Jonathan Glasier
Music was with me from birth. My father John Strong Glasier was a composer, violinist and violist and Professor of Music at The University of Arkansas. My mother Alletah was also a violinist in her early school years and sang in several choirs. Among my first memories was playing with my toys at the feet of my father while he composed music at the piano. Later in my late teens, I began improvising music with my father. That activity grew and for the rest of his life (until 1985), we played concerts and made recordings. Those experiences were one of the major factors in my musical education.
The other was the influence of Harry Partch. When I was three, microtonal music pioneer Harry Partch lived with our family for a short time in El Centro California. That experience of playing on his instruments and hearing just intonation intervals changed my perception forever. Yes, I grew up playing traditionally tuned instruments (guitar and piano), but when Harry would leave his instruments with us from time to time, I was reconnected to the microtonal memories from those very early years.
Then, in my early twenties, Partch lived in San Diego and I was his assistant and gofer. I also was in his ensemble and played the Harmonic Cannon for his Plectra and Percussion Dances composition at UCLA’s Royce Hall. Then, he was chosen as a Regent’s Professor at UCSD and I enrolled as one of that first group of students at UCSD’s Department of Music in the Fall of 1967. Partch was only there that one year and although we did perform one of his larger film scores, Daphne of the Dunes, I stayed on and soaked up the new music vibe that permeated the UCSD Music Dept.
After a couple of years in Graduate Studies I realized that academia was not my future, but I was passionate about music education so in 1972, with my friend and grad student Joe Friedman, started Making Music, a music school which used some of the ideas from UCSD.s Music 1 program. The core class for kids was The Beginning Music Experience, a grassroots class, whose premise was the “We are all musicians as we speak.” So we are already composing beautiful improvisations as we converse with one another. If we take a look at all the parameters of music that are going on simultaneously, we can use those elements as tools for composition.
This brings my story up to the ID Project of 1975. At this time we started making instruments and actually creating new sounds which were wholly improvised creations. During the ID Project I met Erv Wilson and then shortly after, Ivor Darreg and then Interval Magazine happened in the Fall of 1978.
In the Fall of 1979, Interval Foundation was formed and the Interval ensemble of musicians and dancers had its life until our last concert in 1982. During that time in 1978 Dance Jam, the free spirited, shoes off, Friday Night meet-up and get-your ya-yas-out party continued at least for 10 years although I left the Dance Jam process after 1984. It was that year that I went to SF to become an Artist in Residence at the Exploratorium and created the Pentaphone which has survived until this day and been replicated in 7 Museums across the planet.
Instruments
Recordings & Media
Articles & Writing
Interval Inaugural Party 1978_05_19 Jonathan Glasier, 1978 May
Interval Newsletter First Advertisement, 1978 Jonathan Glasier, 1978 Nov
Sonic Arts Gallery Announcement of Opening by Jonathan Glasier Jonathan Glasier, 1979 Sep
Interval Foundation Notes Fall 1980 and Spring 1982 Jonathan Glasier, 1980 Sep
Vocal Harmonics Class Lesson 1.10, 1982 Jonathan Glasier, 1982 Oct
Interval Interview With French Composer Pierre-Jean Croset and His Lyra Jonathan Glasier, 1984 Jan
Jonathan Glasier and Brink McGoogy, 2007 Javier, 2007 Jan
Notes on Sound Sculpture by John Gibbon and Jonathan Glasier John Gibbon, 2017 Jul
lumatone_hands-on_504px Glasier
Glasier Meantone (non-octave) on the Array Keyboard Jonathan Glasier
Ivor Darreg Bio by Jonathan Glasier Jonathan Glasier
Microtonal News, Summer 1990: The Rim Institute Conference Jonathan Glasier
Sonic Arts Gallery Press Release on Improviser Jack Wright Jonathan Glasier
Five Exercises for Children. Jonathan Glasier Instrument Making Jonathan Glasier
Instrument Making Workshops for Sonic Arts Gallery I by Jonathan Glasier Jonathan Glasier
New Age by Bill Wesley Bill Wesley
Glasier Meantone 3-2 = 697 cents Closest Just Interval
Scott Wilkinson. Tuning In: Carlos Meantone Temperament Scott Wilkinson
Letters
Warren Burt letter to Jonathan D Glasier with pitch grid Warren Burt → Jonathan Glasier, 1988 Aug
Rim Microtonal Conference 1989 Open Invitation Jonathan Glasier → Unknown, 1989 Apr
Brink McGoogy letter to Jonathan Glasier, 1991 (page 2) Brink McGoogy → Jonathan Glasier, 1991 Sep
Letter from Jonathan Glasier to Erv Wilson about Hannover Millennium Project Jonathan Glasier → Erv Wilson, 1996 Mar
Euler Genus Lattice, Erv Wilson 1999 Erv Wilson → Jonathan Glasier, 1999 Dec
Letter from Erv Wilson to Jonathan Glasier on Open Hear Erv Wilson → Jonathan Glasier, 2000 Jan
Erv Wilson Letter to Jonathan Glasier: Pacheco Itinerary, 2007 Erv Wilson → Jonathan Glasier, 2007 Apr
Erv Wilson Letter to Jonathan and Elizabeth Glasier Erv Wilson → Jonathan Glasier, 2007 Apr
Letter from Bart Hopkin to Jonathan Glasier, page 1 Bart Hopkin → Jonathan Glasier, n.d.
Callipolis and Ancient Athens Note from Erv Wilson to J. Glasier Erv Wilson → Jonathan Glasier, n.d.
Photos
Performances & Exhibitions
‘Microtonal Magic’ Concert at SDSU, October 31, 1977 1977 Oct
Microtonal Magic Concert at SDSU, 1977 1977 Oct
‘Collage Concert’ 1978 1978 Mar
Interval Foundation Presents: The Microtonal Music of the Future Concert, 1979 1979 Jul
Interval Concert ‘Pepe Aton’ program notes, 1981 1981 Jan
Harmony Harp and Friends concert poster, June 1981 1981 Jun
Interval Foundation Dance-Music Concert Program, September 12, 1981 1981 Sep
Interval Dance Troupe performance, November 1981 G.D. Jenkins, 1981 Nov
Sound and Movement Choir, Interval Players, 1982 1982 Jan
Dance Jam Celebrates Life, San Diego Union, 1982 Nancy Cochran, 1982 Feb
SD Reader Event: Glasier Collage Concert, San Diego Union article 1986 Mar
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 Spring Concert Series 1988 1988 Apr
Jonathan Glasier Concert at the Nunnery, San Francisco, 1988 1988 Jul
Interval Players Summit Laboratories Concert Julian CA 1988 1988 Aug
Transpectra and David Scheirman Julian Recording Event 1982 1988 Aug
Sonic Arts Gallery Fall Concert Series 1988 Oct
Rim Microtonal Conference 1989 Open Invitation Jonathan Glasier, 1989 Apr
Zoundonia, Sonic Arts Gallery I, 1989 1989 Apr
Emerald Players Concert, 1993-05-07 1993 May
Sonic Arts Gallery II Concert Program: Brian McLaren, Jonathan Glasier, 1994 1994 Oct
1-Exploratorium Magazine 1985 Pentaphone cover Ron Hipschman
The Endless Scale Concert Program, May 23, 1978 — Ivor Darreg
Instruments of Jonathan Glasier: Pentadec and Harmonic Cannon, Sonic Arts Gallery I exhibit
Arthur Frick and Jonathan Glasier, Zounds Sag I Opening Flier
Tubulongs: Microtonal Percussion Instruments Exhibition, Sonic Arts Gallery 1988
Zoundonia Popup Shows at Sonic Arts Gallery I
Compositions | Scores
Mentioned in...
Music Goes Elementary: Jonathan Glasier’s Experimental Music Class at Fremont School, 1978 Lanie Jones, 1978 Nov
Interval_a_Microtonal_Newsletter_Vol_I_no.1 1970 Jan
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
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
Notes on Sound Sculpture by John Gibbon and Jonathan Glasier John Gibbon, 2017 Jul
lumatone_hands-on
New Age by Bill Wesley Bill Wesley
Julian Carrillo: Mexico’s Microtonal Music Master; Pepe Estevane and Nueva Vida
Glasier Meantone 3-2 = 697 cents Closest Just Interval
Scott Wilkinson. Tuning In: Carlos Just Intonation Scott Wilkinson
Scott Wilkinson. Tuning In: Carlos Meantone Temperament Scott Wilkinson
Zing Wheeze: Music to His Ears. San Diego Union Tribune, 1988 Lianne Stevens
Other
Interval Inaugural Party 1978_05_19 Jonathan Glasier, 1978 May
lumatone_hands-on
Scott Wilkinson. Tuning In: Carlos Just Intonation Scott Wilkinson