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Harry Partch: Bitter Music

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Download links and information about Harry Partch: Bitter Music by John Schneider, Paul West, Partch, Gary Eister. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Alternative genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 03:16:21 minutes.

Artist: John Schneider, Paul West, Partch, Gary Eister
Release date: 2011
Genre: Alternative
Tracks: 23
Duration: 03:16:21
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Bitter Music: I. Preface 7:26
2. Bitter Music: II. June 11, 1935 - Santa Rosa, California 14:41
3. Bitter Music: III. June 15 - Harrington Ranch, San Joaquin Delta 9:46
4. Bitter Music: IV. June 24 - Today Is My Birthday... 6:06
5. Bitter Music: V. London, October 1934 3:35
6. Bitter Music: VI. “By the Rivers of Babylon” 3:25
7. Bitter Music: VII. I Draw My Last Bow, and There Is Silence... 11:58
8. Bitter Music: VIII. Wimbledon, London, March 1935 13:05
9. Bitter Music: IX. Harrington Ranch, June 24, 1935 13:37
10. Bitter Music: X. July 20 - Heading North, Between Sacramento and Redding 7:42
11. Bitter Music: XI. July 25 - Blue Ox Lodge, Seattle, Washington 11:42
12. Bitter Music: XII. August 5 - Toledo 8:47
13. Bitter Music: XIII. August 11 - SERA Camp, Ingot 7:00
14. Bitter Music: XIV. September 1 - Cisco 13:02
15. Bitter Music: XV. October 22 - Nearing Monterey 8:16
16. Bitter Music: XVI. “Letter from Hobo Pablo” 3:29
17. Bitter Music: XVII. Near Lodi I Cut the Huge Tokays 6:09
18. Bitter Music: XVIII. October 24 - Leaving Big Sur 9:44
19. Bitter Music: XIX. October 30 - Big Creek 10:31
20. Bitter Music: XX. November 15 - Leaving Santa Barbara 9:45
21. Bitter Music: XXI. December ?, 1935 - Night. Four Black Walls - 8:07
22. Bitter Music: XXII. February 1, 1936 - San Bernadino 4:37
23. Postlude - Harry Partch On Bitter Music - Encinitas, 1969 (featuring Harry Partch) 3:51

Details

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The first volume of Bridge's Music of Harry Partch consists of a reading of his Depression-era journal and fragmentary pieces he wrote while traveling up and down the west coast of the United States, living as a hobo. During 1935 and early 1936, Partch kept a diary he called Bitter Music, which included drawings and musical sketches about the people and songs he heard around him. Over time, the book was destroyed, though it was preserved on microfilm; some of Partch's drawings and musical ideas are presented in the booklet included with this three-CD set by the PARTCH ensemble. The text is read by John Schneider, and Garry Eister provides the vocals and piano for the pieces that appeared in the diary or were referred to in its pages. This is a prodigious amount of material for listeners to get through, since most of the tracks are spoken word, and the musical snippets are intermittent and easy to miss because of their brevity. Students of Partch's music will recognize certain idiosyncrasies of melody and the colloquial delivery that informed later pieces, such as Barstow and U.S. Highball, though little here anticipates the novel tunings, instrumentation, and techniques of his mature works. Instead, this is a revelation of Partch's life as a transient, and day-to-day concerns dominate his entries. The last track on the third disc is a short recording of Partch's voice, briefly recounting the origins of Bitter Music., Rovi