In the mid-1960s, Pauline Oliveros was a composer of experimental electronic music. But at the end of the 1960s, shocked by the political violence around her, she turned away from electronic technology and towards to a different kind of experimentation, which Dr. Kerry O'Brien calls "experimentalisms of the self." The immediate result of this turn was Oliveros's Sonic Meditations, a series of instructions for group bodymind practice. This work became the seed of Deep Listening, a sort of musical yoga Oliveros developed throughout the rest of her long career. Dr. O'Brien joins JF and Phil for a conversation on practice, "gaining mind," the ritual value of art, the wisdom of the body, and whether Deep Listening is really best understood as art at all.
\n\nREFERENCES
\n\nKerry O'Brien, "Listening as Activism: The 'Sonic Meditations' of Pauline Oliveros"
\nPauline Oliveros, American composer
\nJohn Cage, 4'33"
\nDead Territory performing Cage's 4'33"
\nAlvin Lucier, "Music for a Solo Performer"
\nPeter Sloterdijk, You Must Change Your Life
\nWalter Benjamin, "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction"
\nLawrence Weschler, Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees
Special Guest: Kerry O'Brien.