Thomas Buckner Full Biography
Thomas Buckner, who was recently awarded the American
Music Center’s Letter of Distinction, has for three decades
championed music of the avant-garde in America and throughout the world
as a performer, producer, and promoter. A former student of the
legendary Metropolitan Opera baritone, Martial Singher, he was trained
in the classical tradition and has continued throughout his
distinguished career to broaden the scope of his vocal styles,
specializing in a wide range of experimental music. Buckner has
collaborated with a host of “new music” composers including
Robert Ashley, Roscoe Mitchell, Wadada Leo Smith, Noah Creshevsky,
Annea Lockwood, Bun-Ching Lam, David Wessel, Tom Hamilton, Leroy
Jenkins, Phill Niblock, Matthias Kaul and many others. He has made solo
appearances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Harvard University, the
Art Institute of Chicago, the Edinburgh Festival, the Prague Spring
Festival, and the Bienalli Festival of Venice, presenting a repertoire
that includes more than 100 compositions, written for, or dedicated to
him.
Buckner’s professional life as a musician began in the
1960’s with the founding of 1750 Arch Concerts and the 23-member
Arch Ensemble in Berkeley, California, which presented hundreds of
musical events yearly. These two institutions provided a venue for a
wide range of experimental music by numerous composers, and included
the baritone’s own innovative vocal performances. In conjunction
with these activities, 1750 Arch Records was founded, and produced over
50 record albums including works of Villa-Lobos, and Dallapiccola, as
well as many established and emerging composers from throughout the
world.
Buckner left California for New York City in 1983 and began a long
association with renowned composer Robert Ashley, performing a lead
role in his acclaimed opera Atalanta (Acts of God) as well as the opera
ELAficionado which was composed especially for Buckner. He has
performed major roles in many of Ashley’s other works such as
Balseros, Dust, the Now Eleanor’s Idea series, Celestial
Excursions which premiered in Berlin in 2003, and his most recent work,
Concrete. Buckner has performed with Ashley’s company throughout
the world, including appearances at the Avignon Festival, Festival
d’Automne a Paris, the Paris Quartier d’Ete Festival, the
Strasbourg Musical Festival, the Warsaw Autumn Festival, and in New
York at BAM’s Next Wave Festival and the Kitchen’s
Electronic Café International.
Thomas Buckner also has a longtime association with legendary
saxophonist, improviser, and composer Roscoe Mitchell, founding member
of the Art Ensemble of Chicago and the Association for the Advancement
of Creative Musicians. Their ongoing collaboration has resulted in the
acclaimed Roscoe Mitchell Chamber Ensemble recording Pilgrimage, as
well as the recording First Meeting, which Buckner is a guest with
Mitchell and pianist Borah Bergman. Buckner premiered Mitchell’s
Fallen Heroes with Petr Kotik conducting the Orchestra of the S.E.M.
Ensemble at Lincoln Center and the Prague Spring Festival. Buckner and
Mitchell’s current project is the quartet entitled
“OPEN”, which also includes multi-dimensional drummer
Jerome Cooper and bassist Harrison Bankhead.
Recently, Buckner has participated in installation performances in
relation to the forged metal sculptures of celebrated French sculptor
Alain Kirili. This enterprise has resulted in further highly acclaimed
collaborations in Africa, Europe, and the United States, and has
included original compositions by Somei Satoh and Alvin Lucier, as well
as improvisations with Leroy Jenkins, Daniel Carter, Aki Takahashi,
Joseph Jarman, and dancers Kei Takei and Maria Mitchell.
Electronic and multi-media theater works are also part of Thomas
Buckner’s musical vocabulary. He has been a featured vocalist in
Morton Subotnik’s Intimate Immensity and Daniel Rothman’s
Cezanne’s Doubt, both of which toured the United States and
Europe. Buckner extemporizes with electronic composer and performer Tom
Hamilton, resulting in the works Jump the Circle, Jump the Line, and
Hamilton’s acclaimed Off-Hour Wait State, satirizing long delays
on New York City subways at night. Other longstanding associations with
electro-acoustic composers include Annea Lockwood, Pauline Oliveros,
Alvin Lucier, Noah Creshevsky, Phill Niblock, and the notable German,
Matthias Kaul.
Joseph Kubera, the baritone’s accompanist for almost two decades,
has been acclaimed as “one of the world’s foremost
interpreters of contemporary piano music.” These two artists have
toured the world and recorded extensively, appearing in joint recital,
as well as in collaboration with larger ensembles.
Thomas Buckner has participated in over 40 recordings, including five
solo albums: Full Spectrum Voice [1991], Sign of the Times [1994],
Inner Journey [1998], and His Tone of Voice [2001], and Contexts
[2006], which features solo improvisations as well as improvised duets
including the distinguished artists Borah Bergman (piano), and David
Darling (cello). This disc also includes the work Ilex by Earl Howard,
who provides an electronic accompaniment in conjunction with Gustavo
Aguilar (percussion), and Wu Man, (pipa). The entire discography
features newly commissioned works by an impressive array of composers
including Annea Lockwood, Somei Satoh, Alvin Lucier, Muhal Richard
Abrams, Blue Gene Tyranny, Brian Smith, David Behrman and many others,
who utilize Buckner’s wide range of musical styles.
The baritone works as an energetic concert producer as well, presenting
many facets of new music deserving recognition. This year marks the
eighteenth season of his celebrated Interpretations series in New York
City, which focuses upon the interaction between creator of a musical
work and his performers. It stands as one of the most prominent forums
for the avante garde in the United States, and has presented over three
hundred premiers of compositions by established and emerging composers
from around the world.
He also has created the Mutable Music record label to produce new
recordings and reissue some important historic recordings, previously
unavailable in CD format. The impressive catalog includes recordings by
Randy Weston, Roscoe Mitchell, Borah Bergman, Jerome Cooper, Earl
Howard, Noah Creshevsky, and Tom Hamilton.
Thomas Buckner’s contribution to new music through the
commissioning and performance of new works, the production of concerts
and recordings, and support of numerous musical enterprises world wide
is perhaps unprecedented in the history of American music.
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