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Me, Myself, and I: The Music of S. Peña Young, Contemporary Composer
I originally wrote this tongue-in-cheek article for gig asking for interviews with musicians. Seeing as I had little time to fulfill the deadline for that particular call, I opted to interview myself. I hope you enjoy this snarky music interview, and learn a little something, too. Or not. (written July 13, 2009)
I opened up the interview with the usual professional rhetoric, “What the heck are you doing up at 3am?”
Expecting some lofty answer often given to me by the classically trained musician who seems to believe that even a disdainful elitist sniff of an answer is quite sufficient for one as low as an Associated Content writer, I was taken quite aback by the disheveled electronic musician’s candid reply: “There’s a dang cricket in my bedroom who won’t shut up.”
So the interview began.
Electronic composer S. Peña Young, like many other composers of new music, began as a classically trained musician. While Bach and Beethoven played keyboard, Peña Young opted for a more delicate music instrument of choice – the drum set. Practicing on her drum set in her parent’s garage day after day such meaningful music masterpieces like music genius Tone Loc’s “Wild Thing” or the classic music work, “Wipeout”, Peña Young honed her music craft, learning to play basic rock beats while a poster of the New Kids on the Block watched approvingly.
Having abandoned earlier dreams of becoming a sleuth like Nancy Drew or an international spy like her namesake from Charlie’s Angels, Peña Young decided to choose a more practical college career path – professional musician. As a teen, the young musician opted to expand her horizons, learning how to play the congas, march snare drum in the drum line, and wield four mallets over a rosewood marimba.
World Order #5 for Video, Tape, Percussion
After several twists, turns, and the typical nervous breakdowns that often accompany a musician who spends six hours a day practicing how to perfect a concert triangle roll (which I am told is quite difficult to near impossible), Peña Young decided to compose and create disturbingly macabre experimental videos full time after several years with SYCOM, the avant-garde insane electronic music posse’ at the University of South Florida.
(Here I should interject that S. Peña Young told me several questionable stories about chasing a giant evil pink bunny around Tampa with a video camera and dressing up like Igor for a music concert. As these can neither be confirmed or denied, I will leave these unsavory tales for a later work on mad music geniuses who fall off their rocker.)
Since that time, composer S. Peña Young has combined her drum prowess with electronic music in such disturbing works as World Order #4 (2004), written for music ensemble, performance artists running like crazy around the audience, and a narrator who nearly got choked to death by the violinist at the premier performance. (Apparently the last page of the music score simple stated “CHAOS!!!!” and the violinist took that to mean attempted murder.) US vs. Them (2005), commissioned by the Kansas State University Percussion Ensemble calls for baby dolls, which may or may not be lit on fire at the conclusion of the piece, while Virelaan (2008), commissioned by the Millikin University Percussion Ensemble, is a Halloween homage to a ghost residing at the Albert Taylor Theater. The composer’s debut electronic album, Origins (2008), available through i-Tunes, has been in the Reverbnation Top Fifteen for electronic music in Nashville, and features a science fiction buff’s digital music sonic fantasy world with nuclear annihilation inspired electronica like World Order #1 and the twisted music diary Looking Glass.
Asking where she saw herself in the future, the composer simply replied, “In bed…”
With that, our early morning music interview concluded, and I conceded, that I, too, needed to hit the sack, albeit with a cricket chirping away at my ear.
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Young is the foremost expert on virtual opera production and online collaboration with the debut of her machinima opera Libertaria: The Virtual Opera. Libertaria includes a live international cast and film crew, virtual choirs, sound synthesis, machinima, and contemporary choral writing, produced entirely online using crowdsourcing, social networking, and the Internet. Critics call Libertaria "Groundbreaking" and "Wagner 2.0". Works performed internationally at the Beijing Conservatory, the International Computer Music Conference, Miramax's Project Greenlight, the Athena Festival, the New York International Independent Film Festival, Art Basil Miami, Turkey's Cinema for Peace, Art Miami, and Pulsefield International Exhibition of Sound Art, the Holland Animation Film Festival, Australasian Computer Music Confetence, Buffalo's Women and Arts Festival, and countless venues worldwide. Young's recent projects include the social media opera The Village and a recent TED Talk on opera and the Internet at TEDxBuffalo.
CONSULTING SERVICES AVAILABLE: Contact SPENAYOUNG@gmail.com
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electronic music
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kansas state university
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University of South Florida
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