
Pauline Oliveros
American composer born 30 May 1932 in Houston; died 24 November 2016 in Kingston, New York.
Pauline Oliveros was born in Houston on 30 May 1932. Her mother was a pianist and her father a dancer. At a very early age, she became acutely aware of the sounds which surrounded her: the crackles of her father’s short-wave radio, bird songs, the croaking of frogs, the voices of her parents mixing with the sound of the car engine on road trips, etc. At the age of 9, her mother brought home an accordion; she developed a passion for the instrument, going on to study it with Willard A. Palmer at the Moores School of Music (University of Houston), alongside studies of horn and tuba.
The realisation that she was homosexual led her to leave her deeply conservative home state of Texas. Resolved to become a composer, she moved to San Francisco in 1952, where she taught accordion and horn to make a living and pay for her studies with Robert Erickson at the San Francisco State College. While there, she met Terry Riley and Loren Rush, with whom she formed a short-lived improvisation trio in 1957, the year in which she graduated with a degree in composition. In 1964, she attended the premiere of In C by Terry Riley, a seminal work of musical minimalism.
In 1958, she experienced a kind of epiphany when she found that her tape recorder was able to pick up sounds that she herself could not perceive. This led her to focus her energy on listening, as attentively as possible, to the sounds that surrounded her. The following year, she worked alongside Ramon Sender and Morton Subotnick (with additional input from Robert Erickson) on the creation of an electroacoustic music studio at the University of San Francisco. In 1960, compositions by the three composers combining improvisations and pre-recorded sounds were presented in a concert titled “Sonics.” During her time at the studio, Oliveros composed her first work for fixed media, Time Perspectives (1961). Sender and Subotnick left the university in 1961 in order to establish the San Francisco Tape Music Center. Oliveros subsequently wrote the vocal work Sound Patterns, heavily inspired by her experiences with electronic music; the piece was awarded the Gaudeamus Prize in 1962.
In 1966, she composed a series of electroacoustic works at the University of Toronto. In the same year, the San Francisco Tape Music Center received financial support from the Rockefeller Foundation, and the following year, a $15,000 grant in order to merge with the Mills Center for Contemporary Music, with Oliveros being named as Director. In this setting, she composed the Bogs series. In 1968, she accepted a teaching position at the University of San Diego, where she met physicist and karate master Lester Ingber. The two collaborated on research on music perception, giving rise to the composition of Sonic Meditations in 1971.
Oliveros left San Diego in 1981, briefly interrupting her teaching activities in order to live and work in Kingston (upstate New York). In 1985, she created the Pauline Oliveros Foundation (which would become the “Deep Listening Institute” in 2005), an organisation whose objectives included promoting of the work of female composers (specifically Anna Rubin, Shelley Hirsch, Lois V. Vierck, etc.). In 1988, she developed the notion of “deep listening,” a term applied to her work on combining music with meditation.
Following an invitation from Joe Catlano, in 1991, Oliveros participated in a “tele-musical” production in which musicians in six different cities (Kingston [NY], New York [NY], Houston [TX], San Diego [CA], Los Angeles [CA], and Oakland [CA]) performed together remotely. In 1996, she became the Darius Milhaud Composer-in-Residence at Mills College. From 2001 until her death, she taught at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy (NY). Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, her works, many of which had rarely been performed, were recorded and released (in some cases, re-released) by a number of experimental music labels (Lovely Music, Important Records, Table of the Elements, Sub Rosa, Pogus, Hat Hut, etc.).
In 1999, Oliveros was the recipient of the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the United States Prize for her life’s work. In 2009, she was awarded the William Schuman Prize from Columbia University, and a retrospective concert of her works (from 1960 to 2010) took place at Miller Theater (also at Columbia University) on 27 March 2010.
Pauline Oliveros died in her sleep on 24 November 2016, at the age of 84.
© Ircam-Centre Pompidou, 2018
By Pierre-Yves Macé
Margins
Sounding the Margins. The title given by Pauline Oliveros to the collection of her writings published in 2010 situates her creative position squarely in the American tradition of the solitary, independent, and somewhat eccentric composer — the figure of the maverick. Oliveros is an outsider, in more ways than one: a women composer in a largely masculine milieu; a performer whose instrument, the accordion, was long ostracized for its popular origins; a creator who collaborated with artists of diverse backgrounds, including composers Terry Riley and Morton Subotnick, improvisers Joëlle Léandre and Joe McPhee, sound artist Stephen Vitiello, DJ Spooky, and the rock band Sonic Youth. Her catalogue is staggering, as prolific as it is eclectic. Academic pieces written for classical instruments stand alongside open-ended performance pieces without defined instrumentation or length, tape improvisations, participatory happenings, and pieces consisting of meditation or art therapy. Such an output disrupts the Western paradigm of the master-composer. Oliveros does not create forms, in the objective sense, but ratherformations, a word that should be understood in all its possible resonances: formation as a process of becoming-form, and formation as education and training, of individual creators, professional performers, and amateurs, to engage in a shared fundamental activity, listening.
Oliveros’s first creative decade, from 1956 to the end of the 1960s, traces a path of decentering, a progressive shedding of the canons of musical tradition. Her first scores, written in the course of her studies with Robert Erickson, bear the imprint of the then-fashionable post-Webernian aesthetic. If the Serenade for Viola and Bassoon (1956) constitutes Oliveros’s one and only venture into dodecaphonicism, her two song cycles — Three Songs for Soprano and Piano (1957) and Three Songs for Soprano and Horn (1957) — adopt a free atonality. The pronounced athematicism of these early scores soon called for the suspension of certain written parameters: a piece like Outline for Flute, Percussion, and String Bass (1963) asks musicians to transition, very quickly, from interpreting partially notated music to entirely free improvisation. The Variations for Sextet (1960), meanwhile, introduces sounds sustained over a long duration, meditative breaks that mark a strong contrast with the density of the writing.
Little by little, conventional music notation disappears, ceding to verbal instructions. To Valerie Solanas and Marilyn Monroe in Recognition of Their Desperation (1970) is based around the organization of five pitches freely chosen in advance for each performer. In Willowbrook (1976) for wind ensemble, a game of exchanging pitches takes place between a first group of performers (the “generating group”), with a second group (the “reflecting group”) playing the role of an echo chamber. The score establishes the rules of the game, the forms of which are indefinitely renewable. As Oliveros’s musical notation thins out, bodily presence is brought to the fore and subjected to increasingly detailed instructions: a seemingly conventional duo for piano and flute is enhanced by a page turner whose numerous gestures are given in a separate score (Trio for Flute, Piano, and Page Turner, 1961). Even more overtly theatrical, the work Pieces of Eight (1964) sets into motion various objects, ranging from the mundane (a clock, wooden crates) to the totemic (a bust of Beethoven), transforming the musical performance into a form of ritual or ceremony. Amid this 1960s aesthetic of musical theater, and extending through to her folklore and surrealism, emerges another longstanding and more personal preoccupation in Oliveros’s oeuvre: the dislocation of musical practice from the concert hall. This ambition finds its terrain of choice in Link (1970), a durational performance meant to take place on a university campus over the course of an entire day. Its continuous, accidental, or intermittent sound events are mapped in advance, and the everyday space becomes a stage on which everyone finds themselves at once performer and audience, listener and producer of sound.
Body-Instruments
Even as she broke away from musical conventions, Oliveros reaffirmed a major trope of American music: the figure of the composer-performer who interprets her own music. Having since her youth relished playful experiments with her wire recorder and her transistor radio, Oliveros committed early on to improvise directly with sonic material. Her activity as an accordionist — which intensified following her departure in 1981 from her professorial post at the University of California San Diego — became a central site of experimentation. It voiced the various developments of her aesthetic: the Cageian heritage of Duo for Accordion & Bandoneon (1965), performed with David Tudor; the meditative minimalism of Horse Sings from Cloud (1977); the modal improvisation of Rattlesnake Mountain (1982); the just tunings of The Roots of the Moment (1987); and so forth. Her intimate rapport with her instrument came to define a poetics implicating the entire body: “In the late 1960s some of my musical colleagues were trying to […] align themselves with the scientific method. The resulting music was complex and intellectual and brought about a kind of separation from the body. […] I went in the opposite direction.”1
In 1971, Oliveros joined the Big Jewish Band of San Diego as accordionist, notably to record the music for a multimedia project by poet Jerome Rothenberg. This brief foray into the accordion’s popular register bore fruit in the form of The Wanderer (1982), a piece for accordion ensemble with percussion, animated by central European dance rhythms as well as the music of klezmer, Bulgarian, and Cajun cultures. Notwithstanding this exception, Oliveros’s use of the accordion is abstracted from any reference to folk traditions: rather, it draws upon the instrumental mechanism itself, which acts as an extension of human respiration, mixing sometimes with the performer’s voice. The first on-disc recording of Horse Sings from Cloud for accordion and voice (released in 1983 on the label Lovely Music) perfectly illustrates this intimate collusion between body and instrument, composition and performance, writing and improvisation.
The collection of electronic pieces composed over the 1960s should be read as an extension of this instrumental output. As she wrote, “My accordion playing informed my electronic music and my electronic music informed my accordion playing.”2 As a musical instrument, the machine is only apprehended through its interaction with the body. Contrary to French musique concrète, Oliveros’s tape music foregoes the structuring possibilities of montage in favor of a focus on real-time performance. And contrary to German elektronische Musik, her tape music is not organized by any predetermined calculation. Drawn instead toward the phenomenon of continuity rather than the sonic object, she explores in this music a sonic continuum ranging from sinusoidal sweeps to biting white noise (A Little Noise in the System, 1967). Taking inspiration from natural phenomena (frogs croaking) as well as from industrial soundscapes (the hum of a power plant), the music unfolds in extended temporal frames, favoring long, sometimes static forms (as the series of “Bogs,” akin to a sound installation). Yet always, the gesture giving rise to the sound remains perceptible.
What is at play across these electronic pieces is the embryonic form of a live electronic system, which Oliveros would continue to develop over the years to interact with instrumental performance. This system, which Oliveros baptized EIS (Expanded Instrument System) would feature in many of her solo performances and would be refined as technology developed. Her first electronic piece, Time Perspectives (1961), created in her home, uses rudimentary equipment, everyday objects manipulated in front of a microphone: cardboard tubes and bathtub pipes used as resonators, a variable-speed tape recorder, and the like. Starting with the series of Mnemonics (1964-1966), created in the studio of the San Francisco Tape Music Center, she used Hewlett-Packard oscillators, test instruments appropriated for musical ends. With these devices, she could generate “resultant sounds” — sounds created by the superposition of two proximate frequencies, which she had previously discovered on the accordion thanks to her teacher Willard A. Palmer — by means of frequencies situated far beyond the limits of human perception. Bye Bye Butterfly (1965) opens with this type of sonority, at the threshold of the audible, until the quotation from Puccini (from which the work’s title is derived) appears, enshrouded in reverberation.
Later on, she would use Buchla and Moog synthesizers, although her interest was focused less on sound-generative devices than on those that process a signal and emit it into space. She was particularly interested in the phenomenon of echo, which she discovered accidentally through the lag between the pickup and the recording head on her tape recorder. Deployed in a quasi-systematic way in her electronic pieces from the 1960s, this technique allowed strict canons of melodic motifs to emerge out of a continuum of frequency sweeps (V of IV, 1966). Elsewhere, the densely amassed use of this technique modified the texture of the original source sounds. When Oliveros combined performance on the accordion with the EIS, she used a pedalboard allowing her to regulate in real time the various properties of echo and reverb. A disc such as Crone Music (1990, Lovely Music) shows how such changes in computing played a role in structuring her music. Technological developments would allow her to work in particular on the question of trajectories: with a piece like Moving Spaces (2006), she managed to attribute a distinct space to each of four component sound sources (woodblocks, conch, thunder tube, and a serrated wooden shell).
Attentive to technological evolutions throughout her life, Oliveros ceaselessly explored how technology could augment or extend the capacities of the human body. In a 1999 article, she drew upon the transhumanist prophecies of Ray Kurzweil to envisage a technology of neural implants that could have effects on improvisational practice, such as to enable the ear to “recognize and identify instantaneously any frequency or combination of frequencies” or “perceive and comprehend interdimensional spatiality.”3 Once again, the idea is to push limits: sounding the margins.
“Just Listen”
In her writings and interviews, Oliveros enjoyed recounting one memory in particular: in 1958, she received as a birthday present a tape recorder, which she placed one day at her window to record the street sounds of San Francisco. Upon listening to the recording, she realized that the microphone had picked up sounds that she, for lack of attention, had not heard herself. From that day onward, she committed herself to a self-discipline of rigorous listening, the pillar of a truly musical life: “Listen to everything all the time and remind yourself when you are not listening.” She kept a journal at that time and wrote summaries of listening that have the precision and the penetrative power of musical compositions in their own right (see, e.g., “Some Sound Observations,” published in Source Magazine4). For Oliveros, listening and hearing are different activities, distinguished according to their relation to the body: the act of hearing transmits sonic information to the brain via the auditory channel, whereas listening is located deep within oneself — “deep inside.”
Oliveros twice sought to convert this depth into experience. In 1983, she performed a piece for the collaborative disc Vor der Flüt in a disused cistern in Cologne; and in 1988, she, Stuart Dempster, and Peter Ward recorded the disc Deep Listening (on the label New Albion) in the underground cistern of Fort Worden in Port Townsend, Washington — a space with a volume of 75 million liters, in which reverberation lasts 45 seconds. In such a space, it is nearly impossible for a musician to distinguish between direct and reverberated sound. The multiplication of reflections acts upon an instrument’s timbre, reinforcing or attenuating certain partials. This situation demands that each instrumentalist concentrate on how her sound affects the space and is affected by it. To play in such a space was, Oliveros tells us, like finding herself immersed “in a hall covered in sonic mirrors.”
These two experiences gave rise to the concept of “deep listening,” which traverses the realms of aesthetics, ethics, and therapeutics. The adjective “deep” evokes both the intensity of the act of listening and the complexity of that which is to be heard — the profusion of exterior and interior worlds. As a discipline, deep listening designates an effort to encompass the full sonic spectrum in order to apprehend, as much as possible, its full scope and richness, all while remaining conscious of individual sounds and their trajectories. By extension, the term refers to a musical ensemble (the Deep Listening Band, with Dempster and Ward) and to a community of followers (the Deep Listening Institute).
The development of the concept of deep listening represented an important turning point in the work of Oliveros. Its roots actually go back to 1971, when she conceived her Sonic Meditations, a collection of twenty-five textual scores intended for “group work.” The collection is not specifically addressed to musicians, but to “any persons who are willing to commit themselves.”5 The pieces are not improvisations, but exercises with precise directions — like tai chi or meditation — and require sustained engagement as a group. The scores invite performers to not only produce sounds, but also to imagine sounds, to hear ambient sounds, and to recall past sounds.
The author explains this turning point in her work with reference to the violent events that marked the end of the 1960s. She cites the self-immolation of a student at the University of California San Diego protesting the Vietnam War, the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and the Mỹ Lai massacre. “So I began to center myself with the work I was doing on Sonic Meditation, feeling that people needed connections, interconnections, rather than separation in order to play together well for one thing (as musicians), but also to be together well as human beings on the planet that is shared by all.”6
Sonic Meditations raises the question of power head-on. Music, she writes in her introduction to the score, exerts a clear power on the body, which has been used by institutions (the Church), wealthy patrons, and industry (the Muzak corporation) in order to control people. Muzak, known in common parlance as “elevator music,” represents the summit of this impulse to control: it is music with the explicit aim of reaching the body at a subconscious or reflexive level to enhance its energy and work capacity. Practicing deep listening is a means of refusing such insidious domination. To develop an awareness of sounds is, by the same token, to develop one’s ability to master one’s own power.
It is difficult to read this idea without hearing a resonance with Oliveros’s feminist thought. It is no accident that the composition of Sonic Meditations occurred at the same time as she was founding an all-women ensemble, the ♀ Ensemble. Given the examples of her mother and grandmother, both of whom were pianists hindered by their expected social roles as homemakers, Oliveros was confronted early on by the effects of the patriarchal oppression of women’s freedoms. In a 1998 article, she called for the mass participation of women in musical life. She wished to bring about a true paradigm shift — to end the cycle of women musicians’ and composers’ careers being stifled or shattered by the shadow of men (citing the case of Alma Mahler as an example). Seeming almost to echo Walter Benjamin’s “heroes of music history,” she rallies the “musical heroines” of our time to “respond to the call of all the lost musics of women through the ages.”7
1. Pauline OLIVEROS, “My ‘American Music’: Soundscape, Politics, Technology, Community,” Sounding the Margins, Kingston, Deep Listening Publications, 2010, p. 231-232.↩
2. Pauline OLIVEROS, “The Accordion (& the Outsider),” Sounding the Margins, p. 160.↩
3. Pauline OLIVEROS, “Quantum Improvisation: The Cybernetic Presence,” Sounding the Margins, p. 53.↩
4. Pauline OLIVEROS, “Some Sound Observations,” Source: Music of the Avant-Garde, 1966-1973, Larry Austin and Douglas Kahn (eds.), Berkeley, University of California Press, 2011, p. 134-137.↩
5. Pauline OLIVEROS, score of Sonic Meditations I-XII, Sharon, Smith Publications, 1971.↩
6. Pauline OLIVEROS, “My ‘American Music’,” Sounding the Margins, p. 232.↩
7. Pauline OLIVEROS, “Breaking the Silence,” Sounding the Margins, p. 17.↩
© Ircam-Centre Pompidou, 2018
- Solo (excluding voice)
- Ode to a Morbid Marble for piano (1951)
- Song for piano (1952)
- Fugue for piano (1953)
- Essay for piano (1954)
- Concert Piece for accordion (1956)
- stage Cock a Doodle Dandy for accordion (1958)
- 18 Children's Pieces for accordion (1959)
- Horn Etudes for horn (1959)
- elec Apple Box for amplified boxe and small items (1964)
- Five for trumpet and dancer (1964)
- elec George Washington Slept Here for amplified violin, film projection and 2-track tape (1965)
- I've Got You under My Skin for percussion (1965)
- elec Light Piece for David Tudor for piano, electroacoustic device, lighting, film projection and 4-track tape (1965)
- elec stage Theater Piece for Trombone Player trombone, pipes and 2-track tape (1966)
- elec Circuitry for percussion and light projections (1967)
- elec Night Jar for viola d'amore, mime, film and 2-track tape (1968)
- The Wheel of Fortune for clarinet, slides and costumes (1969)
- Elephant Call for trumpet (1975)
- Rattlesnake Mountain for accordion (1982)
- elec The Seventh Mansion: From the Interior Castle for amplified accordion (1983)
- Gathering Together for eight-hand piano (1984)
- Thirteen Changes for violin (1986), Deep Listening Publications.
- Tara's Room for accordion (1987)
- elec The Roots of the Moment for accordion and electronics (1987), 58 mn
- elec stage Crone Music / Music for Lear for accordion and Expanded Instrument System (1989), 57 mn 41 s
- All Fours for the Drum Bun for percussion (1990)
- Portrait of Malcolm for violin (1991) [program note]
- Saint George and the Dragon for accordion (1991)
- What If for accordion (1991)
- Pauline's Solo for accordion (1992), Deep Listening Publications.
- A Fluting Moment for flute (1996)
- elec The Heart of Tones for trombone, oscillator and free accompaniment (1999), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Continuing Variations for accordion and electronics (2000), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Red Shifts for trombone, oscillators and noise generators (2000), Deep Listening Publications.
- Quintuplets Play Pen – Homage to Ruth Crawford Seeger for piano (2001)
- Sister Dreams for percussion (2001)
- Vigil for piano (2002)
- elec Big Room for trombone and Expanded Instrument System (2003), Deep Listening Publications.
- Quantum Flirts and Fits for accordion (2003), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Spirit Light for accordion and Expanded Instrument System (2003), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Sound Light Migrations for accordion, Expanded Instrument System and light (2009)
- Redwood Shrine for outdoor piano (2014)
- A Trilling Piece for Terry for piano (one or more players) (2015)
- Intensity 21.5 for bass flute (2015)
- Chamber music
- Undertone for violin and piano (1951)
- stage Song for horn, harp and group of dancers (1952)
- Prelude and Fugue for string quartet (1953)
- Trio for clarinet, bassoon and horn (1955)
- Serenade for bassoon and viola (1956)
- 4H Club for flute, clarinet, guitar and double bass (1958)
- Variations for Sextet for flute, clarinet, trumpet, horn, piano and cello (1960), Smith Publications
- 1000 Acres for string quartet (1961)
- Trio for flute, piano and page turner (1961), Smith Publications
- Lulu for flute and prepared piano (1962)
- Outline for flute, percussion and double bass (1963)
- Outline for Septet for accordion, trumpet, trombone, two percussions, bass and pianos (1963)
- Trio for accordion, trumpet and double bass (1964), Smith Publications
- Duo for accordion and bandoneon (1965)
- elec Double Basses at Twenty Paces for two double basses with their assistants, a referee, slides and 2-track tape (1968), Smith Publications
- Aeolian Partitions for flute, clarinet, piano and cello (1969), Bowdoin College Press
- Double X for instrument quartet or octet (1979, 1979)
- stage Traveling Companions for three dancers and three percussionists (1980)
- Mother's Day for two concertinas (1981)
- elec The Wheel of Time for string quartet and 2-track tape (1984), Smith Publications
- Tree/Peace for violin, cello and piano (1984)
- Portrait of Quintet of the Americans for wind quintet (1987)
- Portraits for Brass Quintet for brass quintet (1989)
- Grand Improvisation for accordion, oboe, bass and synthesizer (1990)
- elec The Lightning Box for voice, accordion, keyboard, marimba and Expanded Instrument System (1990), Deep Listening Publications.
- Illegal Harmony for two performers (1992)
- Stay the Same to Change… And Change to Stay the Same for two accordions (1993)
- elec Epigraphs in the Time of AIDS for accordion, trombone, keyboard, string instrument and Expanded Instrument System (1994), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Ghostdance for accordion, percussion and electronics (1996)
- Saxual Orientation for saxophone quartet (1997), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Primordial Lift for accordion, harmonium, violin, cello, electric cello, oscillator, mixing (1998), 45 mn
- Six for New Time for five electric guitars and one drum kit (1999), 8 mn
- 70 Chords for Terry: A Meditation on String Theory for string quartet (2005), Deep Listening Publications.
- String-utopia for violin and cello (2005)
- The Gender of Now: There But Not There for trombone and piano (2005), Deep Listening Publications.
- Blue Heron for piano and double bass (2006), Deep Listening Publications.
- One Hundred Meeting Places: In Memory of Ron George for violin, cello and percussion (2006), Deep Listening Publications.
- Magnetic Trails for violin and piano (2008), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Heptagonal Dreams for seven Paetzold flutes and electronics (2014)
- elec Motion Memories, Mermaids for accordion, cello, Expanded Instrument System and multichannel system (2014)
- elec The Mystery Beyond Matter for five instruments, Expanded Instrument System and multichannel system (2015)
- Twins Peeking at Koto for two accordions and koto (2015), 23 mn
- Instrumental ensemble music
- View from the Bridge for ensemble (1958)
- elec Apple Box Orchestra for amplified box, percussion and small objects (1964)
- Pieces of Eight for ensemble and conductor (1964), Smith Publications
- elec SY*YdY=1 for players, cellos, bassoons, shakuhachi and amplified heartbeats (1969)
- The Yellow River Map for large ensemble (1977)
- ...Jam for accordion ensemble (1980)
- Gone With the Wind for ensemble (1980)
- Tashi Gomang for orchestra (1981)
- The Wanderer for twenty-two accordions and five percussionists (1982), 19 mn, Deep Listening Publications.
- Wings of Dove for double wind quintet and two pianos (1983), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Lion's Eye for Javanese Gamelan and sampler (1985)
- elec stage Tasting the Blaze for clarinet, trombone, percussion, cello, four accordions, Gagaku orchestra and electronics (1985)
- Queens of Space for ensemble (1991)
- Pebble Music for pebbles and instruments (1992), Deep Listening Publications.
- Ear Rings for indeterminate ensemble (1995), Deep Listening Publications.
- Four Meditations for orchestra (1997), Deep Listening Publications.
- Out of the Dark for string orchestra (1998), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Sound Geometries for chamber orchestra and Expanded Instrument System (2003)
- One Hundred Meeting Places for flexible orchestra (2006), Deep Listening Publications.
- Inner/Outer Matrix for ensemble (2007), Deep Listening Publications.
- Olas, Sobre las Olas for open ensemble (2010)
- elec Sound Piece for amplified table, objects and instruments (2014)
- elec Whatchamacallit for the Thingamajigs for glass, shō, hichiriki, flutes, clave, gong, bass drum and electronics (2014)
- Concertant music
- Letting Go for accordion and ensemble (1984)
- Waking the Heart for accordion and ensemble (1984)
- Vocal music and instrument(s)
- Three Songs for soprano and piano (1957)
- Three Songs for soprano and horn (1957)
- Fifteen for singers, actors, dancers and instruments (1964)
- George Washington Slept Here Too for four performers, a concert piano, toys and slides (1965)
- elec Hallo for actor, voice, violins, electronics and two echo systems (1966)
- elec The C(s) for ONCE for voice(s), organ and three tape recorders (1966)
- A-OK for choir, accordion, violins, conductor and audience participation (1969)
- The Dying Alchemist Preview for trumpet, percussion, violin, narrator and slides (1969)
- Meditation on the Points of the Compass for choir, percussion and audience participation (1970)
- Music for T'ai Chi for three voices, accordion and two cellos (1970)
- elec To Valerie Solanas and Marylin Monroe in Recognition of their Desparation for choir, organ, orchestra, electronics and lights (1970), Smith Publications
- Rose Mountain Slow Runner for voice and accordion (1975)
- The Pathways of the Grandmothers for voice and accordion (1976)
- Willowbrook Generations and Reflections for choir and wind ensemble (1976), Smith Publications
- Horse Sings from Cloud for voice(s) and accordion (1977)
- Carol Plantamura for solo voice and twenty instruments (1979)
- El Relicario de los Animales for voice and twenty instruments (1979)
- elec Aga for voice, concertina, whistling conch, trumpet, electronics and echo (1984)
- elec Legend for choir, amplified accordion and percussion (1985)
- The Chicken Who Learned to Fly for voice, narrator and synthesizer (1985-1984)
- Deep Listening Pieces for voices, instruments and audience participation (1970-1990)
- elec Poem of Change for voice, accordion and 2-track tape (1990)
- Im Memoriam Mr Whitney for voice and accordion (1991)
- Reflexions on the Persian Gulf for voice and accordion (1991)
- The Future of Anonymity for voice and accordion (1991)
- elec Inside Outside Space for voice(s), chamber orchestra and electronics (1992), Deep Listening Publications.
- Metalorgy for bagpipe and voice (1992)
- Phantom for voice and instruments (1992)
- The Ready Made Boomerang for voice and instruments (1992)
- stage Njinga the Queen King: The Return of a Warrior for voice and electronics (1993), Deep Listening Publications.
- Beyond the Mysterious Silence: Approaches and Departures for voice and ensemble (1995), Deep Listening Publications.
- The Space of Spirit for voices, organ and carillon (1999), Deep Listening Publications.
- Elemental Gallop for voice, flute, piano and cello (2000), Deep Listening Publications.
- stage Lunar Opera: Deep Listening for Tunes for voice, accordion, conch, percussion and dance (2000), Deep Listening Publications.
- Encensored Sound for voice, trombone, keyboard and accordion (2001)
- Sound Patterns and Tropes for mixed choir and percussion (2001), 13 mn, Deep Listening Publications.
- stage The Library of Maps: An Opera in Many Parts (2002), Deep Listening Publications.
- For the Memory of Christine for voice and percussion (2006)
- A New Indigo Peace for choir and piano (2008), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec The Heart of Tones, mixed realities version for voices, trombone and virtual orchestra (2008)
- elec Oracle Bones for spoken voice, accordion, koto and electronics (2009), Deep Listening Publications.
- Tower Ring for gong, choir and instruments (2011)
- A cappella vocal music
- Sound Patterns for mixed choir (1961), Tonos
- elec Candelaio for voices (1965)
- elec O Ha Ah for mixed choir (1968)
- King Kong Sing Along for choir (1977)
- Oh Sister Whose Name is Goddess for voice and echo (1984)
- elec Talking Bottles and Bones for voice, sound effects and echo (1984)
- elec Dream Horse Spiel for voice(s) and sound effects (1989)
- In Memory of the Future for solo voice (1992)
- Midnight Operas for choir (1992)
- Seven-up for solo voice (1992)
- elec Time Piece for electronic voice (1992)
- Ear Piece for vocal ensemble (1998)
- elec stage Antigone's Dream for voice, dance and electronics (1999)
- Electronic music / fixed media / mechanical musical instruments
- elec Time Perspective for 2-track tape (1961), 19 mn 30 s
- elec stage Seven Passages for dancer, mobile and 2-track tape (1963)
- elec Seven Passages for Elizabeth Harris for 2-track tape (1964)
- elec Before the Music Ends for 2-track tape (1965)
- elec Bye Bye Butterfly for 2-track tape (1965), 8 mn
- elec Cat O'Nine Tails for 2-track tape (1965)
- elec Covenant for 2-track tape (1965)
- elec Rock Symphony for live electronics and echo system (1965)
- elec The Chronicle of Hell for 2-track tape (1965)
- elec The Exception and the Rule for 2-track tape (1965)
- elec Winter Light for 2-track tape and mobile (1965)
- elec 5000 Miles for 2-track tape (1966), 32 mn
- elec Angel Fix for 2-track tape (1966), 32 mn
- elec Another Big Mother for 2-track tape (1966), 31 mn
- elec Big Mother is Watching You for 2-track tape (1966), 33 mn, Smith Publications
- elec Bottom Ups 1 for 2-track tape (1966), 12 mn
- elec stage Engineers Delight for performers and four turntables (1966)
- elec Feed Back 1 for 2-track tape (1966), 28 mn
- elec Feed Back 2 for 2-track tape (1966), 4 mn
- elec I of IV for 2-track tape (1966), 20 mn
- elec II of IV for 2-track tape (1966), 16 mn
- elec III for 2-track tape (1966), 14 mn
- elec III of IV for 2-track tape (1966), 9 mn
- elec IV of IV for 2-track tape (1966), 16 mn
- elec Jar Piece for 2-track tape (1966), 15 mn, Smith Publications
- elec Mnemonics I-V for 2-track tape (1964-1966), 1 h 14 mn 30 s
- elec Nite for 2-track tape (1966), 16 mn
- elec NO MO for 2-track tape (1966), 17 mn
- elec Once Again / Buchla Piece for 2-track tape (1966), 19 mn
- elec Participle Dangling in Honor of Gertrude Stein for mobile, film and 2 tracks tape (1966)
- elec Ringing the Mods 1 Heads for 2-track tape (1966), 9 mn
- elec Ringing the Mods 2 Tails for 2-track tape (1966), 9 mn
- elec Something else for 2-track tape (1966), 13 mn
- elec Team and Desecration Improvisation for 2-track tape (1966), 22 mn
- elec stage The Bath for dancers and echo system (1966)
- elec The Day I Disconnected the Erase Head and Forgot to Reconnect it for 2-track tape (1966), 32 mn
- elec Three Pieces I, II, III for 2-track tape (1966), 12 mn
- elec V of IV for 2-track tape (1966), 14 mn
- elec Alien Bog for 2-track tape (1967), 33 mn
- elec Beautiful Soop for 2-track tape (1967), 27 mn
- elec Big Road With Bird Call Patch for 2-track tape (1967), 33 mn
- elec Big Slow Bog for 2-track tape (1967), 32 mn
- elec Bog Bog for 2-track tape (1967), 33 mn
- elec Boone Bog for 2-track tape (1967), 32 mn
- elec stage Lysistrata for 2-track tape (1967)
- elec Mewsack for 2-track tape (1967), 32 mn
- elec Mills Bog for 2-track tape (1967)
- elec Mind Big for 2-track tape (1967), 33 mn
- elec Some Sound Observations for 2-track tape (1968)
- elec Events for soundtrack, audience participation (1969)
- elec In Memoriam Nikola Tesla, Cosmic Engineer for live electronics (1969)
- elec Live Electronic Piece for Merce Cunningham's Dance for live electronics (1969)
- elec Please Don't Shoot the Piano Player, He's Doing the Best He Can multimedia room (1969)
- elec The Indefinite Integral of Psi Star Psi d Tau = One multimedia piece (1969)
- elec 50-50 1 Heads for 2-track tape (1967-1970), 19 mn
- elec 50-50 2 Tails for 2-track tape (1967-1970), 19 mn
- elec A Little Noise in the System for 2-track tape (1967-1970), 30 mn
- elec Music for Expo for multitrack tape (1970)
- elec Red Horse Headache for 2-track tape (1967-1970), 21 mn
- elec The Flaming Indian for tape recorder and microphone (1971)
- elec Postcard Theatre multimedia piece for a performer (1972), 12 mn
- elec What to do multimedia piece for two or more performers (1972), Smith Publications
- elec Dear John: A Canon on the Name of Cage for electronics (1986)
- elec Portraits for interprets with computer generated scores (1988)
- elec Lion's Tale for sampler (1989)
- elec Contendors for 2-track tape (1990)
- elec Listening for Life for 2-track tape (1991)
- elec Cyber Talk for electronics (2001)
- elec Listen Edgemar sound installation (2004)
- Moving Spaces for 5.1 surround sound system (2006)
- elec Murphy Mixup for laptop orchestra (2006), Deep Listening Publications.
- A Gathering of Voices for a crowd of voices and two tape recorders (2014)
- elec Climactic Climate: Environmental Dialogue radio broadcast (2015)
- Unspecified instrumentation
- Tom Sawyer music for the theater (1958)
- Art in Woodcut movie soundtrack (1963)
- stage A Theater Piece for fifteen actors, film, projection, musicians and 2-track tape (1965)
- "I Hear a Boy Singing…" (1968)
- stage Evidence for Competing Bimolecular and Termolecular Mechanisms in the Hydrochlorination of Cyclohexine musical theater for professional and non-professional performers (1968)
- elec Festival House for mimes, films and projection (1968)
- Valentine for four card players (1968)
- California 99 (1969)
- Link for professional and non-professional performers (1970), Smith Publications
- Why Don't You Write a Short Piece ? for soloist or ensemble (1970)
- Sonic Meditations I-XII for professional and non-professional interpreters (1971), Smith Publications
- Phantom Fathom (II) from the Theater of the Ancient Trompetteers: A Ceremonial Participation Evening for an unspecified number of interpreters (1972)
- Sonic Images for a narrator with audience participation (1972)
- Sonic Meditations XIII-XXV for professional and non-professional interpreters (1973), Smith Publications
- A Ceremony of Sounds public participation (1974)
- Crow Two – A Ceremonial Opera for professional and non-professional interpreters (1974)
- Theater of Substitution for a performer (1975)
- Cheap Commissions for composers and audience (1976)
- To Those in the Grey Northwestern Rainforests for unspecified ensemble (1976)
- Twenty-two Cuts from the Red Horse music for the theater (1976)
- Bonn Feier for an undetermined number of interpreters (1977), Smith Publications
- Rose Moon for choir and marathon runners (1977), Smith Publications
- Theater of Substitutions: Blind/Dumb/Director for solo performer (1977)
- Crow's Nest (The Tuning Meditation) installation with film and dance (1979)
- Music for Stacked Deck for four performers (1979)
- Rock Piece for an unspecified number of interpreters (1979)
- The Klickitat Ride for choir and/or instruments and participants (1979)
- The Witness for virtuoso musicians (1979), Smith Publications
- Anarchy Walz for an unspecified number of performers (1980)
- Angels and Demons for an unspecified number of performers (1980)
- stage Fwyynghn (1980)
- MMM, a Lullaby for Daisy Pauline with public participation (1980)
- stage Stacked Deck (1980)
- Lake CHARGOGGAGOGGMANCHAUGGAGOGGCHAUBUNABUNBAGAUGG for an unspecified number of interpreters (1981)
- Monkey for a group of children (1981)
- Open Circuits (1984)
- Songs of the Ancestors (1984)
- Earth Ears: A Sonic Ritual for an unspecified number of interpreters (1982-1985), Deep Listening Publications.
- Dream Gates for soloist or ensemble (1989)
- The New Sound Meditation for voice and audience participation (1989)
- Sound Fishes for soloist or ensemble (1992)
- stage Walter's Finest Hours (1992)
- Hommage a Serafina (1994)
- Breaking Boundaries for piano or ensemble (1996), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec stage Io and Her and the Trouble with Him opera (2001), Deep Listening Publications.
- stage The Noh Project II (2004)
- Maquilapolis movie soundtrack (2005)
- Dissolving Your Earplugs for classically trained musicians (2006), Deep Listening Publications.
- Drifting Depths (2008), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec DroniPhonia for six iPhones and multi-instrumentalists (2009), Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Mercury Retrograde for instruments and electronics (2011), Deep Listening Publications.
- For Amnon Wolman for one singer-instrumentalist or more (2015)
- 2015
- A Trilling Piece for Terry for piano (one or more players)
- elec Climactic Climate: Environmental Dialogue radio broadcast
- For Amnon Wolman for one singer-instrumentalist or more
- Intensity 21.5 for bass flute
- elec The Mystery Beyond Matter for five instruments, Expanded Instrument System and multichannel system
- Twins Peeking at Koto for two accordions and koto, 23 mn
- 2014
- A Gathering of Voices for a crowd of voices and two tape recorders
- elec Heptagonal Dreams for seven Paetzold flutes and electronics
- elec Motion Memories, Mermaids for accordion, cello, Expanded Instrument System and multichannel system
- Redwood Shrine for outdoor piano
- elec Sound Piece for amplified table, objects and instruments
- elec Whatchamacallit for the Thingamajigs for glass, shō, hichiriki, flutes, clave, gong, bass drum and electronics
- 2011
- elec Mercury Retrograde for instruments and electronics, Deep Listening Publications.
- Tower Ring for gong, choir and instruments
- 2010
- Olas, Sobre las Olas for open ensemble
- 2009
- elec DroniPhonia for six iPhones and multi-instrumentalists, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Oracle Bones for spoken voice, accordion, koto and electronics, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Sound Light Migrations for accordion, Expanded Instrument System and light
- 2008
- A New Indigo Peace for choir and piano, Deep Listening Publications.
- Drifting Depths, Deep Listening Publications.
- Magnetic Trails for violin and piano, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec The Heart of Tones, mixed realities version for voices, trombone and virtual orchestra
- 2007
- Inner/Outer Matrix for ensemble, Deep Listening Publications.
- 2006
- Blue Heron for piano and double bass, Deep Listening Publications.
- Dissolving Your Earplugs for classically trained musicians, Deep Listening Publications.
- For the Memory of Christine for voice and percussion
- Moving Spaces for 5.1 surround sound system
- elec Murphy Mixup for laptop orchestra, Deep Listening Publications.
- One Hundred Meeting Places for flexible orchestra, Deep Listening Publications.
- One Hundred Meeting Places: In Memory of Ron George for violin, cello and percussion, Deep Listening Publications.
- 2005
- 70 Chords for Terry: A Meditation on String Theory for string quartet, Deep Listening Publications.
- Maquilapolis movie soundtrack
- String-utopia for violin and cello
- The Gender of Now: There But Not There for trombone and piano, Deep Listening Publications.
- 2004
- elec Listen Edgemar sound installation
- stage The Noh Project II
- 2003
- elec Big Room for trombone and Expanded Instrument System, Deep Listening Publications.
- Quantum Flirts and Fits for accordion, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Sound Geometries for chamber orchestra and Expanded Instrument System
- elec Spirit Light for accordion and Expanded Instrument System, Deep Listening Publications.
- 2002
- stage The Library of Maps: An Opera in Many Parts, Deep Listening Publications.
- Vigil for piano
- 2001
- elec Cyber Talk for electronics
- Encensored Sound for voice, trombone, keyboard and accordion
- elec stage Io and Her and the Trouble with Him opera, Deep Listening Publications.
- Quintuplets Play Pen – Homage to Ruth Crawford Seeger for piano
- Sister Dreams for percussion
- Sound Patterns and Tropes for mixed choir and percussion, 13 mn, Deep Listening Publications.
- 2000
- elec Continuing Variations for accordion and electronics, Deep Listening Publications.
- Elemental Gallop for voice, flute, piano and cello, Deep Listening Publications.
- stage Lunar Opera: Deep Listening for Tunes for voice, accordion, conch, percussion and dance, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Red Shifts for trombone, oscillators and noise generators, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1999
- elec stage Antigone's Dream for voice, dance and electronics
- Six for New Time for five electric guitars and one drum kit, 8 mn
- elec The Heart of Tones for trombone, oscillator and free accompaniment, Deep Listening Publications.
- The Space of Spirit for voices, organ and carillon, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1998
- Ear Piece for vocal ensemble
- Out of the Dark for string orchestra, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Primordial Lift for accordion, harmonium, violin, cello, electric cello, oscillator, mixing, 45 mn
- 1997
- Four Meditations for orchestra, Deep Listening Publications.
- Saxual Orientation for saxophone quartet, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1996
- A Fluting Moment for flute
- Breaking Boundaries for piano or ensemble, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Ghostdance for accordion, percussion and electronics
- 1995
- Beyond the Mysterious Silence: Approaches and Departures for voice and ensemble, Deep Listening Publications.
- Ear Rings for indeterminate ensemble, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1994
- elec Epigraphs in the Time of AIDS for accordion, trombone, keyboard, string instrument and Expanded Instrument System, Deep Listening Publications.
- Hommage a Serafina
- 1993
- stage Njinga the Queen King: The Return of a Warrior for voice and electronics, Deep Listening Publications.
- Stay the Same to Change… And Change to Stay the Same for two accordions
- 1992
- Illegal Harmony for two performers
- In Memory of the Future for solo voice
- elec Inside Outside Space for voice(s), chamber orchestra and electronics, Deep Listening Publications.
- Metalorgy for bagpipe and voice
- Midnight Operas for choir
- Pauline's Solo for accordion, Deep Listening Publications.
- Pebble Music for pebbles and instruments, Deep Listening Publications.
- Phantom for voice and instruments
- Seven-up for solo voice
- Sound Fishes for soloist or ensemble
- The Ready Made Boomerang for voice and instruments
- elec Time Piece for electronic voice
- stage Walter's Finest Hours
- 1991
- Im Memoriam Mr Whitney for voice and accordion
- elec Listening for Life for 2-track tape
- Portrait of Malcolm for violin [program note]
- Queens of Space for ensemble
- Reflexions on the Persian Gulf for voice and accordion
- Saint George and the Dragon for accordion
- The Future of Anonymity for voice and accordion
- What If for accordion
- 1990
- All Fours for the Drum Bun for percussion
- elec Contendors for 2-track tape
- Deep Listening Pieces for voices, instruments and audience participation
- Grand Improvisation for accordion, oboe, bass and synthesizer
- elec Poem of Change for voice, accordion and 2-track tape
- elec The Lightning Box for voice, accordion, keyboard, marimba and Expanded Instrument System, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1989
- elec stage Crone Music / Music for Lear for accordion and Expanded Instrument System, 57 mn 41 s
- Dream Gates for soloist or ensemble
- elec Dream Horse Spiel for voice(s) and sound effects
- elec Lion's Tale for sampler
- Portraits for Brass Quintet for brass quintet
- The New Sound Meditation for voice and audience participation
- 1988
- elec Portraits for interprets with computer generated scores
- 1987
- Portrait of Quintet of the Americans for wind quintet
- Tara's Room for accordion
- elec The Roots of the Moment for accordion and electronics, 58 mn
- 1986
- elec Dear John: A Canon on the Name of Cage for electronics
- Thirteen Changes for violin, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1985
- Earth Ears: A Sonic Ritual for an unspecified number of interpreters, Deep Listening Publications.
- elec Legend for choir, amplified accordion and percussion
- elec Lion's Eye for Javanese Gamelan and sampler
- elec stage Tasting the Blaze for clarinet, trombone, percussion, cello, four accordions, Gagaku orchestra and electronics
- The Chicken Who Learned to Fly for voice, narrator and synthesizer
- 1984
- elec Aga for voice, concertina, whistling conch, trumpet, electronics and echo
- Gathering Together for eight-hand piano
- Letting Go for accordion and ensemble
- Oh Sister Whose Name is Goddess for voice and echo
- Open Circuits
- Songs of the Ancestors
- elec Talking Bottles and Bones for voice, sound effects and echo
- elec The Wheel of Time for string quartet and 2-track tape, Smith Publications
- Tree/Peace for violin, cello and piano
- Waking the Heart for accordion and ensemble
- 1983
- elec The Seventh Mansion: From the Interior Castle for amplified accordion
- Wings of Dove for double wind quintet and two pianos, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1982
- Rattlesnake Mountain for accordion
- The Wanderer for twenty-two accordions and five percussionists, 19 mn, Deep Listening Publications.
- 1981
- Lake CHARGOGGAGOGGMANCHAUGGAGOGGCHAUBUNABUNBAGAUGG for an unspecified number of interpreters
- Monkey for a group of children
- Mother's Day for two concertinas
- Tashi Gomang for orchestra
- 1980
- ...Jam for accordion ensemble
- Anarchy Walz for an unspecified number of performers
- Angels and Demons for an unspecified number of performers
- stage Fwyynghn
- Gone With the Wind for ensemble
- MMM, a Lullaby for Daisy Pauline with public participation
- stage Stacked Deck
- stage Traveling Companions for three dancers and three percussionists
- 1979
- Carol Plantamura for solo voice and twenty instruments
- Crow's Nest (The Tuning Meditation) installation with film and dance
- Double X for instrument quartet or octet
- El Relicario de los Animales for voice and twenty instruments
- Music for Stacked Deck for four performers
- Rock Piece for an unspecified number of interpreters
- The Klickitat Ride for choir and/or instruments and participants
- The Witness for virtuoso musicians, Smith Publications
- 1977
- Bonn Feier for an undetermined number of interpreters, Smith Publications
- Horse Sings from Cloud for voice(s) and accordion
- King Kong Sing Along for choir
- Rose Moon for choir and marathon runners, Smith Publications
- The Yellow River Map for large ensemble
- Theater of Substitutions: Blind/Dumb/Director for solo performer
- 1976
- Cheap Commissions for composers and audience
- The Pathways of the Grandmothers for voice and accordion
- To Those in the Grey Northwestern Rainforests for unspecified ensemble
- Twenty-two Cuts from the Red Horse music for the theater
- Willowbrook Generations and Reflections for choir and wind ensemble, Smith Publications
- 1975
- Elephant Call for trumpet
- Rose Mountain Slow Runner for voice and accordion
- Theater of Substitution for a performer
- 1974
- A Ceremony of Sounds public participation
- Crow Two – A Ceremonial Opera for professional and non-professional interpreters
- 1973
- Sonic Meditations XIII-XXV for professional and non-professional interpreters, Smith Publications
- 1972
- Phantom Fathom (II) from the Theater of the Ancient Trompetteers: A Ceremonial Participation Evening for an unspecified number of interpreters
- elec Postcard Theatre multimedia piece for a performer, 12 mn
- Sonic Images for a narrator with audience participation
- elec What to do multimedia piece for two or more performers, Smith Publications
- 1971
- Sonic Meditations I-XII for professional and non-professional interpreters, Smith Publications
- elec The Flaming Indian for tape recorder and microphone
- 1970
- elec 50-50 1 Heads for 2-track tape, 19 mn
- elec 50-50 2 Tails for 2-track tape, 19 mn
- elec A Little Noise in the System for 2-track tape, 30 mn
- Link for professional and non-professional performers, Smith Publications
- Meditation on the Points of the Compass for choir, percussion and audience participation
- elec Music for Expo for multitrack tape
- Music for T'ai Chi for three voices, accordion and two cellos
- elec Red Horse Headache for 2-track tape, 21 mn
- elec To Valerie Solanas and Marylin Monroe in Recognition of their Desparation for choir, organ, orchestra, electronics and lights, Smith Publications
- Why Don't You Write a Short Piece ? for soloist or ensemble
- 1969
- A-OK for choir, accordion, violins, conductor and audience participation
- Aeolian Partitions for flute, clarinet, piano and cello, Bowdoin College Press
- California 99
- elec Events for soundtrack, audience participation
- elec In Memoriam Nikola Tesla, Cosmic Engineer for live electronics
- elec Live Electronic Piece for Merce Cunningham's Dance for live electronics
- elec Please Don't Shoot the Piano Player, He's Doing the Best He Can multimedia room
- elec SY*YdY=1 for players, cellos, bassoons, shakuhachi and amplified heartbeats
- The Dying Alchemist Preview for trumpet, percussion, violin, narrator and slides
- elec The Indefinite Integral of Psi Star Psi d Tau = One multimedia piece
- The Wheel of Fortune for clarinet, slides and costumes
- 1968
- "I Hear a Boy Singing…"
- elec Double Basses at Twenty Paces for two double basses with their assistants, a referee, slides and 2-track tape, Smith Publications
- stage Evidence for Competing Bimolecular and Termolecular Mechanisms in the Hydrochlorination of Cyclohexine musical theater for professional and non-professional performers
- elec Festival House for mimes, films and projection
- elec Night Jar for viola d'amore, mime, film and 2-track tape
- elec O Ha Ah for mixed choir
- elec Some Sound Observations for 2-track tape
- Valentine for four card players
- 1967
- elec Alien Bog for 2-track tape, 33 mn
- elec Beautiful Soop for 2-track tape, 27 mn
- elec Big Road With Bird Call Patch for 2-track tape, 33 mn
- elec Big Slow Bog for 2-track tape, 32 mn
- elec Bog Bog for 2-track tape, 33 mn
- elec Boone Bog for 2-track tape, 32 mn
- elec Circuitry for percussion and light projections
- elec stage Lysistrata for 2-track tape
- elec Mewsack for 2-track tape, 32 mn
- elec Mills Bog for 2-track tape
- elec Mind Big for 2-track tape, 33 mn
- 1966
- elec 5000 Miles for 2-track tape, 32 mn
- elec Angel Fix for 2-track tape, 32 mn
- elec Another Big Mother for 2-track tape, 31 mn
- elec Big Mother is Watching You for 2-track tape, 33 mn, Smith Publications
- elec Bottom Ups 1 for 2-track tape, 12 mn
- elec stage Engineers Delight for performers and four turntables
- elec Feed Back 1 for 2-track tape, 28 mn
- elec Feed Back 2 for 2-track tape, 4 mn
- elec Hallo for actor, voice, violins, electronics and two echo systems
- elec I of IV for 2-track tape, 20 mn
- elec II of IV for 2-track tape, 16 mn
- elec III for 2-track tape, 14 mn
- elec III of IV for 2-track tape, 9 mn
- elec IV of IV for 2-track tape, 16 mn
- elec Jar Piece for 2-track tape, 15 mn, Smith Publications
- elec Mnemonics I-V for 2-track tape, 1 h 14 mn 30 s
- elec NO MO for 2-track tape, 17 mn
- elec Nite for 2-track tape, 16 mn
- elec Once Again / Buchla Piece for 2-track tape, 19 mn
- elec Participle Dangling in Honor of Gertrude Stein for mobile, film and 2 tracks tape
- elec Ringing the Mods 1 Heads for 2-track tape, 9 mn
- elec Ringing the Mods 2 Tails for 2-track tape, 9 mn
- elec Something else for 2-track tape, 13 mn
- elec Team and Desecration Improvisation for 2-track tape, 22 mn
- elec stage The Bath for dancers and echo system
- elec The C(s) for ONCE for voice(s), organ and three tape recorders
- elec The Day I Disconnected the Erase Head and Forgot to Reconnect it for 2-track tape, 32 mn
- elec stage Theater Piece for Trombone Player trombone, pipes and 2-track tape
- elec Three Pieces I, II, III for 2-track tape, 12 mn
- elec V of IV for 2-track tape, 14 mn
- 1965
- stage A Theater Piece for fifteen actors, film, projection, musicians and 2-track tape
- elec Before the Music Ends for 2-track tape
- elec Bye Bye Butterfly for 2-track tape, 8 mn
- elec Candelaio for voices
- elec Cat O'Nine Tails for 2-track tape
- elec Covenant for 2-track tape
- Duo for accordion and bandoneon
- elec George Washington Slept Here for amplified violin, film projection and 2-track tape
- George Washington Slept Here Too for four performers, a concert piano, toys and slides
- I've Got You under My Skin for percussion
- elec Light Piece for David Tudor for piano, electroacoustic device, lighting, film projection and 4-track tape
- elec Rock Symphony for live electronics and echo system
- elec The Chronicle of Hell for 2-track tape
- elec The Exception and the Rule for 2-track tape
- elec Winter Light for 2-track tape and mobile
- 1964
- elec Apple Box for amplified boxe and small items
- elec Apple Box Orchestra for amplified box, percussion and small objects
- Fifteen for singers, actors, dancers and instruments
- Five for trumpet and dancer
- Pieces of Eight for ensemble and conductor, Smith Publications
- elec Seven Passages for Elizabeth Harris for 2-track tape
- Trio for accordion, trumpet and double bass, Smith Publications
- 1963
- Art in Woodcut movie soundtrack
- Outline for flute, percussion and double bass
- Outline for Septet for accordion, trumpet, trombone, two percussions, bass and pianos
- elec stage Seven Passages for dancer, mobile and 2-track tape
- 1962
- Lulu for flute and prepared piano
- 1961
- 1000 Acres for string quartet
- Sound Patterns for mixed choir, Tonos
- elec Time Perspective for 2-track tape, 19 mn 30 s
- Trio for flute, piano and page turner, Smith Publications
- 1960
- Variations for Sextet for flute, clarinet, trumpet, horn, piano and cello, Smith Publications
- 1959
- 18 Children's Pieces for accordion
- Horn Etudes for horn
- 1958
- 4H Club for flute, clarinet, guitar and double bass
- stage Cock a Doodle Dandy for accordion
- Tom Sawyer music for the theater
- View from the Bridge for ensemble
- 1957
- Three Songs for soprano and piano
- Three Songs for soprano and horn
- 1956
- Concert Piece for accordion
- Serenade for bassoon and viola
- 1955
- Trio for clarinet, bassoon and horn
- 1954
- Essay for piano
- 1953
- Fugue for piano
- Prelude and Fugue for string quartet
- 1952
- 1951
- Ode to a Morbid Marble for piano
- Undertone for violin and piano
Bibliographie
- Drake ANDERSEN, « Spaces for People: Technology, improvisation and social interaction in the music of Pauline Oliveros », in Organised Sound, 2022, p. 1-8.
- Alan BAKER, « An Interview with Pauline Oliveros », American Public Media, janvier 2003, http://musicmavericks.publicradio.org/features/interview_oliveros.html
- David W. BERNSTEIN, « Opening the Sound Field: Pauline Oliveros’ Improvisations with Magnetic Tape », notices dans Reverberations: Tape and Electronic Music, coffret 12 cd, Important Records, 2012.
- Theodore GORDON, « ‘Androgynous Music’: Pauline Oliveros’s Early Cybernetic Improvisation », in Contemporary Music Review, 2021, Vol. 40, No. 4, p. 386–408.
- Heidi von GUNDEN, The Music of Pauline Oliveros, Metuchen, The Scarecrow Press, 1983.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Initiation Dream, Los Angeles, Astro Artz, 1982.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Software for People. Collected Writings 1963-1980, Baltimore, Printed Editions, 1984.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Roots of the Moment, New York, Drogue Press, 1998.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Deep Listening, A Composer’s Sound Practice, Lincoln, iuniverse, 2005.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Sounding the Margins, Kingston, Deep Listening Publications, 2010.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Anthology of Text Scores by Pauline Oliveros 1971-2013, Kingston, Deep Listening Publications, 2013.
- Benjamin Ethan TINKER, « Reflection & Dwelling, écho & réverbération in Pauline Oliveros’ Work », notices dans Reverberations: Tape and Electronic Music, coffret 12 cd, Important Records, 2012.
Discographie sélective
- Pauline OLIVEROS, The Fool’s Circle ; A Woman Sees how the World Goes with no Eyes ; Reason in Madness Mixed ; This Great Fool’s Stage ; Let it Be So ; Let Me not Be Mad ; *Lear on the Road,*Pauline Oliveros, accordéon et élecronique, Panaiotis, électronique, dans « Crone Music », Lovely Music, 1990, LCD1903.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Time Perspectives ; Mnemonics I-V, II of IV, III of IV,IV of IV,V of IV,III;Team and Desecrations Improvisation;The Day I Disconnected the Erase Head and Forgot to Reconnect it;Jar Piece;Another Big Mother;Fed Back 1;Fed Back 2;5000 Miles;Angel Fix;Bottoms Up 1;Nite;Ringing the Mods 1 Heads;Ringing the Mods 2 Tails;Three Pieces I-III;Big Slow Bog;Boone Bog;Bog Bog;Mind Bog;Mewsack;50-50 1 Heads;50-50 2 Tails;A Little Noise in the System;Red Horse Headache, dans « Reverberations: Tape and Electronic Music 1961-1970 », coffret 12 cd, Important Records, 2012.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Horse Sings from Cloud ; Rattlesnake Mountain, dans « Accordion & Voice », imprec, 2014.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, « Water Above Sky Below Now », 1 vinyle Morphine Records, 2015, Doser027LP.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, « Half A Dove In New York, Half A Dove In Buenos Aires », 1 vinyle Smalltown Supersound, 2022, STSLJN407LP.
- Pauline OLIVEROS, Quintessential ; Sound Piece ; Horse Sings from Cloud ; From Unkown Silences ; David Tudor ; Tree / Peace, dans « Sound Pieces », 1 CD Another Timbre, 2023, at207.
Liens Internet
- Site de Pauline Oliveros : http://paulineoliveros.us/
- « Pauline Oliveros, écoute profonde », dans Musicopolis sur France Musique le 23 septembre 2020.
(liens vérifiés en mai 2023).