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Alien Territory Archives, The: A Collection of Radical, Experimental and Irrelevant Music from 1970's San Diego - Various Artists

Alien Territory Archives, The: A Collection of Radical, Experimental and Irrelevant Music from 1970's San Diego - Various Artists

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Drawing from the occult, self-realization and radical political movements of 70s Southern California, these artists sought to dismantle the established control systems of American life, looking to the future even as they sometimes referenced a distant, idyllically imagined past. In their pursuit of “Irrelevant Music” - Kenneth Gaburo’s term for an untainted music free of constraint and compromise - these disparate artists constitute a shadow history of American experimental music far removed from the European and East Coast models of the time. Sonic Meditations, compositional linguistics, microtonality, invented instruments, cutting edge electronics, underwater synthesizers, Tibetan throat singing, environmental sound and pure noise were their tools. My 2023 book, Alien Territory: Radical, Experimental and Irrelevant Music in 1970s San Diego, presents the story. In this collection are the sounds. It’s a lot of ground to cover and in an attempt to ever so slightly smooth out the listener experience and impose a little structure on to a decade of far-reaching experimentation each disc from this set is devoted to a particular musical style, strategy or genre. These are useful but admittedly porous distinctions that the artists themselves may or may not recognize. With the exception of “Noyse” by Kenneth Gaburo, which was released on a Musicworks compilation in 1999, as well as a couple Warren Burt tracks available for purchase directly from the artist, all tracks in this set are previously unreleased. Thanks to all the artists who contributed their work, as well as Philip Blackburn, Gavin Bryars, Lia Gaburo, Pea Hix, Ione, Al Margolis, John McCaughey, Grace Bell Parsons, Pat Strange, Jon Szanto and the other fine people I’ve forgotten to thank because I left this section to the last minute. An extra round of applause to Warren Burt for his archival efforts on behalf of Ernie Morgan; likewise to David Dunn for his work on the Kenneth Gaburo pieces.
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