Joseph Zitt's vocal performance combines a background in traditional
synagogue and world musics with a mastery of extended vocal
techniques. While he often approaches performance non-verbally,
focusing on the vocal sounds themselves rather than the meanings of
words, he also includes moving and surprising uses of text in work
that straddles the line between music and poetry. In his solo and
ensemble performances and workshops, he works to create music that is
both complex and clear, exemplifying the best that each person can
bring to free and structured improvisation.
His recent recording, All Souls, in collaboration with Thomas
Bickley, presents a free long-form improvisation, created on the spot
with intertwining voices exploring the architecture and objects in a
resonant room and its surroundings. His latest recording,
Collaborations, captures live improvisations performed with bassists
F. Vattel Cherry and Jane Wang, with percussionist Brian Fending, and
with guitarist Jonathan Matis (both members, along with Zitt, Bickley,
and Matthew Ross Davis, of the ensemble Gray Code), as well as a
studio collaborations with Thomas Bickley and Craque.
His newest book, Surprise Me With Beauty: the Music of Human
Systems, collects writings and scores from over 20 years that present
and embody new visions of human interaction through structured group
improvisation. Believing, as John Cage said, that "the performance of
a piece of music can be a metaphor ... of how we want society to be",
Zitt develops and discusses the creation of ensemble musics that are
clear, multifaceted, and enjoyable. These scores help reveal and
encourage people's strengths in performance while allowing for
acceptance of and recovery from honest human frailty and error.
Composer Pauline Oliveros has called the book "a wonderful invitation
to participate in making music for musicians, interested people, and
educators. These scores will encourage you to sound the silenced
self."
Joseph Zitt studied cantorial music at Yeshiva University, electronic
and ethnic music and composition at Rutgers University with Daniel
Goode, Phillip Corner, and Barbara Benary, and voice with Martha
Randall.
He has performed in a wide variety of solo and ensemble contexts,
including performing with the ensemble Comma in Pauline Oliveros's
"Lunar Opera" at Lincoln Center in New York City, and with the
ensemble Gray Code at the Knitting Factory in New York and at the 2001
Vision Festival in Washington, DC. He has worked extensively in the
realms of free and structured improvisation with musicians including
Toshi Makihara, John Berndt, LaDonna Smith, Thom the World Poet, and
Philip Gelb. In annual tours of Texas, his group QslashC, a large and
varied ensemble of musicians, poets, and dancers, explores
improvisation methods and structures in engaging (and often hilarious)
events. He has also led the Human Systems Performance Group, which
moves among dance, theatrical, musical, and video performance to
develop effective multimedia events, and created electronic theatre
scores for the PAM Repertory Company in Brooklyn, NY.
His recordings includes Comma's (voices) and Gray Code's Live in
Philadelphia 2000 on the Metatron Press label, the solo CD
Jerusaklyn from MP3.com, and the vocal solo "mouth. midnight." on
the lowercase compilation on the Bremsstrahlung label. His other
works include the book Shekhinah: The Presence from Metatron Press
and the ambient video dance work, Gentle Entropy, each of which has
accompanying CDs from the MP3.com label.
He founded and manages Silence: the John Cage Internet discussion
list, and has developed and managed Web sites for businesses and arts
organizations, including the Austin International Poetry Festival and
Metatron Press. MP3s and streaming recordings of many of his
performances, as well as those of other Metatron Press artists, are
online at http://www.metatronpress.com/mp3/.
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