Monday, April 20, 2020

Jonathon Grasse

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'''Jonathon Grasse''' is an American [[composer]], [[Ethnomusicology|ethnomusicologist]], and improvising electric [[guitarist]]. He is a professor of music at [[California State University, Dominguez Hills]].

==Career==
===Composition===

Grasse’s list of music compositions dating to the late-1980s includes over thirty pieces for soloists, chamber groups, large ensembles, and [[American gamelan]]. His ''Triptych for String Trio'' was awarded first place in the 2012 [[American Composers Forum]]-Los Angeles competition.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> "The Informal Sector," a concerto for two trombones and Just Intonation gamelan (2010) premiered at a Microfest concert at Claremont's [[Harvey Mudd College]].<ref></ref> Both of these works appear on his 2016 CD ''Six Compositions''. Many of his works for guitar and guitar ensemble have been concertized by Los Angeles-based guitarist Peter Yates.<ref></ref> Since 2017, Grasse has collaborated with the new music ensemble Brightwork, resulting in two works for that sextet.<ref></ref>

In addition to fully notated compositions, Grasse has collaborated with Los Angeles-based ensembles on structured improvisations and site-specific pieces as a composer and electric guitarist since the late 1990s. Grasse's four-hour-long piece "13 + 7 + one" (2006) for multiple ensembles was commissioned for the environs of the Frank Gehry-designed [[Edgemar]] complex in Santa Monica, California, where it was performed in 2006.<ref name=smm>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The same year, his site-specific work "Curfew" for octet, covering four city blocks of the Long Beach Arts District, was performed for that city's Soundwalk festival.<ref></ref> In 2003, the [[Los Angeles Times]]' critic Victoria Looseleaf reviewed his [[Skirball Cultural Center]] Siteworks electronic music collaboration with choreographer Parijat Desai: "Making felicitous use of the Mark Taper Courtyard in the site-specific series, choreographer Parijat Desai, in collaboration with Liam Clancy, Iddrisu Saaka and [[Denise Uyehara]], performed “Water, Tree, Stone,” an elegiac take on the notion of peace. Set to Jonathon Grasse’s sound collage that veered from techno to Portuguese love songs and talk of cruise missiles, the quartet traversed the patio with butoh-like deliberateness before brandishing a large papier-mache globe among them."<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

===Guitarist===

As an electric guitarist, Grasse began experimenting with spontaneous improvisation with writer and pianist [[Carter Scholz]], whom he met in 1986 as a member of the Mills College gamelan. Some of their Berkeley session recordings appear as part of Scholz' [[Frog Peak Music|Frog Peak]] catalog.<ref></ref> After relocating to Los Angeles, Grasse played guitar with Surrealestate and Decisive Instant, Los Angeles-based improvisation collectives. Between 1999 and 2012, he appeared on five full-length recordings of improvised ensemble music released through Acoustic Levitation Records, including his own ''Phantomwise'' (2012), and others featuring the Los Angeles-based collective Surrealestate, Gustavo Aguilar, and Robert Reigle.<ref></ref> In this capacity he has appeared with various groups at the [[Hammer Museum]], [[REDCAT|REDCAT Theater]], the Electric Lodge in Venice, Eagle Rock Performing Arts Center's Open Gate Theater, Cultural Center of Long Beach, San Francisco's Luggage Store Gallery, and the 1999, and 2004 Big Sur Experimental Music Festival.<ref name=smm />

=== Academic ===

An M.A. in composition ([[UC Santa Cruz]], 1995).<ref></ref> In 1999, he earned a Ph.D. in composition with the cognate in ethnomusicology from [[University of California, Los Angeles|UCLA]]. Grasse furthered his gamelan studies and performance in UCLA's Central Javanese gamelan directed by master Balinese musician and dancer Pak Nyoman Wenten. Remaining at UCLA as an instructor from 1999-2005, Grasse taught world music theory, music of Brazil, composition, and western music theory, and sponsored a student [[capoeira]] group.<ref></ref><ref></ref> Along with ethnomusicologists Brenda Romero and Paul Humphries, Grasse was a principle presenter for the College Music Society-affiliated Institute for the Pedagogy of World Music Theories held at the [[University of Colorado, Boulder]] (2005, 2007, 2010), an institute that grew from their presentations at meetings of the [[Society for Ethnomusicology]]. Since 2005, he has been a professor of music at [[California State University, Dominguez Hills]], where he directs the CSUDH Festival of New and Improvised Music.<ref></ref>

==Research work==

Grasse's ethnomusicology research and publications focus on music from [[Minas Gerais]], Brazil, and includes articles examining regional Afro-Brazilian music traditions.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref></ref> Since the early 1990s, Grasse has pursued fieldwork investigations and archival research in and around [[Belo Horizonte]], Brazil. There, he has interviewed members of the [[Clube da Esquina]] (the Corner Club) music collective based around [[Milton Nascimento]], luthiers producing the guitar-like viola (Brazilian ten-string guitar), and studied the Afro-Brazilian genre of Congado, among other topics. Grasse is author of the [[33⅓|331/3]] Brazil book ''Lo Borges' and Milton Nascimento's Corner Club,'' examining the 1972 album ''[[Clube da Esquina (album)|Clube da Esquina]].'' His assistance in archival research at São Paulo’s Oneyda Alvarenga municipal recording archive in Brazil is acknowledged in the liner notes of two CD recordings published by [[Smithsonian Folkways|Smithsonian Folkways Recordings]]: ''The Discoteca Collection: Missão de Pesquisas Folclóricas,'' and ''L. H. Corrêa de Azevedo: Music of Ceará and Minas Gerais.''<ref></ref> His current book project is ''Hearing Brazil: Music in Minas Gerais'', forthcoming from [[University Press of Mississippi]].

Previous to his work on Brazil, Grasse studied the Indonesian gamelan percussion orchestra beginning in 1986, performing as a community member with [[University of California, Berkeley|UC Berkeley]]'s Sari Raras under the direction of Midiyanto and Ben Brinner, and Oakland's Mills College gamelan Si Betty, constructed by [[Lou Harrison]] and [[William Colvig|Bill Colvig]], and directed by [[Jody Diamond]]. From 1987 to 1991, Grasse was a member of the Berkeley Gamelan directed by instrument builder and composer [[Daniel Schmidt (musician)|Daniel Schmidt]], who encouraged him to compose several works for the ensemble. Grasse later co-authored the chapter on gamelan in a 1998 biographical work on Harrison written by then [[University of California, Santa Cruz|UC Santa Cruz]] professors [[Fredric Lieberman|Fred Lieberman]] and Leta Miller, before completing his UCLA doctoral monograph on that composer in 1999.<ref></ref>

== References ==
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==External links==
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[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American male composers]]
[[Category:American writers about music]]
[[Category:University of California, Los Angeles faculty]]
[[Category:California State University, Dominguez Hills faculty]]


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