Tracer
1985

Duration

15'

Publisher

Edition Peters

Instrumentation Notes

Fl., Cl., B-cl., Vln., Vc., Db., and 4-channel audio

Program Notes

This score was previously self-published by Earle Brown. It is available as facsimile print from Edition Peters as of 2007.

More Information

Program Notes:
The title is that of a painting by Bob Rauschenberg. Bob and I have been friends since 1952 and he and his work have been an influence on my work for many years and perhaps my work on his, in the early days. There has always been a layering and collage process in my work; the idea of 2 or more things transforming each other by being in “flexible” relationships to one another. Musical performance allows these relationships to change from performance to performance in a kind of endless re-association of the composed elements of that piece. In 1952 I called this a “mobile score” (having been influenced by Calder) but it has since been officially called “open form”. TRACER, being a kind of “homage” to Bob, has even more of this quality of endless and unexpected transformability than most of my other works, which is a condition that Bob himself might very well utilize if he were to compose sounds in time — which, as we know, he just might — at any moment.

Robert Rauschenberg, Tracer, 1963
Robert Rauschenberg, Tracer, 1963. Oil and silkscreen on canvas.

The four channels of tape material are on endless tape cassettes* (no functional beginning or end). The quality and time relationships of what is on each cassette does not change but the four cassettes will constantly be in different temporal and spatial relationships to one another from performance to performance. The conductor therefore cannot learn or predict the rhythms and placement of the four channel sound environment that he will be “conversing” with in performance. The instrumental material is all music composed by me (as are the sounds on the tapes) scored in an “open-form” context — spontaneously combined, juxtaposed, modified and “formed”. Working in the gap between art and life, as Bob Rauschenberg once said.

—Earle Brown, 1984–85

*As of 2008, the four endless tape cassettes used at the time of the creation of this work have been replaced by digital audio and a Max/MSP patch.

Audio Samples

Tracer (1985)

Selected Performances

January 19, 2016 • Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, WA

Inverted Space Ensemble
 

December 9, 2015 • The Cell, New York City

Ensemble Mise-en

April 13, 2014 • Singapore

Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music
New Music Ensemble
Conductor: Manuel Nawri

February 7, 2008 • Houston

Ensemble: MusiquaConductor: Anthony Brandt

November 3, 1986 • Leo S. Bing Theater, Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Ensemble: MEC EnsembleConductor: Earle Brown

January 20, 1986 • San Francisco Museum of Art

Ensemble: San Francisco Contemporary Music PlayersConductor: Stephen Mosco

April 18, 1985 • North American New Music Festival, Buffalo

Ensemble: SEM EnsembleConductor: Earle Brown

Sample Page

Tracer sample page

Browse
full
score

General instructions for conducting “open form”

Recordings

cover of Mode Records 179, Tracer

TRACER (CD / DVD) (released 2007)

MODE records

Performed by Ne(x)tworks

Buy from
Mode Records
bandcamp

Earle Brown Music Foundation