Ross Bolleter
{{Short description|Australian composer (born 1946)}}
{{use Australian English|date=September 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2014}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Ross Bolleter
| image = Ross Bolleter 01 (cropped).JPG
| alt =
| caption = Bolleter at a ZGWA gathering in 2012
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1946}}
| birth_place = Subiaco, Western Australia
| death_date =
| death_place =
| education = University of Western Australia
| occupation = Composer
| known_for = Ruined pianos
| website = {{Official|https://bolleter.wixsite.com}}
}}
Ross Bolleter (born 1946 in Subiaco) is an Australian composer and musician whose work is focused on ruined pianos,{{cite web|url=https://www.brown.edu/news/2023-10-23/haruta|title=Devanney Haruta: Investigating the life and death of musical instruments|date=2023-10-23|publisher=Brown University|access-date=2025-04-11}} abandoned pianos that have been warped and changed naturally by time and weather. He is a founding member of The Blackeyed Susans and co-founder of World Association for Ruined Piano Studies (WARPS) with Stephen Scott. In addition to teaching music, Bolleter also taught Zen Buddhism prior to his retirement in 2023.
Career
Bolleter was given his first instrument, a piano accordion, by his parents when he was 11 years old. He learned to play piano in the 1960s{{cite web|url=https://grisli.canalblog.com/archives/2007/01/15/5825300.html|title=Interview de Ross Bolleter|publisher=CanalBlog|date=January 2007|interviewer-last=Belhomme|interviewer-first=Guillaume|access-date=2025-04-11|language=fr}} and began writing poetry at 17. He then pursued a bachelor's degree in English and music at University of Western Australia (UWA). He studied under Alice Carrard, David Tunley, and John Exton, the latter introducing him to the music of Cage, Boulez, and Stockhausen. At the time, UWA had not yet established its conservatory, so he studied medieval music. After finishing his degree in 1967, he spent four years as a schoolteacher in Esperance and Katanning.{{cite web|url=https://musicguy247.typepad.com/my-blog/2015/03/ross-bolleter-an-interview-with-the-australian-composer.html|title=Ross Bolleter - An interview with the Australian composer who specializes in creating compositions with ruined pianos|interviewer-last= von Bernewitz|interviewer-first=Rob|date=2015-03-22|publisher=musicguy247|access-date=2025-04-11}} Bolleter played piano with the house band at a hotel in Parmelia (later bought out by Hilton) for six years, spending the final year playing solo in the front bar. He later held various other jobs, including a deckhand, an orderly and an apprentice roof plumber.
In the 1980s, he formed a musical improvisation duo, Alone Together, with flautist Tos Mahoney. They released Openings in 1982 on Wasit Music. Bolleter was first inspired to explore prepared piano in the 1980s during an improvisation session with his friend Ryszard Ratajczak, who stuck things into the strings of his double bass to change the sound. He released his cassette The Temple of Joyous Bones in 1985 on Homegrown Headroom. He received a creative development grant from the Department of Culture and the Arts in 1986 to develop skills and techniques on the prepared piano and accordion. In June 1987, during a family trip to Nallan Sheep Station in Cue, he was tipped off about an abandoned piano that had sat on a tennis court in direct sunlight and through a flood for a year before being moved to a nearby shed. This was his first experience with what he calls "ruined" pianos: pianos subject to weather and time, warping and decaying the wood and strings in a way that produces unpredictable sounds. When the property was sold many years later, he was invited to relocate the piano to his home in Perth, where it remains in his kitchen.
In 1989, he founded The Blackeyed Susans with Phil Kakulas, Rob Snarski, David McComb and Alsy MacDonald. He played organ and accordion in the band before leaving to play piano bars in Japan.{{cite web|url=https://www.australialive.org.au/artists/black-eyed-susans/|title=Black Eyed Susans Bio|publisher=Australian Rock Co|access-date=2025-04-11}} Also in 1989, he started the Synchronicity Project, a collection of "intuitive pieces" of improvisation, wherein musicians performed in different locations across Australia and the world. "Simulplay 1" in September 1989 saw Jim Denley playing flute to a live audience in Linz, accompanied from the ABC radio studios in Perth by Bolleter on piano and accordion and Carol Henning on a plastic trombone. The second work, "That Time/Simulplay 2", was a piece for two musicians on opposite sides of the continent. They played simultaneously but were unable to hear each other, while an audience listened to the overlapping audio. This performance had Ryszard Ratajczak on double bass at ABC FM Sydney and Bolleter on two different pianos (standard and prepared), played through on separate recordings, from ABC's Perth studios. "Time/Simulplay 2" was released as part of the album Crow Country in 2000.{{cite magazine|url=https://www.rainerlinz.net/NMA/repr/Synchronistic.html|last1=Bolleter |first1=Ross|last2=Hammond|first2=Rowan|title=Improvising with synchronistic experiences|magazine=NMA|volume=9|date=1991}} Bolleter's next radiophonic piece was "Pocket Sky/Simulplay 3" on 21 October 1991.{{cite web|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/audio-pioneer-gave-australian-artists-global-radio-presence-20200318-p54bhj.html|title=Audio pioneer gave Australian artists global radio presence|date=2020-03-26|publisher=Sydney Morning Herald|access-date=2025-04-11}}{{cite news|title=ABC Radio National 576|newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald|location=Sydney, Australia|date=1991-10-21|page=66|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-sydney-morning-herald/170123270/|via=newspapers.com|access-date=2025-04-11}} It included musicians Jim Denley (Radio ORF Vienna), Stevie Wishart (BBC Radio London), David Moss (SFR Berlin), Jon Rose (ABC Sydney) and Simone De Haan (ABC Melbourne).{{cite web|url=https://www.kunstradio.at/AUSTRALIA/lennon_topology.htm|title=A Brief Topology of Australian Sound Art and Experimental Broadcasting|last=McLennan|first=Andrew|publisher=KunstRadio|access-date=2025-04-11}}{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-sydney-morning-herald/170103607/|title=Pocket Sky - Simulplay III|newspaper= The Sydney Morning Herald|location=Sydney, Australia|date=1993-03-22|page=52|via=newspapers.com|access-date=2025-04-11}} It was later released as a CD under the same name in 2004.
In 1991, Bolleter and Stephen Scott started the World Association of Ruined Piano Studies (WARPS), a record label and informal group of ruined piano musicians. Michal Murin established a subsidiary of WARPS in Slovakia under the name Piano Hotel in 1997. In 1996,{{cn|date=April 2025}} he and several other left-hand piano players (Michal Murin, Zdeněk Plachý, Milan Adamčiak, Stephen Scott, Dan Wiencek, and Nathan Crotty) simultaneously played damaged pianos across Europe, the United States and Australia. The result, Left Hand of the Universe, was released on CD in 1997 by WARPS.{{cite web|url=https://www.hisvoice.cz/objevovani-hudby-v-australske-pustine-ross-bolleter/|title=Objevování hudby v australské pustině / Ross Bolleter|last=Cseres|first=Jozef|trans-title=Discovering Music in the Australian Outback / Ross Bolleter|date=2008-09-01|publisher=His Voice|access-date=2025-04-11|language=cs}}{{cite web|url=http://www.soundexchange.eu/#slovakia_en?id=11|title=Organized sound and experiments in Slovak music|last=Krekovič|first=Slávo|publisher=Sound Exchange|access-date=2025-04-11}}
In 2005, following an installation (Piano Labyrinth) of 17 ruined pianos at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts (PICA), Bolleter collaborated with York olive farmers Kim Hack and Penny Mossop to create the country's first Ruined Piano Sanctuary. Here, around forty pianos are left to decay in the elements in dams, groves and fields.{{cite web|url=https://au.news.yahoo.com/organic-farmers-tune-land-015116073.html|title=Organic farmers in tune with the land|last=Bevis|first=Danella|date=2014-03-26|publisher=Yahoo! News|access-date=2025-03-11}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldpianonews.com/event/art-installation/piano-sanctuary/|title=Piano Sanctuaries. Good or Bad?|date=2017-07-25|last=Crombie|first=David|publisher=World Piano News|access-date=2025-04-11}} Bolleter has performed on and exhibited ruined pianos across Australia, including at numerous Totally Huge New Music Festivals, including the Ruined Piano Convergence in 2005.{{cite journal|url=https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts/vol1/iss1/5/|title= A New Historicism? Sound, Music and Ruined Pianos|last1=Hope|first1=Cat|last2=Marshall|first2=Jonathan|year=2006|journal=Sound Scripts|volume=1|issue=1|publisher=Edith Cowan University|page=3|access-date=2025-04-11}} In 2008, he performed Ruined at the 10 Days on the Island Festival,{{cite web|url=https://www.tendays.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/brochure_2009.pdf|title=Ruined|publisher=Ten Days|page=4|access-date=2025-04-11}} followed by the show Piano! at the Australian National Academy of Music in 2009 and 2010.{{cite web|url=https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/musicshow/piano-an-excursion-through-the-keyboard-from-bach/3033786|title=Piano! An excursion through the keyboard from Bach to Bolleter, Puccini to Cage|date=2010-07-02|publisher=ABC|access-date=2025-04-12}} In 2010, he installed 18 ruined pianos at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery as part of the 10 Days on the Island Festival. His ruined pianos have been featured in Andrew Ford's book A Defence of Classical Music (2005);{{cite book|last=Ford|first=Andrew|chapter= Things fall apart in the music of Ross Bolleter|title= A Defence of Classical Music|date=2005|publisher=ABC Books|pages=143-151}} in Robert Castiglione's film Invitation to Ruin, which was shown at the Totally Huge New Music Festival in 2015;{{cite web|url=https://www.cafeoto.co.uk/artists/an-invitation-to-ruin/|title=An Invitation to Ruin|publisher=Cafe Oto|access-date=2025-04-11}}{{cite web|url=https://xpressmag.com.au/totally-huge-new-music-festival/|title=Totally Huge New Music Festival|date=2015-05-13|publisher=X-Press Magazine|access-date=2025-04-11}} and in musicologist Tim Rutherford-Johnson's book Music After the Fall (2017).{{cite book|first=Tim|last=Rutherford-Johnson|title=Music After the Fall|publisher=University of California Press|date=2017|isbn=9780520283152|pages=ix-x, 212, 214, 216, 267, 282, 333}} In April 2025, he performed Lee Buddle's score for The Little Prince at Spare Parts Puppet Theatre.{{cite web|url=https://www.perthnow.com.au/local-news/perthnow-western-suburbs/the-little-prince-invites-you-to-rediscover-wonder-under-a-canopy-of-stars-c-18191475|title=The Little Prince invites you to rediscover wonder under a canopy of stars|date=2025-03-31|publisher=Perth Now|access-date=2025-04-11}}
Other artists Bolleter has worked with include Kavisha Mazzella,{{cite web|url=https://www.parliament.wa.gov.au/Hansard%5Chansard.nsf/0/206b2b9f7c87c5ff48257dc8001fa686/$FILE/A39%20S1%2020141023%20p7899c-7900a.pdf|title=Extract from Hansard|last=Quirk|first=Margaret|date=2014-10-23|publisher=Parliament of Western Australia|access-date=2025-04-11}} Lindsay Vickery,{{cite web|url=https://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue55/7111|title=Totally Huge contemporary chamber music|last=Combes|first=Sarah|date=2003|publisher=Real Time|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161216141407/https://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue55/7111|archive-date=2016-12-16}} Ernie Althoff and KK Null. Since 2010,{{cn|date=April 2025}} he has collaborated with Antoinette Carrier, who marries the art of weaving with the piano.{{cite web|url=https://rtrfm.com.au/story/antoinette-carrier/|title=Antoinette Carrier: Fracture and Weft|publisher=RTR FM|access-date=2025-04-11}}{{cite web|url=https://issuu.com/fremantle-festivals/docs/freo_festival_2013_program|title=Pianos - Antoinette Carrier|publisher=Fremantle Festivals|via=issuu|date=2013|access-date=2025-04-11}} Carrier's Nothing as a Thing was released on the WARPS label in 2012. He has also worked with Anthony Cormican, who sang songs written by Bolleter on Songs from the Third Watch{{cn|date=April 2025}} and who, in 2017, performed Quarry Music with him as a sound installation at the Totally Huge New Music Festival at PICA.{{cite web|url=https://pica.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/PICA-Annual-Report-2017.pdf|title=Annual Report 2017|publisher=Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts|page=33|access-date=2025-04-11}}
Bolleter's Crow Country was nominated as one of the 10 best albums of 1999 by Cadence Magazine and Secret Sandhills and Satellites (2006) was voted best CD of September 2006 by Blow Up magazine and #2 CD of the year by the French magazine dMute.{{cn|date=April 2025}}
Zen Buddhism
Until his retirement in 2023, Bolleter was a Zen Buddhist teacher{{cite web|url=https://fremantlepress.com.au/2009/12/04/interview-ross-bolleter/?srsltid=AfmBOoritq6squlMzdc68XgBuMDsWW02Yac5DbTAAYVZ57sAqkMUJjDJ|title=Interview with a poet: Ross Bolleter|interviewer-last1=Falls|interviewer-first1=Kiri|publisher=Fremantle Press|date=2009-12-04|access-date=2025-04-11}} in the Diamond Sangha tradition. He trained with Robert Aitken and John Tarrant{{Cite web|url=https://wisdomexperience.org/content-author/ross-bolleter/|title=Ross Bolleter|publisher=Wisdom Publications|access-date=2025-04-12}} from 1982 to 1992,{{cn|date=April 2025}} when he was authorised by Tarrant to teach.{{cite journal|url=https://www.globalbuddhism.org/article/view/1994/3162|title=Casting Indra’s Net across the Pacific: Robert Aitken and the Growth of the Diamond Sangha as a Trans-Pacific Zen Movement|last=Baroni|first=Helen J.|date=2022-12-08|journal=Journal of Global Buddhism|volume=23|number=2|doi=10.26034/lu.jgb.2022.1994|page=154|access-date=2025-04-12|doi-access=free}} He received transmission from both Aitken and Tarrant in 1997.{{cite book|url=https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24723/4/24723_MBarker_2002.pdf|title=Developments in Australian Buddhism: Facets of the Diamond|date=2003|publisher=RoutledgeCurzon|isbn=0-7007-1582-7|last=Spuler|first=Michelle|pages=xi, 19, 21|access-date=2025-04-12}} He taught primarily in the Zen Group of Western Australia (ZGWA) but has also taught extensively elsewhere in Australia and in New Zealand. He has given transmission to: Mary Jaksch, Susan Murphy, Bob Joyner, Ian Sweetman, Glenn Wallis, Mari Rhydwen and Arthur Wells{{cn|date=April 2025}} and has authorised Christopher Barker and Jane Gyngell Taylor to teach.{{cn|date=April 2025}} He continues to work with ZGWA "in an emeritus capacity."{{cite web|url=https://www.zgwa.org.au/teachers|title=Our Teachers|publisher=The Zen Group of Western Australia|access-date=2025-04-11}}
Personal life
Selected works
=Books=
- 1986: Fostering Creative Improvisation at the Keyboard: A Handbook for Piano Teachers, R. Bolleter. {{isbn| 0731624173}}{{cite web|url=https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/283600|title=Fostering creative improvisation at the keyboard : a handbook for piano teachers / written by Ross Bolleter|publisher=National Library of Australia|access-date=2025-04-12}}
- 2004: All the Iron Night (edited by Andrew Burke), Smokebush Press. {{isbn|0975169505}}
- 2005: The Well Weathered Piano, WARPS.
- 2009: Piano Hill, Fremantle Press. {{isbn| 9781921361647 }}{{cite web|url=https://thewest.com.au/entertainment/art/music-springs-from-ruins-ng-ya-228894|title=Music springs from ruins|last=Yeoman|first=William|date=2009-12-01|publisher=The West Australian|access-date=2025-04-11}}
- 2014: The Five Ranks of Dongshan: Keys to Enlightenment, Wisdom Publications. {{isbn| 9780861715305 }}{{cite journal|url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/759301|title=restricted access Neither Straight Nor Crooked: Poetry as Performative Dialectics in the Five Ranks Philosophy of Zen Buddhism|last=Byrne|first=Christopher|journal=Philosophy East and West|volume=70|number=3|date=July 2020|doi=10.1353/pew.2020.0049|page=673|access-date=2025-04-12}}
- 2017: Du piano-épave / The Well Weathered Piano (bilingual edition), Editions Lenka Lente. {{isbn|979-10-94601-17-4}}{{cite web|url=https://www.lespressesdureel.com/ouvrage.php?id=5901&menu=0|title=Ross Bolleter: Du piano-épave – The Well Weathered Piano|publisher= Les Presses du Réel|language=fr|access-date=2025-04-11}}
- 2018: The Crow Flies Backwards and Other New Zen Koans, Wisdom Publications. {{isbn| 978-1614292944 }}{{cite news|title=Notices: Book review|url=http://szc.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Newsletter-AugSept-2018.pdf|publisher=Sydney Zen Centre|date=2018|last=Coote|first=Gillian|newspaper= Sydney Zen Centre Newsletter|issue=5|volume=4|page=5|access-date=2025-04-12}}
- 2020: Blind Summits (with Christopher Konrad), Sunline Press. {{isbn| 9780648486541}}{{cite web|url=https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/8549768|title=Blind summits / Christopher Konrad & Ross Bolleter|publisher=National Library of Australia|access-date=2025-04-12}}
- 2022: Average Human Heart: left hand stories, Editions Lenka Lente. {{isbn| 979-10-94601-49-5 }}{{cite web|url=https://www.jazzin.fr/ross-bolleter-ou-le-piano-aborigene/|title=Ross Bolleter ou le piano aborigène|trans-title=Ross Bolleter or the Aboriginal piano|date=2023-11-03|publisher=Jazz In|last=Alen|first=Philippe|access-date=2025-04-11|language=fr}}
- 2022: The Piano Book (with Antoinette Carrier), WARPS.{{cn|date=April 2025}}
- 2025: Suivez ma Trace / Track Me Down (bilingual edition), Editions Lenka Lente. {{isbn| 979-10-94601-59-4}}{{cite web|url=https://www.lespressesdureel.com/EN/ouvrage.php?id=11957&menu=0|title=Ross Bolleter: Suivez ma Trace / Track Me Down|publisher=Les Presses du Réel|language=fr|access-date=2025-04-12}}
=Discography=
Additionally, he performed “Nallan Void” on New Albion Records' Austral Voices in 1990 and "Hymn to Ruin" on{{cite web|url=https://img.macba.cat/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Probes23_2_eng-1.pdf|title=09:34 Ross Bolleter, 'Hymn to Ruin' (excerpt), 2010|publisher=Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona|page=2|access-date=2025-04-11}} Margaret Leng Tan's She Herself Alone{{cite web|url=https://moderecords.com/profiles/rossbolleter/|title=Ross Bolleter|publisher=Mode Records|access-date=2025-04-11}} in 2010.
External links
- [https://bolleter.wixsite.com/warpsmusic World Association for Ruined Piano Studies] (WARPS), Boteller's label
References
{{reflist}}
{{Authority control}}
{{The Blackeyed Susans}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bolleter, Ross}}
Category:Australian male composers
Category:Musicians from Perth, Western Australia
Category:Zen Buddhist spiritual teachers
Category:Australian Zen Buddhists
Category:The Blackeyed Susans members