![]() ![]() On a laptop screen, a scrawled music manuscript is brought up to go with the recording. Kinda like, punk rock minimalism? Just check this out…” “Oh, yo! Have you heard of Julius Eastman?” Bootleg files of scores and recordings may or may not have been promiscuously shared. The more esoteric, underground, or just plain gossipy, the better. Even though the topic is decidedly music-centric, the conversation has the feeling of one long non-sequitur, scattering tenuously-connected ideas, stories, and anecdotes (likely apocryphal) about pieces, composers, bands, and so on. We’re between rehearsals at the Bang on a Can Summer Festival, a two-week residency at nearby MASS MoCA, currently entrenched in one of those free-wheeling gab sessions that happen when like-minded nerds of any age get together at a festival or conference. That's fine, as long as Unjust Malaise is not ignored.July 2009. I’m in a college dorm room in North Adams, a small post-industrial town in Western Mass, hanging out with a couple of composers and percussionists. With any luck, Unjust Malaise will make Eastman's case, although it will almost certainly be controversial and elicit any number of conflicting opinions as to its relative value. One wonders where the audience is to cultivate for this kind of material - Eastman's choice of titles, his disdain of tradition, and lack of gloss might well discourage many listeners who would normally embrace and accept his work out of hand. Kyle Gann's impassioned notes are well worth reading also, and set the stage for more installments of Eastman's recordings. The most stunningly beautiful work here is The Holy Presence of Joan d'Arc (1981), performed by an ensemble of 10 cellos, but all of Eastman's pieces are gloriously messy, highly personal statements that are nonetheless completely original. Not only is it a sendup of serial technique, with the chromatic scale rising from bottom to top, it also seems to take off Louis Armstrong's obligatory habit of rising to the top note of his trumpet at the end of many pieces he played. ![]() The weakest piece (not by much) has the best title, If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You Rich? (1978). Stay On It (1973) is an obvious early masterwork of minimalism and one cannot imagine what prevented this title from being issued on LP at the time. Eastman is lucky that the university recording engineers who captured these pieces did such an excellent job in recording them - this was the exception, not the rule, when open reel tape was king at institutions of learning. Eastman also sidesteps one's preconceived notions about what a black classical composer is about, as although improvisation is central to his art, there is nothing whatsoever "jazzy" about his work, though sometimes it evokes ideas common to gospel and other folk forms. Eastman was an early minimalist, drawing inspiration from Terry Riley's In C as a formal jumping off point, but diverging from the standards of the era in almost every other way. Unjust Malaise is a three-disc set made up of seven pieces, all rather long, and a monologue delivered by Eastman, rescued by producer Mary Jane Leach from university-made tapes of concerts and a privately made tape from the Third Street Music School Settlement. ![]() He didn't make it easy for anyone to grasp, perform, or to conserve his music, and to savor the challenge of Unjust Malaise one must be prepared to meet Eastman at least halfway, to accept his anger and to forgive his carelessness in certain respects. Eastman's blackness, combined with his uncompromising, difficult career choices, politically incorrect subject material, and vulnerability in the age of Jesse Helms are all reasons why New World Records' Julius Eastman: Unjust Malaise marks the very first inkling we've had on disc of what an unbelievable talent Eastman was, and the nature of his singular contribution to American classical music. The fact that Eastman's face is the only black one in these photos seems not to have impacted the attitude of his colleagues, any more than Oliveros or Renée Levine, then director of the University at Buffalo's Center of the Creative and Performing Arts, presence as the only women in these images might suggest. ![]() The booklet to New World Records' survey of Eastman's never-before-issued compositions contains a number of group shots showing Eastman in the presence of such luminaries as Lukas Foss, Lejaren Hiller, Pauline Oliveros, Jan Williams, Eberhard Blum, David Del Tredici, Morton Feldman, and other first-tier proponents of contemporary music of that time. Julius Eastman (1940-1990) was a composer in good company around 1970. ![]()
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