Description
Papers of Jon Phetteplace, composer and performer of contemporary music. The papers include drafts, transparencies, and Ozalid
prints of his own scores, as well as materials for the performance of works by others; correspondence with composers and friends
in English and Italian; programs from Phetteplace's activity with orchestras and small ensembles; miscellaneous appointment
books, calendars, and journals; photographs; subject files; notebooks; and audio recordings of his work and the work of others.
One of the strengths of the collection is the extensive documentation of his time in Italy, both in terms of his own work
and that of others.
Background
Jon Dale Phetteplace was born February 4, 1940, in Fullerton, California. He studied cello with Frieda Belinfante before graduating
from Fullerton High School in 1958, and after a year in Vienna, Austria (1959-1960), he moved to Siena, Italy, where he took
masterclasses at the Accademia Chigiana. He then studied with Mario Bianchi and Pietro Grossi at the Conservatorio Luigi Cherubini
in Florence, where, with Grossi, he began to study electronic music and composition. After returning briefly to the United
States, Phetteplace moved back to Italy, where in 1965 he again studied cello and electronic music in Florence and worked
in the Studio Fiorentino di Fonologica Musicale (S2FM). He also worked with Sylvano Bussotti, creating photographic projections
for Bussotti's opera
Passion selon Sade. By 1966, he was active as a performer in Italy, and moved to Rome in 1967, where, until 1968, he was associated with Musica
Elettronica Viva (MEV), a group known for performing live electronic music. MEV is also known for not having any fixed set
of members, although, according to Phetteplace, the original ensemble was constituted by Allan Bryant, Alvin Curran, Carol
Plantamura, Frederic Rzewski, Ivan Vandor, and himself. Phetteplace participated in many of the concerts that MEV gave throughout
Europe, and these concerts sometimes featured his music. He also participated in The Contraband, an offshoot of MEV, which
also featured a rotating set of members, including Steve Lacy and Richard Teitelbaum, both of whom also collaborated with
MEV.