Harry Partch (June
24,
1901 –
September 3,
1974) was an
American
composer. He was one the first
composers to work with
microtonal
scales, writing much of his
music for
instruments he built himself,
tuned in 11-limit
just intonation. Partch's tuning
had its origin in an extended version of
Max Meyer's
tonality diamond, whose diagonals
produce
Otonalities (o=over, or 'major')
and
Utonalities (u=under or 'minor')
in Partch's scheme. The 11-limit tonality diamond is clearly
embodied in Partch's
diamond marimba. Due to
peculiarities of media reporting, Partch is famous for his 43-tone
scale, even though he used many different scales in his work.
Partch was born in
Oakland, California. Both his
parents were
Presbyterian
missionaries. He learned to play
the
clarinet and
guitar as a child, and there was
also a
harmonium in the house, which he
played. He began to compose at an early age using the
chromatic scale normal in western
music, but burned all his early works after becoming frustrated
with what he saw as the imperfections of that particular system of
musical tuning.
Interested in the potential musicality of
speech, Partch worked out his
first extended scales to notate the inflections of the speaking
voice. He built his adapted
viola to demonstrate the concept.
He then secured a grant, which allowed him to go to
London to study the history of
tuning systems. While there, he met the
poet
W. B. Yeats with the intention of
gaining his permission to write an
opera based on his translation of
Sophocles'
Oedipus the King. He took
another instrument he had built, an adapted guitar, to the
meeting, and accompanied himself in one of his own songs on it.
Yeats was enthusiastic, saying "a play done entirely in this way,
with this wonderful instrument, and with this type of music, might
really be sensational", and giving Partch's idea his blessing.
Partch set about building more instruments to
realise his opera with. However, his grant money ran out, and,
back in the United States, he began to live as a
hobo, travelling around on
trains and taking casual work
where he could find it. He continued in this way for ten years,
writing about his experiences in journals that were later
collected together under the title
Bitter Music. They frequently
include snatches of overheard
speech notated on
musical staves according to the
pitches used by the speaker. This
technique (which had been earlier used by
Leos Janacek and would be later
used by
Steve Reich) was to become a
standard approach to vocal parts in Partch's work.
In
1941, Partch wrote Barstow,
a vocal piece that takes as its text eight pieces of
graffiti he had seen on a highway
railing in
Barstow, California. The piece
uses his 43-tone scale, and is scored for his custom-built
instruments.
In 1943, Partch received another grant, and was
able to settle down somewhat and work with more dedication on the
music. He returned to his
Oedipus project, although the
executors of Yeats' estate refused permission for him to use
Yeats' translation, and he had to make his own (a recording with
Yeats' translation has since been released, Yeats' text having
passed into the
public domain). He also started
work on
US Highball, a piece that
used many of his jottings from his hobo years as text. The work
is, essentially, the story of a hobo's trip from Oakland,
California to
Chicago, a journey that Partch
had himself undertaken.
Around this time, Partch was also working on a
book, eventually published as
Genesis of a Music. It is an
account of his own music, with discussions of music theory and
instrument design. It is considered a standard text of microtonal
music theory.
Partch went on to write
The Bewitched, a sort of
cross between a
ballet and an
opera and
Revelation in the Courthouse Park,
a work based in large part on
Euripides'
The Bacchae.
Delusion of the Fury (1969)
is seen by some as his greatest work. He died in
San Diego, California of a
heart attack.
Partch ran his own record label, "Gate
5", to release recordings of his works. Towards the end
of his life,
Columbia Records made recordings
of some of his works, including Delusion of the Fury, which
helped in large part to bring him to the attention of the musical
world. He remains a somewhat obscure figure, but is well known in
experimental and microtonal circles, and is considered by many to
be one of the most significant composers of the 20th century.
In
1990,
Dean Drummond's
Newband became custodians of the
original Harry Partch instrument collection, and frequently
perform with and commission new pieces for Partch's instruments.