Harry Partch
While Harry Partch was finishing writing “Genesis of a Music” he lived in Madison Wisconsin, where my grandparents Gilson and Marybell lived. Also living at the 1919 Rawley address was my Uncle Marshall, a painter who was a janitor at the Art Dept. at the U. of Wiisconsin. Marshall was a well known visual art maverick who met Harry, the music maverick, and became good friends. Soon, my father and mother visited Harry and also became friends Later Harry visited them in Fayetteville Arkansas where Jonathan’s father John was a professor of music. This friendship continued throughout Harry’s life. Soon after Harry’s book was finished he went to El Centro (1947) where the younger Glasier family moved It was there that Jonathan was introduced at the age three to the world of Harry Partch and his instruments. Later the Glasiers moved to San Diego and every time Harry got a chance, he visited John and Alletah there where Harry’s lifetime friends Bertha and Harold Driscoll lived. At different times through Jonathan’s early life an instrument of Harry’s would be parked at the San Diego Glasier home and Jonathan had the unique pleasure of playing the Boo or Diamond Marimba during those times. Unfortunately he did not realize what a gift it was and did not take full advantage of the opportunity.
When Harry moved to San Diego during the last years of his life from 1966 to 1974 Jonathan became a gofer and assistant to Partch. He played in the Partch Ensemble various times between 1965 and 1972, and most memorable was playing the Harmonic Cannon II in “Castor and Pollux” , Diamond Marimba in “Daphne of the Dunes”, and Harmonic Cannon I in the film “The Dreamer That Remains”. Some time after Jonathan’s apprenticeship with Harry and after Harry died, Jonathan realized that Harry Partch was the catalyst of a “New Music” and started gathering information and learning from living microtonalists about different scales. Jonathan studied with Erv Wilson and and built the requisite 31 EDO Tubulong. He played refretted guitar pieces and improvised microtonal music with Ivor Darreg and by 1978 decided to publish Interval Journal, a document to bring together microtonal ideas and activities from all over the world, dedicated to the spirit of Harry Partch. Interval Journal spanned almost a decade from 1978 to 1987. By the time Interval ceased to be published, there were several publications to take its place. The first two predated Interval, John Chalmers’ “Xenharmonikon”, and Ivor Darreg’s “Xenharmonic Bulletin”. Then, in the space of a few years three other magazines grew out of Interval’s idea: “Experimental Musical Instruments” by Bart Hopkin, “1/1” (“One/One”), a Just Intonation Journal edited by David Doty, and “Pitch” edited by Johnny Reinhard.
Although microtonality or Xenharmonics has not taken the world by a storm, there are practicing “xenharmonicists” all over the world and in the last few years the Microtonal University, an online Zoom class on Sundays moderated by Johnny Reinhard, has been vital to those who have embraced going beyond the shackles of the 12-tone (EDO) “Squirrel Cage”. – Jonathan Glasier
Instruments
Recordings & Media
Articles & Writing
Harry Partch. Narrative from 39 Tone System Chart, 1932 Harry Partch, 1932 Jan
Classification of Intervals, c. 1932 Harry Partch, 1932 Jan
Ratio Keyboard (right half) by Harry Partch, 1932 Harry Partch, 1932 Aug
Review of Exposition of Monophony, June 1933 Harry Partch, 1933 Jun
Harry Partch Gems From My Scrapbook 1930–1957, 10 pages Harry Partch, 1957 Jan
One Footed Bride (From 1932 chart) 1932 Jan
Ratio Keyboard by Harry Partch (left half), 1932 1932 Aug
Harry Partch. Notation from 39 Tone System Chart, August 1933 1933 Aug
A Keyboard Notation for Harry Partch’s 43 Tone System by Erv Wilson, 1975 Erv Wilson, 1975 Jan
Co-Prime Grid over Lambdoma Erv Wilson, 2004 Jan
Exposition of Monophony by Harry Partch (cover) Harry Partch
Exposition of Monophony: Overtone and Undertone Ratios Harry Partch
Harry Partch Ratio Keyboard Harry Partch
History of the 37 Intervals, c. 1932 Harry Partch
Harry Partch. Review of Yasser’s ‘A Theory of Evolving Tonality’ Harry Partch
Scott Wilkinson. Tuning In: Carlos Meantone Temperament Scott Wilkinson
Emotions of Intervals. Exposition of Monophony
Letters
Harry Partch Subscription Fund letter to Harold and Bertha Driscoll Harry Partch → Harold Driscoll, 1959 May
Anais Nin letter to Harry Partch, invitation, March 1969 Anais Nin → Harry Partch, 1969 Mar
Anais Nin letter to Harry Partch: Euphonic Paintings exhibition invitation, 1969 Anais Nin → Harry Partch, 1969 Mar
Photos
Performances & Exhibitions
Harry Partch Concert Program, April 28, 1932 1932 Apr
Partch Prepares Concert; Most Unorthodox to Date Lynn Ludlow, 1966 Jan- Harry Partch’s ‘The Bewitched’ program notes, page 1 1970 Jan
San Diego Union: ‘The Bewitched’ Rehearsal, Harry Partch 1974 Oct
The Bewitched. Harry Partch. San Diego State University, 1976 1976 Oct
Sonic Arts Gallery Announcement of Opening by Jonathan Glasier Jonathan Glasier, 1979 Sep
Harry Partch Memorial Seminars on Music Experiment, Summer 1980 1980 Jul- Harry Partch Ensemble at San Diego State University, February 24, 1981 1981 Feb
Dance Jam Celebrates Life, San Diego Union, 1982 Nancy Cochran, 1982 Feb
SD Reader Event: Glasier Collage Concert, San Diego Union article 1986 Mar
Harry Partch exhibit at Grossmont College, San Diego Union, February 1987 Tony Doubek, 1987 Feb
Grand Opening of Sonic Arts Gallery I, September 17, 1987 1987 Sep
Grand Opening of Sonic Arts Gallery I, September 17, 1987 1987 Sep
Reader SAG I 1987 September 17 Gordon Smith, 1987 Sep
Zounds exhibition opening announcement, Sonic Arts Gallery, September 1987 1987 Sep
Los Angeles Times, Sonic Arts Gallery, October 3, 1987 Hilliard Harper, 1987 Oct
Sonic Arts Gallery I: Automated Music Ensemble by Stephen Kent Goodman, December 5, 1987 1987 Dec
AFMM MicroFest Program, 1988 1988 May
Jonathan Glasier Concert, New Instruments/New Music Series, San Francisco, 1988 1988 Jul
Transpectra and David Scheirman Julian Recording Event 1982 1988 Aug
Harry Partch’s Gourd Tree and Cone Gongs at Sonic Arts Gallery I Zounds 1988 1988 Sep
Ben Johnston Microfest 2006 Concert Program, Page 1 2006 Jan
AFMM Concert 1986 05 20 Program Johnny Reinhard
Harry Partch, Edgard Varèse, and John Cage films at Hunter College 1968 Harold Schonberg
HP Concert at UCSD – San Diego Union review by Donald Dierks Donald Dierks
Harry Partch’s The Bewitched, SDSU 1976
University of Illinois Festival of Contemporary Arts 1957 program cover
Instruments of Jonathan Glasier: Pentadec and Harmonic Cannon, Sonic Arts Gallery I exhibit
Sonic Arts Museum Idea
Compositions | Scores
One Footed Bride (From 1932 chart) 1932 Jan
Mentioned in...
Harry Partch Article. Interval Journal IV no. 2, 1932 Eleanor Barnes, 1932 Jan
New York Times Article: 43 Tones to the Octave: 43 tones to the octave: New Scores by Harry Partch Use Split Tones and Many Novel Instruments 1957 Jul
The Bewitched by Harry Partch, Playhouse Dance Company, New York Times, 1957 David Berlin, 1957 Oct
Joel Mandelbaum. The Isolation of the Microtonal Composer. ASUC Vol. 2, 1967. Joel Mandelbaum, 1967 Apr
A New Look at the Partch Monophonic Fabric by George Secor, 1975 George Secor, 1975 Jan
A Keyboard Notation for Harry Partch’s 43 Tone System by Erv Wilson, 1975 Erv Wilson, 1975 Jan
Interval Newsletter First Advertisement, 1978 Jonathan Glasier, 1978 Nov
Partchian Twin-Star Eikosany by John Gibbon John Gibbon, 1979 Jan
Partchian Twin Star Eikosany, c. 1979 John Gibbon, 1979 Jan
Barbs and Broadsides: A Record of Harry Partch. JI Primer by Danlee Mitchell Danlee Mitchell, 1979 May
Center for Music Experiment by William Justin, Community Arts San Diego Vol. 2 #9, 1980 William Justin, 1980 Oct
San Diego Reader: On the Move about Interval-Dance Jam Ruth Baily, 1981 Aug
San Diego About to Bloom: Holistic Living News, 1982 Melissa Morgan, 1981 Sep
Interval Foundation. Golden Hill News, October 1981 1981 Oct
Golden Hill News: Interval Foundation Arts Grant Award, October 1981 1981 Oct
Interval Interview With French Composer Pierre-Jean Croset and His Lyra Jonathan Glasier, 1984 Jan
Composers Study Realms Beyond the 12-Tone Scale — Easley Blackwood Edward Rothstein, 1986 Dec
Sound sculpture. Jonathan Glasier and Sonic Arts Gallery. San Diego Home and Garden, August 1987. Phyllis van Doren, 1987 Aug
Jonathan Glasier Opens Sonic Arts Gallery I, Sound Sculpture Article, 1987 1987 Aug
SDReader article: Opening of Sonic Arts Gallery I, September 17, 1987 Gordon Smith, 1987 Sep
Weekend of Musical Exploration at the Rim Institute, June 1990 1990 May
British Harry Partch Society Vol. II No. 3/4, Feb/May 1997 1997 Feb
Marching to a Different Ratio. Computer Music Journal Vol. II No. 2, p. 7-8 Curtis Abbott
Chrysalis by Cris Forster. Interval Journal Vol. 1, pp. 1–3 Cris Forster
Easley Blackwood. OMNI Magazine Article, page 1 Matthew Kiel
Scott Wilkinson. Tuning In: Carlos Meantone Temperament Scott Wilkinson
Harry Partch: An ‘Unheard Of’ Music by Norman Kaesberg Norman Kaesberg
Barbs and Broadsides: A Record of Harry Partch, JI Primer, Recipe for a Music, Page 1 Danlee Mitchell
Danlee Mitchell. Recollections. The Irregular Quarterly, pp. 131–132. Dion Wright
List of References on Tuning Systems and Scales Ivor Darreg
Microtonal News, Summer 1990: The Rim Institute Conference Jonathan Glasier
Why Is Harry Partch Important? by Brian McLaren Brian McLaren
Partch Ratios in the Round by John Gibbon John Gibbon
Zing Wheeze: Music to His Ears. San Diego Union Tribune, 1988 Lianne Stevens
