Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Julius Eastman and His Music
- 1 Julius Eastman, A Biography
- 2 Unjust Malaise
- 3 The Julius Eastman Parables
- 4 Julius Eastman and the Conception of “Organic Music”
- 5 Julius Eastman Singing
- 6 An Accidental Musicologist Passes the Torch
- 7 A Flexible Musical Identity: Julius Eastman in New York City, 1976–90
- 8 Evil Nigger: A Piece for Multiple Instruments of the Same Type by Julius Eastman (1979), with Performance Instructions by Joseph Kubera
- 9 A Postminimalist Analysis of Julius Eastman’s Crazy Nigger
- 10 “That Piece Does Not Exist without Julius”: Still Staying on Stay On It
- 11 Connecting the Dots
- 12 Gay Guerrilla: A Minimalist Choralphantasie
- Appendix: Julius Eastman Compositions
- Chronology
- Selected Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
10 - “That Piece Does Not Exist without Julius”: Still Staying on Stay On It
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Julius Eastman and His Music
- 1 Julius Eastman, A Biography
- 2 Unjust Malaise
- 3 The Julius Eastman Parables
- 4 Julius Eastman and the Conception of “Organic Music”
- 5 Julius Eastman Singing
- 6 An Accidental Musicologist Passes the Torch
- 7 A Flexible Musical Identity: Julius Eastman in New York City, 1976–90
- 8 Evil Nigger: A Piece for Multiple Instruments of the Same Type by Julius Eastman (1979), with Performance Instructions by Joseph Kubera
- 9 A Postminimalist Analysis of Julius Eastman’s Crazy Nigger
- 10 “That Piece Does Not Exist without Julius”: Still Staying on Stay On It
- 11 Connecting the Dots
- 12 Gay Guerrilla: A Minimalist Choralphantasie
- Appendix: Julius Eastman Compositions
- Chronology
- Selected Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
Summary
Com’on now baby, stay on it.
Change this thread on which we move
from invisible to hardly tangible.
… … … … … … … … … . .
This is why baby cakes, I’m ringing you up
in order to relay this song message
so that you can get the feelin
O sweet boy
Because without the movin and the groovin,
the carin and the sharin,
the reelin and the feelin
I mean really.
—Julius Eastman's program note for Stay On It (1973)Since the new music community's rediscovery of Julius Eastman with the 2005 release of Unjust Malaise, Stay On It has quickly rushed to the head of the pack in listener popularity sweepstakes. Among critics, Mark Swed hails the music as “intensely personal” and “radically ahead of its time.” Steve Smith deems it a “potent metaphor” for the virtues of “crosspollination and collaboration.” And most colorfully of all, Paul Muller affectionately likens the piece to “a slightly out of control street party.” Nor has Eastman's resourceful fusion of relentless pulsation and elements of free improvisation failed to catch the imagination of young, open-eared performers. Captivated by the archival recordings in Unjust Malaise, the artistic directors of the experimental ensembles thingNY and Ne(x)tworks have independently undertaken to “realize” the music in live performance. Without their efforts, it is hard to imagine that Stay On It would have been selected as the representative Eastman composition on the Los Angeles Philharmonic's second Minimalist Jukebox festival in April 2014—the first “official” recognition of Eastman's belated entrée into the minimalist canon. All mighty impressive for a piece whose score is lost.
Yet the task of reconstructing Stay On It is hardly as straightforward as all that. For starters, the piece was not originally rehearsed in traditional “new music” fashion. Following the example set by the composerled ensembles of the 1960s (such as those of Cornelius Cardew and Steve Reich), and anticipating the techniques soon to be favored by the so-called downtown movement, Eastman's working methods were marked by forms of what Walter J. Ong has termed “secondary orality.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Gay GuerrillaJulius Eastman and His Music, pp. 151 - 178Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015
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