Access
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Online Items Available
Administrative History
Scope and Content
Arrangement
Processing Information
Related Materials
Additional Collection Guides
Contributing Institution:
University of California, Santa Cruz
Title:
Other
Minds
records
Creator:
Other
Minds
(Organization)
Identifier/Call Number: MS.414
Physical Description:
399.75 Linear Feet
(404 boxes, 15 framed and oversized items)
Physical Description:
0.17 GB
(3,565 digital files, approximately 550 unprocessed CDs, and
approximately 10 unprocessed DVDs)
Date (inclusive): 1918-2018
Date (bulk): 1981-2015
Language of Material: English
Access
Collection is open for research. Audiovisual media is unavailable until reformatted.
Digital files are available in the UCSC Special Collections and Archives reading room. Some
files may require reformatting before they can be accessed. Technical limitations may hinder
the Library's ability to provide access to some digital files. Access to digital files on
original carriers is prohibited; users must request to view access copies. Contact Special
Collections and Archives in advance to request access to audiovisual media and digital
files.
Publication Rights
Property rights for this collection reside with the University of California. Literary
rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. The publication
or use of any work protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use for research or
educational purposes requires written permission from the copyright owner. Responsibility
for obtaining permissions, and for any use rests exclusively with the user. For more
information on copyright or to order a reproduction, please visit
guides.library.ucsc.edu/speccoll/reproduction-publication.
Preferred Citation
Other
Minds
records. MS 414. Special Collections and Archives, University Library,
University of California, Santa Cruz.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift of Charles Amirkhanian, 2016.
Online Items Available
Many of the recordings that
Other
Minds
digitized through History of New Music Preservation
and Access Project are available online either on the Internet Archive (
archive.org/details/
other_
minds
) or on the
Other
Minds
radiOM Archive website
(
radiom.org ).
Administrative History
Composer and radio broadcaster Charles Amirkhanian was born in Fresno, California in 1945
and has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area since the late 1960s. He served as the Music
director for Pacifica Radio's KPFA-FM broadcasts in Berkeley, California from 1969 until
1992. During his tenure, Amirkhanian curated radio programs featuring contemporary music as
well as interviews with noteworthy composers. From 1974–1990, Amirkhanian programmed
experimental music concerts for the Cabrillo Music Festival in Santa Cruz, CA. Between 1988
and 1991 Amirkhanian co-directed the Telluride Institute's "Composer to Composer" festival
in Telluride, Colorado. As a composer, Amirkhanian is known for his electroacoustic and
text-sound/sound poetry compositions. In addition to supporting contemporary music,
Amirkhanian has efforted to revive the music of older musicians of the recent past, such
George Antheil, Johanna Beyer, and Alan Hovhannes, among others, through public
performances, radio broadcasts, and recording projects.
Other
Minds
co-founder, Jim Newman
was born in Omaha, Nebraska and received his Bachelors of Music from Oberlin College in
1955. He moved to Los Angeles, California following his graduation where he produced
performances of jazz by musicians like Count Basie and Dave Brubeck and also began working
in the art world by founding the Syddal Gallery with Walter Hopps. In 1958, Newman moved to
San Francisco where he founded the Dilexi Art Gallery in 1959. Following the closing of
Dilexi in 1970, Newman reentered the music scene, taking up the study of flute and holding
the baritone saxophone chair in the Junius Courtney Big Band from 1982 to 2013.
In 1991 Amirkhanian left the Telluride festival to accept directorship of the Djerassi
Artist Residency program. He also announced his resignation from his longtime position at
KPFA as part of this pursuit. Newman, a longtime listener and supporter of KPFA's
programming, contacted Amirkhanian to try and convince him to remain involved in the Bay
Area music scene. Together Amirkhanian and Newman conceived of the
Other
Minds
organization
through the inspiration of the collaborative, inclusive model established by Telluride, New
Music America, and other previous music festivals devoted to experimental music. The name
Other
Minds
was suggested by Newman as a response to an obituary for the composer John Cage
(1912–1992), which stated "His epitaph might read that he composed music in
other peoples'
minds
." The significance of the name of the organization is reflected in its concert
programming, featuring composers from diverse backgrounds and parts of the world who create
works outside the usual parlance.
The first concert presented by
Other
Minds
featured pianist Volker Banfeld giving the North
American Premier of Hungarian composer György Ligeti's Piano Etudes at Hertz Hall of UC
Berkeley in January of 1993. Later that year the first
Other
Minds
Festival (OM I) coincided
with the opening of San Francisco's Yerba Buena Center for the Performing Arts (YBCA). In
coordination with the Djerassi board of directors, the inaugural festival featured eleven
guest composers, including Robert Ashley, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk, Conlon Nancarrow,
Trimpin, and Julia Wolfe, among others. As of 2017, OM has produced twenty-two flagship
festivals, each with a cohort of composers at various stages in their careers. The
organization also produces concerts with specific themes, such as composer retrospectives,
film festivals, and other special events pertaining to new music.
The
Other
Minds
record label launched in 1999 as a complementary endeavor to the public
performances of the organization. The label produces select recordings by composers whose
works remained unavailable to the general public despite their significance to experimental
composition. Notable releases include the
Complete Music of Carl Ruggles, the
Complete Studies for Player Piano by Conlon Nancarrow, and collections of
works by composers such as George Antheil, John Bischoff, Sheila Booth, John Cage, Kui Dong,
Amy Neuburg, Ezra Pound, Sarah Cahill, and Carter Scholz. The label also hosts digital
downloads of live performances presented at OM concerts.
In 2005,
Other
Minds
began a new series of radio broadcasts on KALW 91.7 San Francisco
called "Music From
Other
Minds
." This hour-long program continues the legacy of the KPFA
broadcasts and furthers the aims of the
Other
Minds
organization by broadcasting new music
on a weekly basis in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Scope and Content
This collection contains the organizational records of
Other
Minds
, a San Francisco-based
contemporary music non-profit organization. The records primarily include business records
and correspondence related to the annual
Other
Minds
New Music Festival, other events,
artists, publications, fundraising and development, radio broadcasts, and the work of
Other
Minds
staff and Board of Directors. Also included are Executive and Artistic Director
Charles Amirkhanian's administrative and planning files, original scores, artwork,
photographs, marketing and press materials, programming publications, and assorted realia,
as well as CDs, VHS, DAT, and audiocassettes related to the
Other
Minds
festival, events,
associated artists, and the
Other
Minds
record label. Events and activities of the
California College of Performing Arts (CCPA) and the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music
are also documented, mostly through
Other
Minds
' Director Amirkhanian's involvement.
Included in the
Other
Minds
History of New Music Preservation and Access Project series are
planning materials and project documentation, as well as the original open-reel audio tapes
and selected digitized recordings of the tapes which were created as part of the
project.
Arrangement
Processing Information
Processed by Jay Arms, Madison Heying, and Jon Myers in the Center for Archival Research
and Training (CART) with assistance from Alix Norton, 2017-2018.
The digital portion of the collection was processed by Special Collections staff Alix
Norton in 2018-2019. Digital files were transferred from carrier disks in 2018. Duplicate
files, personnel records, and other out of scope files were not retained. Files were not
reformatted, and file names are original to the creator. Original disks were retained and
are included in the collection.
Related Materials
Related materials are cataloged separately in our holdings in Special Collections, and may
be found by searching the keywords "
Other
Minds
" in UCSC Library Search.
Additional Collection Guides
For a complete inventory of the processed digital files in Series 1 and Series 3, see the
following guide: