Melissa Achten: Ritual Schizophonia

harpist and interdisciplinary artist focused on immersive musical ritual in experimental performance

Fri., Sep. 30, 2022
Doors at 8pm | Show at 8:30pm
Indexical
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$16 General / $8 Members
SOLD OUT
Schizophonia, from the Greek; schizo- to split / phonia- sound | the splitting of sound from its original source | 

The twentieth century development of sound reproduction and its cultural impact on society prompted Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer to coin the term schizophonia, writing that “…it was intended to be a nervous word… I intended it to convey…(a) sense of aberration and drama…” In his experimental theater work for harp, “The Crown of Ariadne”, Schafer employs schizophonia to mirror the trauma and violence of a Greek myth in the relationship between instrument and performer. Centered around that pivotal work, this program descends further into the labyrinth, exploring how the physical mechanism of the harp invites the use of schizophonic gestures to establish dislocated soundscapes. Each work is based on a unique choreography of sonic obfuscation where performative movement shapes new meaning and sounds, leaning into the aberration that Schafer spoke of. The harp is decontextualized, allowing it to evoke aching tenderness and brutal destruction simultaneously. Within this unsettling atmosphere, the instrument is transformed, taking the severance of sound and turning it into a ritual for understanding the ugliness and beauty of life.

This project was supported, in part, by a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant.

Melissa Achten


Melissa Achten is a Los Angeles based harpist focused on experimentation and immersive sonic ritual. Her performances directly engage with the listener, blurring the relationship between bodies, instruments, and sound to destabilize and thereby reveal hidden meaning. Within carefully conjured atmospheres, she explores the nuances of surrealism, fantasy, mythology, and the occult and what these say about the human condition. In her hands, the harp is untangled from convention and remade as a divining tool for channeling work that is diaristic, intimate, and cathartic.

The fifth work of R. Murray Schafer’s ambitious Patria Cycle, titled “Patria V: The Crown of Ariadne”, is centered around the Greek myth of Theseus, who journeys into the labyrinth to destroy the Minotaur with the help of Ariadne and her red thread. Presented as a set of thematic dances for solo harpist with percussion, Schafer’s graphic composition implies an elaborate choreography of gestures, costume, and production effects. This original interpretation amplifies the inherent queerness of the myth, exploring how the creation and subsequent destruction of the “monster” is a dark metaphor for sexual desire, lust for power, and fear of the other. Masks are used to offer a symbolic differentiation between characters while concealing a sinister thought: who is the real monster? In this way, it is not only Ariadne at the harp, but Theseus, the Minotaur, Pasiphae, and many others, their collective hands pulling at the strings and drawing out the notes of a song that is repeated throughout the cosmogonic cycle. 

—Melissa Achten

HEART SCENES is a ritualistic exploration into the schizophonic nature of a heartfelt harp. In a series of scenes, the harpist utilizes various extensions of their physical and emotional being to conjure wholehearted soundscapes, eliciting gestures occur unseen via an unorthodox configuration from the audience. The resulting sympathetic resonance of the harp is then magnified through amplification, mimicking the sympathetic nervous system of a harpist entangled in cardiovascular chaos.
Marguerite Brown (b.1990) is an American composer and multi-instrumentalist who explores new mediums, forms, and performance practices with an emphasis on unorthodox approaches to tuning and temperament. In her compositions, algorithms often provide a framework for indeterminate parameters to unfold, where performer control and composer control play an equal role in realizing the vision.

Marguerite received first place in the 6th International Microtonal Guitar Competition (composition category) with her piece “Solo (Daisy)” which she performed on a guitar refretted in an original 11-limit just intonation tuning system.

Her other work for refretted guitars was recently published in the microtonal journal Edition Zalzal, as well as presented at the 2021 21st Century Guitar Conference and the 2021 Pacific Pythagorean Music Festival. Marguerite was also recently awarded the Mivos/Kanter String Quartet Prize for her string quartet in just intonation titled “chroai: tetrachords”, which will be performed in New York City during Mivos Quartet’s 2022-23 season.

Marguerite holds a BM in music composition from Cornish College of the Arts (2013), a MA from the University of California, Santa Cruz (2019), and is currently a PhD student in music composition at the University of California, San Diego.

Traces: Sarah is a work not so much about grief than it is grief itself: a moment of ritualized mourning suspended in sound. Against a backdrop of manipulated field recordings and interactive electronics, the harp is restrained, haunting the work as it lingers achingly in the aura of what remains. The blurry distinction between heard and perceived sound gives Traces: Sarah a ghost-like quality, a breathless sigh that is both question and answer. What begins as an incantation to give voice to the inaudible slowly becomes a trace, a remnant, a requiem for things lost. 

Traces: Sarah was commissioned and premiered by Melissa Achten in February 2020 at Kerry Hall in Seattle, WA. It is performed in memory of Sarah Anne Clark. 

The Garden of Forking Paths is a movement from a larger work for solo harp titled Labyrinths, which takes its initial inspiration from R. Murray Schafer’s The Crown of Ariadne and centralizes Ariadne’s thread as a vehicle for navigating sound generation on the instrument.  This myth is then placed in the context of  Labyrinths, a collection of short stories by Jorge Luis Borges, in which the concept of the labyrinth is explored using a series of mental games presented through stories filled with archaic and apocryphal information and absurd philosophical conjectures in which all things are possible.  Borges invites us to contemplate the nature of complexity and what it means to be lost.  The Garden of Forking Paths places the performer amongst pre-recorded harp that at first suggests conventional minimalism invites the harpist to not simply participate but to navigate the landscape of various timbres through semi-improvised and performative gestures. 

Melissa Achten: Ritual Schizophonia

harpist and interdisciplinary artist focused on immersive musical ritual in experimental performance

Fri., Sep. 30, 2022
Doors at 8pm | Show at 8:30pm
Indexical
Add to Calendar
$16 General / $8 Members
SOLD OUT

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Chamber Music
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