating the achievements of aspiring artists/composers as part of this unique concert program, he is tapping into the lifeblood that nourishes Lois and TJ.

The Memory Leaves concert, inspired initially by the August publication of Memory Book, a collection of short TJ Anderson pieces sponsored by American Composers Alliance in honor of TJ’s 93rd birthday, will thus contain the premieres of Anderson’s 2021 pieces Serenade (solo cello; celebrating Lois Anderson’s 91st birthday with music for her favorite instrument); In Memoriam Randy Wilson (solo double bass, remembering this Canterbury Court Retirement Community friend), and Weightless (solo flute). Other related Anderson works to be performed will be In Memoriam Peter Gomes (solo viola), In Memoriam Lerone Bennett, Jr. (solo violin), and two renditions of the 1979 solo piano piece Play Me Something. Threaded through these performances will be substantial pieces by Tufts composers Jackson Carter and Alan Mackwell and Tufts alumnus Trevor Weston and Jeannette Chechile. Current students Matthew Diamond, Hunter Harville-Moxley, Katianna Nardone, and Phillip Wright will infiltrate the proceedings in solo appearances and in an “intermission manifestation” where they will be played simultaneously as an ensemble occurrence.

The celebration features faculty and student performers Emmanuel Feldman, cello; Anna Griffis, viola; Annie D. Kim, violin; Hunter Harville-Moxley, double bass; John McDonald, piano; Thomas Stumpf, piano; Samantha Tripp, flute; and Phillip Wright, clarinet.

This concert has been made possible by a gift to Tufts from Tom and Anita Adams

For Music-Making In Difficult Days, Perhaps…

September 1, 2020 [or: March 172, 2020]

Dear Tufts Music Students,

Having just digested an email from winds and brass-playing Tufts students concerned about returning to school in a week without the permission to play their instruments on campus, I found myself sprouting a few ideas given the fact that, at least at the beginning of the Fall 2020 semester, singing and the playing of wind and brass instruments on campus has been determined too risky to permit for the time being.

Have ANY of us been able to call sufficiently upon our considerable creative energies and resources as we contend with Covid-19 strictures? Are we trying too desperately to solve problems that will pass or at least alter or ease their dangerous components, but not please us by subsiding when we want them to? Are we looking too directly at these problems instead of to the side of, around, or behind them?

Regarding the currently forbidden singing, wind, and brass playing, what alternatives can we pursue while sticking somewhat closely to our customary patterns, our inspiring teachers, or our “proven methods” when our vocal or instrumental outlets are “off limits?” What musical acts can we study when we can’t sing or play?

First off, PLEASE keep studying with your teacher or with a new teacher. Don’t forego the brilliance of your instructors; since they are here to work with you, and to think about and practice their art, please consider sticking with a set of lessons or an ensemble through these difficult days. They might still prove productive.

I’m reminded of a time when I advised a music major who played the ocarina, an instrument for which they sought private instruction for credit. We could not find a teacher anywhere in the Boston area who felt qualified to teach ocarina. Then I thought about something my secondary-school mentor William Appling regularly suggested: study with someone who plays a different instrument from yours. With this in mind, I asked our classical saxophone instructor Philipp Staudlin if he could see himself teaching someone the ocarina? He complied with enthusiasm, and the music major presented a novel, full-length senior recital on the ocarina.

Consider this story I recently wrote up as part of the early-life story of composer TJ Anderson, Jr., former Tufts Music Department Chair and Austin Fletcher Professor of Music Emeritus:

In the early 1940s, TJ Jr attended public grammar schools in DC and Cincinnati, continuing the developing practice of staying out all night to hear jazz bands. Listening to live music emerged as a primary learning tool for Anderson, and in 1941 he formed his own jazz group in junior high school in Cincinnati, where he also sang in an Episcopal Church choir and continued violin studies with Charles Keys. When Andy returned to professional life in Coatesville, resuming his role as Principal of the James Adams School after thirteen years teaching at Howard University, TJ Jr attended Coatesville High School and soon (circa 1945) auditioned on baritone sax for the Veterans Jazz Band (Veterans Hospital, Coatesville); he passed the audition using the method of practicing with a broomstick (in the absence of the baritone sax itself). He credits his ability to read music as the essential reason he passed the audition, calling it “a good experience.”

Thinking of Anderson’s youthful resourcefulness and the broomstick-as-bari sax, the possibilities below came to mind. Perhaps they’ll give you an idea or two to make up for yourself and perhaps pursue with your teacher?

If you’re a singer: could you work on Melodramas (spoken word with instrumental accompaniment; Schubert wrote some; Satie’s Sports et Divertissements can be performed as spoken word and piano; there are lots more); make studies of diction/declamation or rhythm in the vocal repertory you’re learning?

In NME (Tufts New Music Ensemble) rehearsals—ask NME Director Donald Berman—we’ve spent many rehearsal hours playing instruments we’ve never tried and don’t know how to negotiate. We would often just switch instruments deliberately. Perhaps this is a time to pick up a new “axe?” Might you think about how an instrument that is not yours breathes differently from yours, practice that, and devise ways it could positively change breath support and/or other ways you might re-approach your own instrument when you can get back to it?

However you might ordinarily function as a musician, make up some listening activities for yourself, some of which you might be able to do with others. The Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer has written many fascinating text-based musical etudes that involve truly experimental listening. I’ve sent some of them around recently. A Sound Education: 100 Exercises in Listening and Soundmaking (1992) is my favorite. Try taking a piece of paper and “playing it.” Could you get a good “flute tone” out of it?

Learn your repertory as if it were unpitched percussion music? I’m considering making up a project for the composers studying this semester to write for the student in Advanced Musicianship (Music 116)—pieces involving clapping, beating, and rhythmical spoken word?

Could you study and internalize the rhythm and phrasing of instrumental or vocal parts you need to learn?

In re-thinking the physical moves necessary to play your trombone slide, could you mime it? Imagine the music as you read the part; study the score and other instrumental parts if there are any.

Devise techniques of silent mental practice? According to his memoirs, Artur Rubinstein learned César Franck’s Symphonic Variations on a train on his way to the concert. As there was no piano on the train, he practised passages in his lap. 

***

I apologize if what I’ve written here comes off like a manifesto or as something similarly heavy-handed. I don’t mean to be like that. These don’t replace the joy of playing and getting better at the skills you seek, but they may deepen the enterprise for the time being.

On campus or off, the limits that have been imposed are stringent for many of us, but if they mitigate the psychological and physical tolls of getting sick or the fear of falling ill, so be it (I admit a fear of teaching in person because I’m in a vulnerable age-zone, but I’m going to try). These factors have created real hardships and continue to do so.

Much is lost at the moment, but not all of it. If we do something usefully different now—even if it feels somewhat disappointing—but think ahead to where the activity might lead later, how will it feed our long-term aspirations?

Thanks for reading. The Tufts Music Department faculty is with you all the way. We will always try to fill our days and yours with the most elevating music-making we can find together.

John McDonald, Composer and Pianist
Professor of Music and Director of Graduate Music Studies

Tufts University

Composing To Learn/Learning To Compose

Tufts Music Department Pre-Orientation Workshop
Tuesday, August 27, 2019, 10-11:30 AM
Granoff Music Center Room 251
Tufts University, 20 Talbot Avenue, Medford, MA 02155

INTRODUCTIONS

THREE ACTIVITIES

1. Listening Exercise (courtesy of R. Murray Schafer [born 1933]; from A Sound Education: 100 Exercises in Listening and Soundmaking) 15 minutes
[Julia Moss ’21, Group Leader]

Almost everyone carries a set of keys. Would you recognize the sound of your own? All key rings are passed in and everyone listens, eyes closed as the group leader shakes each in turn. Put your hand up if you think you detect your own and it will be dropped behind you. Have all sets of keys found their rightful owners at the end?

2. PLAY ME SOMETHING: Short Composition Project 30-40 minutes

TJ Anderson Jr. (born 1928) celebrated his 91st birthday on August 17, 2019. He was the First African American to be a successful Composer-in-Residence for an American Symphony Orchestra (Robert Shaw and the Atlanta Symphony; 1969-71); Three Firsts in One Year (1972): first African American to chair a music department in a predominantly white university (Tufts University); first composer to orchestrate Scott Joplin’s opera Treemonisha; first chairman of the Black Music Caucus (NASPAM); First African-American to conduct the Boston Pops (1973); First Music Department Chair to create a joint degree program with two independent institutions: Tufts University and New England Conservatory. The program continues to this day (since 1976; 42nd Anniversary); First Composer invited to a residency at Wolf Trap, Vienna, VA (Milton Babbitt [1916-2011] was the second); First composer to receive a fellowship at the National Humanities Center, and more.

Anderson’s Play Me Something (1979), for solo piano, “small hands,” was composed for the Rivers Conservatory in Weston, Massachusetts, which sponsors a Seminar on Contemporary Music for the Young each year. The dedicatee, Kathy Mortenson, was a young student at the school when she premiered a version of the piece.

Play Me Something (“hey—you’re a musician?—play me something—do you take requests?”) is really more of a menu from which to choose a sonic meal than a “piece” in the accustomed sense. The composer writes:

              Play Me Something is not a piece or etude though it contains elements of both. The composition is a series of musical gestures or events which may be performed in any order. The gestures which repeat may be played as many times as the performer wishes. The pianist may or may not use all events and an attacca or slight pause may be placed after each gesture. Once an event is completed, the performer may not play this episodical material again. Multiple performance possibilities can enable the total work to have a duration between five seconds and five minutes.

Our task is to make our own playing menu that embraces:

  • a novel performance plan that uses all or some of what you write down—figuring out how to engage performer choice is part of the mission
  • “gestures” or “events” that can be shaped, repeated, ignored, celebrated
  • an exploration of varied styles of playing
  • a questioning of continuity and the meaning of “development”
  • more (to be discussed); your “scores” can be in staff notation, prose instruction (or bullet points, lists, etc.), visual cues (pictorial), or in a combination of formats

Protocol for today:

 After hearing a short demonstration of TJ Anderson’s piece in one or two versions, take 20 minutes to devise/write something of your own that will become part of a group composition. You can go anywhere in the Granoff building to do this. Then we will all return to Room 251 with our excerpts, briefly discuss them, and perform what we have for each other.

3. CLIME CLIMB (in-progress project for discussion)

Clime Climb—Music for Solo Traverso or Modern Flute [with optional/encouraged Flute(s), Piano(s), and Speaking Part(s)]

Draft Proposal and Description (sent to potential participants/commissioning parties)John McDonald, composer/pianist
July 30, 2019

Na’ama and I met to talk last week, and I think we’ve come up with a general plan/proposal for a piece entitled “Clime Climb”—(environment/climate—climbing as in “integral steps”).

I have some melodic material to work with to make a solo traverso piece that would be played twice. The second time through, students and/or other professional musicians would/could join with their own melodic and/or harmonic parts (as in flute parts and piano parts in short snippets to play in free repetition patterns). This “community section” of the piece will be planned with enough freedom to let people play what they have and be somewhat inventive with it—all while the soloist is playing a “second verse” of traverso music. A solo CODA will close the piece.

Every phrase in the piece will ascend, as if climbing steps. Some people climb stairs several at a time, others one at a time. Slower, faster, rushing, patient—but all these steps are incremental. In this way, the playable parts for community members can vary quite a bit. Much like the small things we do in our lives to make inroads in what we believe will make life more tolerable or livable. [My version is not having owned a car since 2010; walking, public transport, and urban car sharing have covered all of my local and some long-distance transport for nearly a decade].

The last and potentially crowning idea for the project is to commission a poly-lingual text to be recited during the above-mentioned second verse of the “solo Climb” (when all the other musicians are also playing). This text could be performed chorally or by soloists, or freely divided between speakers in some way depending on performance. Na’ama mentioned her daughter Shira as perhaps the ideal poet/author of such a text, which would minimally find its way into English, French, German, and Hebrew. My in-laws are Sri Lankan, so a short English text could also be translated into Sinhalese either by my wife or my brother-in-law (and read phonetically). Reciting Shira’s text in these several languages brings the participating community together with one purpose.

My thought is that the second verse is really where a lot could happen in terms of performative action. The first verse and CODA would be comparatively reflective, but the idea of a unifying ascent will permeate the proceedings.

What does everyone think?

Thanks for reading and considering!

CONCLUSION: Your Thoughts and Questions

[Handouts will include scores of “Play Me Something” by TJ Anderson; Orientation poster of Fall Tufts Composers events; sample Music 118/119 Syllabus; and “Aphorisms for Composers”]

Aphorisms for Composers – August 2018

August 31, 2018

Visiting artist=enrichment w/o commitment, for both visitor and visited. ‘Just visiting.’

August 29, 2018

What used to feel like hard technical work sometimes feels like nothing by now. Does this mean I’m better at the task at hand, or do I need to re-start by aiming for something I know for sure I can’t do—or can’t do without considerable re-questioning of what seem like fundamental fluencies? Can we scan the keys or gauge the breath or re-balance the bow arm to find entirely unheard-of precedents?

…After many years, still trying to find a viewpoint that renews, even if only for a few beguiling musical seconds…

Let it fall apart; don’t put it back together—at least not the same way.

Weak, tired; ‘breathe’ through wrists.

How does a composer capture states of ‘vulnerability,’ ‘fear,’ ‘shutdown,’ among others, when performing arts teaching promotes what could be described as ‘power’ or ‘strength’? Is the composer’s ‘strength’ a contradiction, then? Is the expressive ‘power’ available through the practice of writing music tantamount to the ability to express ‘weakness’ along with a a full gamut of possible evocations of perceived emotional states? The next question: what technical preparation and set of tools is needed in order to achieve this flexibility?

August 23, 2018

Write what you want and must…but make sure you ‘teach to the test.’ (sardonic)

August 23-30, 2018

Quartets, Set 3:

Hit bottom, hit wood. (August 30, 2018; for the pianist)
Small adjustments; new universes. (August 29, 2018)
Analog composer; digital performer. (August 23, 2018, on the composer/pianist)

August 22, 2018

NEVER underestimate the intelligence of an audience.  By the same token, ALWAYS attend to how you say what you say musically. Don’t expect understanding if you garble your words. Communicate, converse.

August 21, 2018

Don’t fear your own ideas. Accept or embrace them enough to figure out their maximal effectiveness. ‘What’ matters, but ‘how’ matters more.

August 19-20, 2018

Quartets, Set 2:

Under rocks: possible ideas. (August 20, 2018)
Difficult issues; careful solutions. (August 20, 2018)
Rejuvenate each musical moment.  (August 19, 2018)
Don’t overlook musicians’ needs. (August 19, 2018)
Hand-weight; chords activate. (August 19, 2018)
To juxtapose: to develop.  (August 19, 2018)

August 16, 2018

Be a schlock absorber. Internalize any material that works; do your thing with it.

August 12, 2018

Program notes and maxims/aphorisms have a common goal: the quick capture of fundamentally musical, non-verbal observations in a few well-chosen words. Tough to achieve.

August 11, 2018

Save or write down all your ideas. Plant seeds. Weed later.

August 8, 2018

In an earnest search for meaning, does your music really signify much? Isn’t it just sound, sense, sensation? Otherwise unattached?

August 7, 2018

Composers humanize and catalyze simply by doing what they do. Abstract or concrete—in the sky or down to earth—composing music is inherently peaceful unless or until the sounds are misapplied. Consider your work as a composer a particular type of activism: you are hearing humanity, documenting experience by shaping sound. (with a bow to TJ Anderson Jr on his 90th birthday)

I’ve stopped composing—for a few minutes.

August 7-8, 2018

Quartets, Set 1:

Inhale/collect; exhale/unleash. (August 8, 2018)
Humanize: write music, perform. (August 8, 2018)
Keyboard, mind, ears, two hands. (August 7, 2018)
Meditate rather than medicate. (August 7, 2018)

August 6, 2018

That new work of yours is a little like a new human being. You feed it, care for it, put it to sleep, then it wakes up and you have to feed it again. After repeated feedings in the form of tweaking, sleeping, re-thinking, perhaps it can finally rest.

TJ Anderson’s 90th birthday Celebration!

I shall be travelling to Atlanta, GA, to celebrate
TJ Anderson’s  90th birthday with his friends and family.

The event is scheduled for August 17-18, 2018, and has been organized as a mini-symposium with a concert, composer session with TJ, and a banquet dinner.

The concert of works by TJ and his favorite composers is on Friday, August 17 at 7:30 pm at Canterbury Court Retirement Center in Atlanta. Artists include myself, Louise Toppin, and many others.

A mini-conference will be held on Saturday afternoon, Aug. 18, with a presentation of music by other residents of Canterbury Court, followed by a dinner/roast of TJ, hosted by the Anderson family, with Master of ceremonies Dwight Andrews and David Morrow of Morehouse Men’s Choir.

The celebration is hosted by Composers of Color Collective (CCC) and the Anderson Family.

Lecture and Demonstration by Professor John McDonald: “Stirring Up the Music: The Life and Works of Composer T.J. Anderson”

As Amherst College’s 2016-2017 Valentine Visiting Professor of Music, I was invited to present a talk on my in-progress biography on T.J. Anderson Jr. at the college’s Frost Library.

My talk partitioned and analyzed Anderson’s work and influence in five chronological phases.

Aphorisms for Composers – January to February 2016

February 24, 2016

In response to pianist David Holzman’s perception that the music of mine he plays is minimalist:

I don’t think of my work with the M word, but I do appreciate simplicity and repetition. So I am certainly influenced by M (minimalism) — Tom Johnson‘s procedures in particular, as well as interesting number series/rhyme schemes that can control and/or shape phrases and forms.

I like things that stay where they are for a while, or just do one thing while exploring the inherent variety in that thing.

January 30, 2016

A placid surface does not necessarily indicate calm underneath.

January 7, 2016

“Work for the idea.”

  • T.J. Anderson, 1989

P.B. –  Pierre Boulez and Paul Bley died in the same week

Aphorisms for Composers – December 2015

December 20, 2015

“It’s truly time to study the water, passing, each specific ripple, flicker of light—“

December 11, 2015

T.J. Anderson, at the age of 87, has just completed a new memorial piano work for the extraordinary coloratura soprano Mattiwilda Dobbs Janzon (1925-2015). He is working as consistently as at any other time in his creative life.

Is the composer/pianist in the silent abode akin to the painter in the whitewashed apartment? Colors from no colors, or clear sounds emerging from silence? This method (if you want to call it such) seems clearer than trying to be heard over the crowd of other musics that populate the “hard day of composing and playing.”

December 10, 2015

Be kind, forthright. Do what you can; seek to own nothing.