James Ross profile picture

James Ross

Orchestral, Post-Minimalist, Ambient

About Me

Hello all. I'm a guitarist, composer and music teacher living in Brooklyn, N.Y. Earned M.A. in classical guitar performance from Mannes College of Music in New York City; B.A. in music from the University of Pittsburgh. Have performed solo guitar repertoire in a wide variety of styles from many historical periods, from Luis de Milan to Leo Brouwer, and have performed works for guitar ensembles and chamber pieces for guitar and various other instruments.

I'm basically self-taught as a composer. I've written pieces for string orchestra, mixed orchestral ensembles, guitar solo and ensembles, and have composed a number of electroacoustic works ( www.myspace.com/jrossdrone ). Some of my dronal music can be heard on the New York Miniaturist Ensemble's Static Music - Drone Podcast. Visit nyme.org/feed.xml to subscribe and hear dronal music from a variety of composers.
About the music ...

"Flute Choir" is a work in progress. Based on a line from "Winds and Strings," it's an exploration of textures ranging from a mass of sound from the whole ensemble to a simple interlocking melodic figure played by single pair of instruments. At the moment, it's scored for four piccolos and six flutes, but I'd like to work a few altos in without increasing the number of players. Would ideally like to have the instruments amplified so effects could be added during performance. More to come on this one.

"Flutes" is scored for flute quartet (two concert flutes, alto flute and piccolo) and is accompanied by a field recording. The "field" in this case is a spot beneath the Williamsburg Bridge near where I live in Brooklyn. The flute music has been molded around the sounds on the recording, creating a form and length dictated by the chance ebb and flow of the traffic, subways passing overhead, pedestrians, etc. Each instrumental part has its own pitch material (though there are some common tones), and the entire gamut of pitches was derived by combining the pool of tones used to build "Strings" and "Winds and Strings." Each instrumental part revolves in its own rhythmic cycle (of 2, 3, 5 or 7 bars of 3/4 time), though the durations are sometimes obscured by pauses and a few repetitions to match the flow of the recorded sounds. I would say that all the sounds in this piece are traveling alone.

"Winds and Strings" and "Strings I" are concerned with the possibilities of composition with a very limited number of pitch classes. In the case of "Strings I," two pitch classes only (Ab and Bb), spread over five and a half octaves. These pieces explore textures and durations, and exploit the spectrum of sounds contained within every individual note. On the surface, at least, this is not complex music. "Winds and Strings," like "Flutes," is completely multicyclic--every instrumental part travels in a 3-, 5- or 7-bar orbit of 3/4 time.

All pieces are fully notated. Scores are available upon request. The sounds you hear come from Garritan Personal Orchestra and Garritan Jazz & Big Band, played by the notation software Finale.

Thank you for visiting this site.

Peace


jr

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 12/28/2006
Influences: In no particular order: Table saw and other power tools in my father's basement workshop, La Monte Young, Brian Eno, John Cage, Gyorgy Ligeti, Toru Takemitsu, Philip Glass, Morton Feldman, the grandfather clock in the living room, Robert Fripp, Steve Reich, Robert Rich, Carl Andre, James Ferla, Tony Conrad, George Crumb, cicadas, Christian Wolff, Giacinto Scelsi, Harold Budd, Krishna Bhatt, Terry Riley, Harry Partch, K.R.T. Wasitodiningrat, Smithsonian Folkways Music of Indonesia series, Earle Brown, Cesar Vallejo, Phill Niblock, Daisy Paradis, Erik Satie, Kyle Gann, Pauline Oliveros, transcendent sounds of the New York City Transit subway system, Captain Beefheart, John Fahey, Charles Bukowski ("Don't Try"), Edgard Varese, lawnmowers, Sanjukta Sen, Jimmy Giuffre, Fred Hand, Master Musicians of Jajouka, Gamelan Semar Pegulingan, Gagaku, George Crumb, William Mathieu, Ravi Shankar, Madeleine Shapiro, Mark Rothko, James Joyce, Firesign Theater, Debashish Bhattacharya, Eliane Radigue, Hermann Helmholtz, Frank Zappa, Ustad Bismillah Khan, Robert Billington, Samuel Beckett, Lou Reed, Ralph Towner, John Luther Adams ... and many of the talented people whose works I've heard here on MySpace.
Sounds Like: See influences list. Some of the names are dead giveaways.
Record Label: unsigned
Type of Label: None

My Blog

Collaboration with Night Germ (aka Stefan Graham)

Check out "Brick Saw"--a collaborative work between Night Germ (aka Stefan Graham) and myself. As it stands, the project consists of various treatments of the sound of a brick-cutting saw captured in ...
Posted by James Ross on Sat, 29 Sep 2007 09:43:00 PST

Alan Watts - The Art of Meditation

From YouTube: A lovely film from the early '70s. Alan Watts discusses meditation and gives a simple but powerful exercise for stilling "the chattering inside the skull.""Simply be here. Live in the wo...
Posted by James Ross on Wed, 15 Aug 2007 06:02:00 PST

NY Miniaturist Ensemble - Static Music Podcast

Hear my composition "Peace Drone" at the NY Miniaturist Ensemble's Static Music - Drone Podcast. Click here to listen and subscribe. It's free, free, free, of course:Anyone interested in drone music (...
Posted by James Ross on Sat, 21 Jul 2007 12:31:00 PST

Suggestions for field recordings

MySpace musicians in the New York and surrounding area (or anywhere, really): Do you know of any spots that might be candidates for making interesting field recordings? A singing bridge? A stairwell t...
Posted by James Ross on Wed, 20 Jun 2007 03:37:00 PST

LaMonte Young's Dream House

A reminder for my New York-area MySpace friends (or anyone visiting the city):The La Monte Young/Marian Zazeela Dream House: Seven+Eight Years of Sound and Light will be closing for the season in just...
Posted by James Ross on Fri, 01 Jun 2007 09:39:00 PST

Tagged

I was tagged by James Combs. But I will forgive him because he is a fine MySpace friend and a composer of some very intriguing piano music. According to James, if you have been tagged, you have to wr...
Posted by James Ross on Tue, 13 Feb 2007 10:47:00 PST