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LA JOLLA GOOD FRIDAY

This recording, remastered in 2024 by Ian Turner, originally appeared as the CP 2 /9 label's ninth vinyl release in 1981. Abstract from the original LP liner notes:

"In 1975 I was invited to the Center for Music Experiment at the University of California at San Diego. Arriving there, one's mid-Atlantic tempo was not only 7 time-zones out of phase, but one had traded wintry gales for balmy California sun . This entirely different world wasn't entirely peopled. There I met again after 15 years my old teacher from Illinois, and soon found other kindred spirits in new acquaintances. One of them was Ed Kobrin who showed me his adaptation of Hybrid IV, and most congenially told me that I could "fool around with it", when studio-time allowed. Such a time obviously had to wait for a vacation...

Another was Warren Burt who, in between emitting strange sounds, was untiring in revealing some "secret" patches...

Other possibilities presented themselves at this fascinating place, then run by Roger Reynolds. The Extended Vocal Techniques Group nimbly traversed what I had believed to be vocal boundaries. Yes, it was like an unclouded sky with many, many visible stars to wonder at.

Those six weeks passed quickly. I wrote a Pastorale for four instruments for an upcoming concert tour, and sketched an orchestral piece. Both of these were far from being experiments as an Icelandic "brrr" (befitting the season at home) was far from the people saying "Have a nice day" with sunny smiles at La Jolla - which goes to show that even the most commonplace expression for them could be an experiment in behavior for someone like

me.

I am no typist, but I was drawn to Kobrin's teletype.

On Good Friday, everyone had left the Center for Easter vacation. I should be returning home in four days. Sitting there, all alone, admiring all the paraphernalia from the computer to the 4-channel tape recorder, all my grand plans about how I was going to spend the day slowly disintegrated. They were replaced by something else: mysterious and beautiful harmonies filled my head. They came and they went. I was in tune with Kepler! A true and wondrous inspiration.

However, I soon discovered its source. It was not of divine origin. Outside the studio doors, an old janitor was just using the opportunity, when nobody was around, to wax the floors with his machine. They were creating this din.

What followed, can be heard on this record, with one modification – the four channels are compressed into two.

- Thorkell Sigurbjönsson"

https://musicalobservations.bandcamp.com/album/thorkell-sigurbj-rnsson-la-jolla-good-friday

LA JOLLA GOOD FRIDAY

This recording, remastered in 2024 by Ian Turner, originally appeared as the CP 2 /9 label's ninth vinyl release in 1981. Abstract from the original LP liner notes:

"In 1975 I was invited to the Center for Music Experiment at the University of California at San Diego. Arriving there, one's mid-Atlantic tempo was not only 7 time-zones out of phase, but one had traded wintry gales for balmy California sun . This entirely different world wasn't entirely peopled. There I met again after 15 years my old teacher from Illinois, and soon found other kindred spirits in new acquaintances. One of them was Ed Kobrin who showed me his adaptation of Hybrid IV, and most congenially told me that I could "fool around with it", when studio-time allowed. Such a time obviously had to wait for a vacation...

Another was Warren Burt who, in between emitting strange sounds, was untiring in revealing some "secret" patches...

Other possibilities presented themselves at this fascinating place, then run by Roger Reynolds. The Extended Vocal Techniques Group nimbly traversed what I had believed to be vocal boundaries. Yes, it was like an unclouded sky with many, many visible stars to wonder at.

Those six weeks passed quickly. I wrote a Pastorale for four instruments for an upcoming concert tour, and sketched an orchestral piece. Both of these were far from being experiments as an Icelandic "brrr" (befitting the season at home) was far from the people saying "Have a nice day" with sunny smiles at La Jolla - which goes to show that even the most commonplace expression for them could be an experiment in behavior for someone like

me.

I am no typist, but I was drawn to Kobrin's teletype.

On Good Friday, everyone had left the Center for Easter vacation. I should be returning home in four days. Sitting there, all alone, admiring all the paraphernalia from the computer to the 4-channel tape recorder, all my grand plans about how I was going to spend the day slowly disintegrated. They were replaced by something else: mysterious and beautiful harmonies filled my head. They came and they went. I was in tune with Kepler! A true and wondrous inspiration.

However, I soon discovered its source. It was not of divine origin. Outside the studio doors, an old janitor was just using the opportunity, when nobody was around, to wax the floors with his machine. They were creating this din.

What followed, can be heard on this record, with one modification – the four channels are compressed into two.

- Thorkell Sigurbjönsson"

https://musicalobservations.bandcamp.com/album/thorkell-sigurbj-rnsson-la-jolla-good-friday

La Jolla Good Friday
Heyr himna smiður
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