Stuart Dempster

{{Short description|American trombonist, scholar, and professor}}

Stuart Dempster (born July 7, 1936 in Berkeley, California) is a trombonist, didjeridu player, improviser, and composer.

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Biography

{{BLP sources section|date=October 2022}}

After Dempster completed his studies at San Francisco State College, he was appointed assistant professor at the California State College at Hayward, and instructor at the San Francisco Conservatory (1960–66). During this period he was also a member of the Performing Group at Mills College, and from 1962 to 1966 was first trombonist in the Oakland Symphony Orchestra.

In 1967–68, he was a Creative Associate at the State University of New York at Buffalo under Lukas Foss. While there he helped organize the first commercial recording of Terry Riley's In C, in the 1964 premiere of which he had also performed {{harv|Schell|2020}}. The following year he was appointed assistant professor at the University of Washington, in Seattle, where he was promoted to full professor in 1985.

In 1971–72 he was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study at the University of Illinois, and in 1973 he was a senior Fulbright scholar to Australia ({{harvnb|Tarr|2001}}; {{harvnb|Anon.|n.d.}}). In 1979 the University of California Press published his book, The Modern Trombone: A Definition of Its Idioms. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship award in 1981 {{harv|John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation|2015}}.

He has commissioned and performed works by Luciano Berio, Rob du Bois, Donald Erb, Robert Erickson, Andrew Imbrie, Ernst Krenek, and Robert Suderburg. He has collaborated with former classmate Pauline Oliveros and Panaiotis including co-founding the Deep Listening Band. He commissioned Theater Piece for Trombone Player (1966) from Oliveros and choreographer Elizabeth Harris.

Dempster practices yoga and breath control including circular breathing. {{harv|Von Gunden|1983|p=38}} He is credited with introducing the didjeridu to North America. {{harv|Ross|2008|p=66}}

Bibliography

  • The Modern Trombone: A Definition of Its Idioms. Berkeley and Los Angeles: The University of California Press, 1979. {{ISBN|0-520-03252-7}}.

Discography

  • In The Great Abbey of Clement VI (1987: New Albion, NA013)
  • Robert Suderburg, Chamber Music III ("Night Set"), for trombone and piano (with Robert Suderburg, piano). Also with Suderburg's Chamber Music IV ("Ritual Series"), for percussion ensemble; Chamber music V ("Stevenson"), for voice, string quartet, and tape. Elizabeth Suderburg, soprano; Ciompi String Quartet; University of Michigan Percussion Ensemble, cond. Charles Owen. (1990: Delfcon Recording Society CD, DRS 2127)
  • Underground Overlays from the Cistern Chapel, S. Dempster and colleagues (1995: New Albion, NA076)
  • Deep Listening, Stuart Dempster, Panaiotis, & Pauline Oliveros (1989: New Albion)
  • On the Boards (November 26, 2001 CD NOM11)
  • Monoliths and Dimensions
  • Lung Tree (2005: ReR Megacorp RDD, LC-02677), Stuart Dempster (trombone, didjeridu, garden hose, et al.), Lesli Dalaba (trumpet), Eric Glick Rieman (modified, prepared, and extended Rhodes electric piano, piano, stomp boxes, MOTM modular synthesizer)
  • Echoes of Syros (2009: Full Bleed Music, FBM 003), Stuart Dempster (trombone, didjeridu, conch, garden hose, toys), Tom Heasley (tuba, electronics), Eric Glick Rieman (prepared Rhodes electric piano)
  • Mavericks (2015: American Modern Recordings, AMR1041)

With Joe McPhee

With Greg Powers (as Pran)

  • Raga for the Rainy Season (Sparkling Beatnik, 1999) {{harv|AAJ Staff|1999}}

See also

Sources

  • {{wikicite|reference={{cite web|author1=AAJ Staff|title=Pran: Raga For The Rainy Season|url=http://www.allaboutjazz.com/raga-for-the-rainy-season-pran-sparkling-beatnik-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php|website=All About Jazz|access-date=26 April 2016|date=1999|issue=1 December}}}}
  • {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Schell|2020}}|reference={{cite web|author1=Michael Schell|title= Stuart Dempster interviewed (April 9, 2020)|url=https://www.mixcloud.com/RadioEclectus/radio-eclectus-039-stuart-dempster-interviewed-apr-9-2020/|website=Radio Eclectus}}}}
  • {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Anon.|n.d.}}|reference=Anon. (n.d.). "[http://faculty.washington.edu/dempster/bio.html Biographical Information about Stuart Dempster]", [http://faculty.washington.edu/dempster Stuart Dempster faculty page, University of Washington] (accessed 26 April 2016)..}}
  • {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation|2015}}|reference=John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (2015). "[http://www.gf.org/fellows/all?index=d&page=7 All Fellows: Fellows 301–350 of 799]". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation website (accessed 2 April 2015).}}
  • {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Ross|2008}}|reference=Ross, John (2008). "Stuart Dempster". Seattle Metropolitan (December): 66.}}
  • {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Tarr|2001}}|reference=Tarr, Edward H. (2001). "Dempster, Stuart (Ross)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.}}
  • {{citation|last=Von Gunden|first=Heidi|year=1983|title=The Music of Pauline Oliveros|location=Metuchen, N.J.|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=0-8108-1600-8}}

=Listening=

  • [https://www.mixcloud.com/RadioEclectus/radio-eclectus-039-stuart-dempster-interviewed-apr-9-2020/ Radio Eclectus: Stuart Dempster interviewed by Michael Schell] featuring Dempster performing Sequenza V and General Speech and Deep Listening Band performing Nike and Roi Et
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20040811223934/http://www.epitonic.com/artists/stuartdempster.html Epitonic: Stuart Dempster] featuring “Morning Light” and “Didjerilayover” from Underground Overlays from the Cistern Chapel.
  • {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20050113090709/http://artofthestates.org/cgi-bin/performer.pl?perf=7 Art of the States: Stuart Dempster]}} General Speech (1969) by Robert Erickson

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{{Deep Listening}}

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Category:1936 births

Category:Living people

Category:American classical trombonists

Category:American male trombonists

Category:Didgeridoo players

Category:San Francisco State University alumni

Category:California State University, East Bay faculty

Category:University of Washington faculty

Category:American contemporary classical music performers

Category:Avant-garde trombonists

Category:20th-century classical trombonists

Category:20th-century American male musicians

Category:21st-century classical trombonists

Category:21st-century American male musicians