Full
Circle Time Machine is my duo project with Tara Mueller that we’ve been working
on now since February 2011. We didn’t begin work as a duo proper until the
fall, but we had both been students at New England Conservatory for a few years.
One of the Contemporary Improvisation teachers (Violist Tanya Kalmanovitch) had been
holding these great duo sessions, where anyone could show up, throw their name
in a hat, and play a duo with another person whose name was drawn next to
yours. Tanya held three or four of these sessions over the long blistery winter
that year, one of which was during a storm projected to be so severe they
cancelled classes and barely ran any trains.
During
one of these “Duo or Die” sessions, Tara and I were assigned to play together,
and I remember really liking it. We sort of knew each other, and we had both
taken a class on American experimental music performance the previous fall. I’d
been prone to seeking out players who enjoyed that
repertoire, and this just seemed like something that needed to be explored
more.
So,
any time I’d see Tara after that, our duo experience or something related to
Tanya’s initiative would come up. For the rest of the semester, we talked about
how it would be nice to play together again, but our paths never crossed in a way to make it work. Then something awesome happened:
I’m not sure who pointed me towards the singer/songwriter Daniel Johnston, but I got really interested in his music that summer, and Tara and I had started to talk about forming the duo. After watching TheDevil and Daniel Johnston, I bought Chord Organ from eBay, and forming a chord organ/violin duo with Tara was almost all I could think about for the rest of the summer. When the summer was over, this didn’t take long. We met a couple times, and our repertoire of original music and our improvisational rapport built pretty quickly. We’d get together to play, then go get a beer or make flyers for our “concerts” (the first was in front of four people in a second floor ensemble room at NEC). Shortly after, we started to play on student composer’s concerts, and a few other things at school. One of our first off-campus shows was in December at Weirdo Records in Cambridge. We did two or three shows there before they closed in 2015.
By
the spring semester of 2012, Full Circle Time Machine was one of the pillars of
my creative existence (the other was Burr Van Nostrand’s Voyage in a White Building I). Tara and I got to do a community
outreach residency at an elementary school in JP that winter, and she came down to New
Haven to meet and rehearse with Burr before we played a concert of his music in
April. Also in April that year was the Contemporary Improvisation Department’s Beckett Play, and it was the first of
three times that we would play together in Jordan Hall.
5/25/2012 @ Yes Oui Si Space |
Though Tara would return to NEC
for a masters, I was finished. The next fall (a year after we started playing
regularly), I moved to VT, but made it a point to work in Boston as much as
possible. VT was incredibly beautiful and livable, but there were fewer musical
opportunities during the time I lived there. So, we would get to play every 6
weeks or so, and by that time we were pretty close. Tara had been dating Andrew
Chilcote for the same amount of time we’d been working as a duo, so to go to
Boston, see them, and meet some of their friends I didn’t know was always
wonderful. This has continued to be the case from an even greater distance.
One
time this sense of community served an especially important function was in April 2013, surrounding the Boston Marathon bombing. I was in
town for concerts by Andrew, our friend Eliza Kinney (both of whom asked me
to write solos for their recitals that month), and a concert where Tara and I
played Donald Miller Piece with the
NEC Wind Ensemble. On Marathon Monday (a day before the Wind Ensemble performance)
we were in a coffee shop next to the school. Around 2:30, I received a phone
call from my father who told me that there had been explosions in Copley Square.
We walked outside to see Huntington Ave full of EMS crews speeding towards
Copley. When we made our way into the Jordan Hall building, we watched live
coverage of the scene, and were made aware
that public transportation would cease operation for several hours, and that
NEC would close up at 6 pm that day.
This and more recent experiences are consistent reminders that Full Circle Time Machine was (and still
is) some sort of connective tissue for me. We would go on to play
one more concert in Jordan Hall in the next year, and Tara played the solo
violin part when we brought Voyage to
Pittsburgh in 2014.
With our friend Lou Goldford on Laptop in Bloomington, IN |
We'd been trying to figure out a way to play again for the last several months, and it finally happened here in Pittsburgh at the tail end of my break. Our original plan was for the end of March, but Andrew had an audition for the symphony here a few weeks earlier, so both of them were in Pittsburgh for two days en route to Miami. In anticipation of playing again, I bought a new chord organ,and we were able to do two shows. I'm completely thrilled with what we did given such short time. We got our original sound back, and like last year we both brought some new things to the table. We were amplified at our second show, and during one improvisation there was a prolonged moment where we each had two or three sustained activities going on (vocally and instrumentally). It was wild.
Tara
is relocating to Miami after May, and we're going to try to play a few things and do some recording before she leaves the midwest. My teacher suggested that we have a number of good quality recordings so we can apply for grants and residencies. Whatever happens, I'm confident that the relative security of our
current situations will allow us to invest time and effort to assure that Full Circle
Time Machine keeps growing.
Photos from Pittsburgh, March 2016. At Howler's, and Station P with Anna Azizzy & Eric Weidenhof
Photos from Pittsburgh, March 2016. At Howler's, and Station P with Anna Azizzy & Eric Weidenhof
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