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Philip Corner
Philip Corner
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Key Information

Philip Lionel Corner (born April 10, 1933; name sometimes given as Phil Corner) is an American composer, trombonist, alphornist, vocalist, pianist, music theorist, music educator, and visual artist.

Biography

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After The High School of Music & Art in New York City, Philip Corner received his BA (1955) at CCNY, where his most important teacher was Fritz Jahoda; and an MA (1959) from Columbia University where his composition teachers were Otto Luening and Henry Cowell, The two years in between (1955–57) were spent in Paris at the Conservatoire Nat'l de Musique, following the class "Philosophie Musicale" of Olivier Messiaen. Equally important was his friendship with the Canadian painter Paul-Emile Borduas, who introduced him to "la grande aventure nord-américaine", to which he returned and became part of the group around John Cage. At the same time he resumed his studies of the piano with Dorothy Taubman, which was to have a significant role in his compositional as well as performing life. He taught Modern Music at the New School for Social Research from 1967–1970, inheriting the class founded by John Cage at double remove after Richard Maxfield, with whom he was teaching assistant, and Malcolm Goldstein. His teaching career started at a New York City high school and continued at the New Lincoln School where he helped develop the music department and introduced innovative courses (1966–1972). During this period he was married to the astrologer and trance medium Julie Winter who was also a minister in the Church of Religious Science, with which he too was associated, composing music to be sung at meditation sessions. From 1972 to 1992 he continued as professor at the newly established Livingston College, a part of Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, soon to be absorbed into the Mason Gross School of the Arts. He then took early retirement and moved to Reggio Emilia, Italy where he had previous contact through the Pari e Dispari "Arte Club Internazionale". An early friend, the dancer and choreographer Phoebe Neville, joined him there and became his wife and performance partner.

As an early participant in pre-Fluxus activities since 1961, he was a resident composer and musician with the Judson Dance Theatre from 1962 to 1964 and later with the Experimental Intermedia Foundation upon the invitation of Elaine Summers, for whose dance company he served as musician. He co-founded with Malcolm Goldstein and James Tenney the Tone Roads Chamber Ensemble in 1963 (active until 1970), with Julie Winter Sounds Out of Silent Spaces in 1972 (active until 1979) and with Barbara Benary and Daniel Goode, Gamelan Son of Lion in 1976 (still active).

Works

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Corner became interested in calligraphy during military service in Korea in 1960–1961 and studied it with Ki-sung Kim; it is often incorporated into his scores. While there he became enamored with Korean traditional music, particularly the jeongak composition Sujecheon, which he describes as "the most beautiful piece of music in the history of the world."[1] Many of his scores are open-ended in that some elements are specified, but others are left partially or entirely to the discretion of the performers. Some employ standard notation, whereas others are graphic scores, text scores, etc. His music also frequently explores unintentional sound, chance activities, minimalism, and non-Western instruments and tuning systems. Improvisation is important, though not exclusive; some "performance proposals" lead to a kind of ecstatic semi-trance. Contact with artists in other media, especially dance and the visual arts, as well as a long-standing interest in Eastern religions such as Zen Buddhism and study of the music of composers from the Baroque and Pre-Baroque eras, has likewise impacted his music.

Representative works include the ensemble pieces Passionate Expanse of the Law, Sang-teh/Situations and Through the Mysterious Barricade, among many others. Also in his incredibly large oeuvre are piano pieces (perfect, Pictures of Pictures from Pictures of Pictures), choral works (Peace, be still), electronic music (the war cantata Oracle), and more than 400 works in the Gamelan series, to mention only some of his catalogue. He divides his output into five periods, each one reflective of his attitudes at the time:

  1. Culture, 1950s
  2. The World, 1960s and 1970s
  3. Mind, 1970s and 1980s
  4. Body, 1980s and 1990s
  5. Spirit; Soul, 1999–present

Frog Peak Music, a Composer's Collective, has undertaken to make as much as possible of his opera omnia available by on-order photocopy publication.

In 1962, Corner's "Piano Activities" became notorious by challenging the important status of the piano in post-war German homes in Wiesbaden, West Germany after concerts of antique musical instruments, the “Fluxus Internationale Festspiele Neuester Music” (Fluxus International Festival of Newest Music) was organized by the American artist George Maciunas at the Museum Wiesbaden to support a planned "Fluxus" publication. Fourteen concerts were performed on four weekends between 1 and 23 September. Corner's work in particular attracted press and public reaction, later seen as marking the beginning of the Fluxus "movement."[1]

Non-musical activities

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In addition to his work as a composer and musician, he has created numerous assemblages, calligraphy, collages, drawings, and paintings, many of which have been exhibited internationally. He has also written much poetry, which like some of his music, has occasionally appeared under his Korean pseudonym Gwan Pok, meaning "Contemplating Waterfall".In the late 1960s Corner's work was published in 0 to 9 magazine, an avant-garde journal which experimented with language and meaning-making. Editions in silk-screen have been brought out by the Archivio F. Conz, Verona, and Pari e Dispari Agency in Reggio Emilia, among others. Works are regularly exhibited in galleries, mostly in Europe, and are in notable museum collections. His principal gallery is UnimediaModern in Genova, whose director Caterina Gualco maintains a large collection. Other important collectors are Hermann Braun in Germany (deceased 2009) and Luigi Bonotto in Bassano who maintains an extensive documentation.

During "Mississippi Freedom Summer 1964" and for some of the following year, Corner was a civil rights volunteer and Freedom School teacher in Meridian, Miss. "Mark Levy Collection. Queens College/CUNY Rosenthal Library Civil Rights Archive." In 1968, Corner signed the "Writers and Editors War Tax Protest" pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against the Vietnam War.[2]

Discography

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  • "Philp Corner - Omnyphony Concentrate For A Multicultural Mix" (2019). Setola di Maiale SM3860 CD
  • "Philp Corner - Dedalus" (2019). Setola di Maiale SM3850 CD
  • "Philp Corner - In The Apartment House" (2017). Setola di Maiale SM3380 CD
  • "Philp Corner - Through Mysterious Exotic Barricades: Asian & African" (2016). Setola di Maiale SM3080 CD
  • "Philp Corner and Rahayu Supanggah - Together in New York" (2015). Setola di Maiale SM2760 CD
  • "Rocks Can Fall at Any Time" Moremars (lp, 2013), Performed by composer. Contributed artists: James Fulkerson, Phoebe Neville, recorded 1972, 1989, 1997, 1999.
  • "Gong(cymbal)/Ear in the desert". Innova 227 (2009).
  • Philip Corner: Extreme Positions (2007). New World Records 80659-2 (2 CDs). The Barton Workshop (James Fulkerson, director)
  • 40 Years and One: Philip Corner Plays the Piano (2000). XI 125. Performed by composer, recorded 1998.
  • Breath Chant (1976). New Wilderness Audiographics 7701A. Performed by composer, recorded 1976.
  • Metal Meditations (1976). New Wilderness Audiographics 7701B. Performed by composer, recorded 1976.
  • More from the Judson Years, early 60s, Volume Two Alga Marghen 056CD (includes "Everything Max Has," "Big Trombone," "Homage to Revere," "Punkt," "Passionate Expanse of the Law" and "Expressions in Parallel").
  • More from the Judson Years, early 60s, Volume One Alga Marghen 055CD (includes "Passionate Expanse of the Law," "Air Effect," "OM Emerging," "As Pure to Begin," "Music, reserved until now," and "Composition with or without Beverly").
  • Gong + Alga Marghen 042CD (includes "Metal Meditations with Listening Center," "Gong!" and "Pulse Polyphony").
  • Three Pieces for Gamelan Ensemble Alga Marghen 034CD (includes "Gamelan," The Barcelona Cathedral" and "Belum").
  • On Tape from the Judson Days Alga Marghen 019CD (includes "Lucinda's Pastime," Memories:Performances," "From Thaïs," "Oracle, a Cantata on Images of War," "Flares" and "Circus Tape").
  • Word-Voices Alga Marghen 4 VOC SON 010 (lp – includes "Vox," "Vocalise" and "Air Effect").
  • Metal Meditations Alga Marghen (lp).

in production as of 2009 are recordings from die Schachtel, Pogus, A Silent Place, Locust, and more from Alga Marghen.

Sources

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Philip Corner is an American composer, musician, performer, and visual artist known for his innovative contributions to experimental music, his foundational role in the Fluxus movement since 1961, and his work as a resident composer and musician with the Judson Dance Theatre. Born on April 10, 1933, in the Bronx, New York, Corner pursued formal studies in music at the High School of Music & Art, City College of New York (BA, 1955), and Columbia University (MA, 1959), where he studied composition with Otto Luening and Henry Cowell. He also attended Olivier Messiaen’s analysis classes at the Paris Conservatoire from 1955 to 1957, an experience that profoundly influenced his approach to sound and structure. After serving in the U.S. Army in South Korea from 1959 to 1961—where he studied calligraphy and received the name Gwan Pok—he returned to New York and immersed himself in the avant-garde scene. In the early 1960s, Corner became deeply engaged with Fluxus, participating in its earliest events and contributing action music, indeterminate scores, graphic notation, and conceptual pieces. Concurrently, he served as a resident composer and musician for the Judson Dance Theatre from 1962 to 1964, collaborating with dancers and choreographers such as Phoebe Neville (whom he later married) and creating works that integrated music with movement and physicality. His output spans diverse forms, including metal meditations and gong explorations, extensive gamelan-inspired series, long-form piano improvisations based on François Couperin’s Les Barricades Mystérieuses, and interdisciplinary performances involving trombone, alphorn, and calligraphic elements. Corner taught modern music at institutions including the New School for Social Research and Rutgers University until his early retirement in 1992, after which he relocated to Reggio Emilia, Italy, where he continues to develop his “Lifework” of experimental, meditative, and integrative practices. His career reflects a commitment to bridging Western classical traditions, non-Western influences, indeterminacy, and bodily awareness in pursuit of expanded sonic and performative possibilities.

Early life and education

Birth and early years

Philip Lionel Corner was born on April 10, 1933, in the Bronx, New York. He is sometimes credited or known as Phil Corner. Corner spent his childhood in New York City, growing up in the Bronx during the 1930s and 1940s. Limited details are available about his family background or specific early influences, but he began composing at the age of 12, indicating an early inclination toward music while still in his pre-high school years.

Formal musical training

Philip Corner attended the High School of Music & Art in New York City, where he received his initial formal musical education. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from the City College of New York in 1955, with Fritz Jahoda serving as his principal teacher in musicianship and piano. From 1955 to 1957, Corner studied at the Conservatoire National de Musique in Paris, attending Olivier Messiaen's "Philosophie Musicale" class. He completed his Master of Arts degree at Columbia University in 1959, studying composition with Otto Luening and Henry Cowell. After his period in Paris, Corner resumed piano studies with Dorothy Taubman, an experience that significantly influenced his composing and performing.

Military service in Korea

Service period and experiences

Philip Corner was drafted into the United States Army in 1959. He initially served in the United States for approximately a year before being shipped to South Korea in 1960. As a trombonist in an Army band, he was assigned to the American occupying forces there. His service in Korea continued until early 1961. During his time in South Korea, Corner experienced guard duty amid the cold winter conditions. He later described being drafted into the Army and sent to Korea as a fortuitous event in his life, far from an unwelcome interruption to his career. In one reflection, he contrasted his military service with a "better world—much much better—than being in the American Army." This period also sparked his interest in Korean calligraphy and music.

Exposure to Korean culture

While stationed in Korea, Philip Corner studied calligraphy with Ki-sung Kim, who gave him the Korean name Gwan Pok, meaning "Contemplating Waterfall." This immersion in Korean calligraphic traditions led him to incorporate a distinctive calligraphic style into his graphic scores and handwritten notations in subsequent years. Corner also developed a profound appreciation for traditional Korean court music, particularly the jeongak orchestral piece Sujecheon, which he described as "the most beautiful piece of music in the history of the world." He was drawn to its spaciousness, glissandi, and slow tempos, elements that deepened his focus on the intrinsic quality of sound. These encounters with Korean calligraphy and music proved formative, influencing the contemplative and sonic dimensions of his experimental approach without aiming to imitate Oriental styles.

Fluxus and experimental music career

Involvement with Fluxus

Philip Corner became involved with Fluxus in its formative period, participating in numerous events and activities starting from 1961. Upon returning to New York in 1961 after military service in Korea—which followed his earlier studies in Paris—he actively sought connections within the John Cage circle, first contacting Morton Feldman, attending concerts, and meeting Cage, who introduced him to Christian Wolff. Through this network, including figures like Dick Higgins and Alison Knowles, he encountered George Maciunas, who was cultivating relationships with avant-garde artists to organize concerts and publications that would coalesce into Fluxus, approaching Corner early as a potential contributor. One of Corner's most prominent contributions was the composition Piano Activities, which received a notorious performance at the Fluxus Internationale Festspiele Neuester Musik in Wiesbaden, Germany, on September 1, 1962—an event often regarded as Fluxus's inaugural festival. The score instructed any number of players to act upon all parts of the piano—including plucking, tapping, scratching, rubbing, striking the soundboard and strings, and using objects—to liberate its inherent energy and raw sonic potential rather than to make an anti-bourgeois symbolic statement. Performers including George Maciunas, Dick Higgins, Emmett Williams, Alison Knowles, Nam June Paik, Wolf Vostell, and Benjamin Patterson carried out these actions to the point of completely destroying the instrument, an outcome that gained scandalous attention, including coverage on German television. Corner was not present at the Wiesbaden performance, having provided the score to Dick Higgins earlier (after its initial presentation in New York at Judson Memorial Church). He initially reacted with shock to accounts of the destruction, associating extreme rhetoric with expressionistic provocation he rejected, but later reflected that the performers' serious engagement necessarily followed the score's specified gestures and intentions, even if exaggerated in force.

Work with Judson Dance Theatre

Philip Corner served as resident composer and musician for the Judson Dance Theatre from 1962 to 1964, a pivotal role during one of the most significant periods in the emergence of avant-garde dance, movement, Happenings, and performance art. He contributed music to performances involving key figures such as Yvonne Rainer, Simone Forti, Deborah Hay, David Gordon, Lucinda Childs, Steve Paxton, and Trisha Brown, often employing indeterminate scores, graphic notations, tape music, and varying degrees of indeterminacy to support experimental choreography. Notable works from this residency include tape pieces like Lucinda’s Pastime, created for Lucinda Childs using recorded kitchen sounds, as well as other compositions such as Reserved Until Now (recorded at Judson in 1965), reflecting his engagement with open experimentation and post-Cagean concepts. Following his Judson tenure, Corner served as a musician for Elaine Summers' dance company at the Experimental Intermedia Foundation, upon her invitation. In 1963, Corner co-founded the Tone Roads Chamber Ensemble with Malcolm Goldstein and James Tenney; the group performed experimental music until 1970.

Teaching positions

Early teaching roles

Philip Corner began his formal teaching career in New York City during the mid-1960s, focusing on music education in progressive school settings. From 1966 to 1972, he taught at the New Lincoln School, where he helped develop the music department and introduced innovative courses that emphasized contemporary approaches to music. He also taught secondary subjects there during this period, contributing to a broader educational program. From 1967 to 1970, Corner taught Modern Music at The New School for Social Research, inheriting the class founded by John Cage at double remove—after Richard Maxfield, with whom Corner had served as a teaching assistant, and Malcolm Goldstein. This role involved courses on the analysis of contemporary music and experimental composition, building on the school's legacy of avant-garde instruction.

Academic career at Rutgers

Philip Corner served as a professor at Rutgers University from 1972 to 1992, beginning at the newly established Livingston College, which later became integrated into the Mason Gross School of the Arts. He held this professorship in the music department for twenty years, teaching experimental composition among other subjects. In 1992, Corner took early retirement from his position at Rutgers, prompted by an increasingly unwelcoming teaching environment. Following his retirement, he relocated to Reggio Emilia, Italy, where he had prior connections through artistic networks and settled with his wife, the choreographer and dancer Phoebe Neville. This move marked the end of his long-term academic career in the United States and the beginning of his residence in Italy.

Gamelan Son of Lion and later music

Founding and activities with Gamelan Son of Lion

Philip Corner co-founded Gamelan Son of Lion in 1976 with composers Barbara Benary and Daniel Goode. The New York City-based ensemble functions as both a composers' collective and a repertory group dedicated to contemporary music composed for instruments of the Javanese gamelan, blending experimental American approaches with elements of Indonesian traditional music. Barbara Benary constructed most of the group's instruments in Javanese style, featuring keyed metallophones with iron bars in pelog and slendro tunings, sometimes combined in single pieces. The ensemble remains active, with ongoing performances, commissions, and contributions from additional composers as well as from remaining original founders. Corner has been a continuing composer with the group since its inception, contributing more than 400 works in his Gamelan series to its repertoire. These compositions form a significant portion of the ensemble's activities, which include concerts, recordings, and explorations of gamelan as a medium for modern experimental music. The group's work emphasizes collaborative creation and performance of new pieces tailored to its instrumentation.

Compositional periods and key works

Philip Corner divides his compositional output into four distinct periods, with a fifth added from 1999 onward, reflecting his evolving artistic attitudes and concerns: Culture (1950s), The World (1960s–1970s), Mind (1970s–1980s), Body (1980s–1990s), and Spirit/Soul (1999–present). These phases trace a trajectory from early explorations of structure and influence to broader engagements with global sounds, conceptual depth, physicality in performance, and finally spiritual dimensions. His works across these periods are characterized by open-ended scores, graphic and text-based notations that often prioritize performer agency over fixed pitches, extensive use of improvisation within defined parameters, incorporation of non-Western tunings and resonances, and elements of chance and indeterminacy that emphasize discovery through sound rather than strict invention. Corner frequently employed verbal instructions, calligraphic gestures, and visual mappings to guide realization, allowing for spontaneous interaction and extreme contrasts between noise and silence, density and sparseness. Key works from his early periods include Passionate Expanse of the Law (1959), a graphic score for indeterminate ensemble that specifies form through notated materials open to any number of instruments. Piano Activities (1962) became a landmark Fluxus event score inviting collective action on a prepared or deconstructed piano, liberating raw sonic energy through performer intervention. From the same era, Sang-teh / Situations provides structures for multi-cultural improvisation drawing on his Korean experiences. Gong! offers numerous proposals for playing single or multiple gongs to explore resonance and sustained tones. Later notable compositions feature Through the Mysterious Barricade, an open work for drums, voices, instruments, and audience participation inspired by François Couperin. Piano pieces such as Pictures of Pictures from Pictures of Pictures present ten movements for solo piano that engage iterative and revelatory processes. Peace, be still exists in versions for voices or a cappella chorus as a meditative canon built on rounds. Metal Meditations investigates resonant metal sonorities through improvisation and sustained exploration. These examples highlight his recurring interest in extreme positions, raw material, and the dialectical interplay between structure and freedom.

Visual art and calligraphy

Development as visual artist

Philip Corner has created an extensive body of visual art that encompasses assemblages, calligraphies, collages, drawings, paintings, and objects made from various materials. His engagement with calligraphy began during his time in South Korea from 1960 to 1961, where he studied the form with Ki-sung Kim, laying the foundation for a practice that would span decades. This calligraphic work has been integrated into his musical scores as graphic elements while also standing as independent visual pieces exhibited on their own terms. Corner's visual output has been presented internationally across the Americas, Asia, and Europe, reflecting its wide recognition beyond his experimental music contributions. His principal gallery is UnimediaModern in Genova, directed by Caterina Gualco, who maintains a substantial collection of his works and has organized exhibitions and events featuring them. Silk-screen editions of his pieces have been produced in collaboration with Archivio F. Conz in Verona, including works such as "La più bella donna del monde" (1979) in an edition of 200. Notable collectors of his visual art include Hermann Braun and Luigi Bonotto.

Exhibitions and collaborations

Philip Corner's visual works, including calligraphies, collages, and other mixed-media pieces, have been presented through international exhibitions and collaborations, particularly in Europe where he has resided since the 1990s. His involvement with Fluxus-related networks has facilitated numerous group shows featuring his visual output alongside other avant-garde artists. A significant aspect of his visual art career involves editions and collaborations with specialized publishers and archives. Silk-screen editions of his works have been produced by Archivio F. Conz in Verona, which holds a large collection of his pieces and has released items such as silkscreen on cloth works like Fluxus Free Speech (2006). The Pari e Dispari Agency in Reggio Emilia has also issued editions and unique works, including the embroidered fabric piece A piece of a dream: reality (2003), created for an itinerant exhibition. His visual art is represented by galleries such as Hundertmark Gallery, which promotes his collages and calligraphic works. Major collectors and institutions preserving his visual pieces include Archivio Conz and Fondazione Bonotto, contributing to ongoing exhibitions of his contributions to experimental art.

Personal life

Marriages and partnerships

Philip Corner was married to Julie Winter, an astrologer, trance medium, and certified minister in the Church of Religious Science. During their marriage, he composed music intended for meditation sessions connected to the Church. In 1972, Corner and Winter co-founded Sounds Out of Silent Spaces, a music-ritual collective that emphasized group improvisation on found objects and instruments, drone chanting, silent meditation, and dance or rhythm-based pieces, remaining active until 1979. Corner later married the dancer and choreographer Phoebe Neville, whom he first met in the early 1960s through their involvement in the Judson Dance Theater. Neville joined him in Reggio Emilia, Italy, following his relocation there in 1992, and became his wife as well as a key performance partner. Their artistic collaborations have included extensive duo improvisations—often featuring Corner on piano or small sounds and Neville in spontaneous movement—as well as public performances, notably an early duo at The Kitchen and subsequent group works integrating dance and music. Notable joint pieces include action duets such as Buns in Bangkok (with Neville's choreography) and works from the More Intimate Musics series. Julie Winter, by then Corner's former wife, officiated the wedding ceremony between Corner and Neville.

Move to Italy and later years

In 1992, Philip Corner took early retirement from his professorship at Rutgers University's Livingston College and relocated to Reggio Emilia, Italy. The decision was influenced by his longstanding collaborations with Italian artistic organizations, particularly the Pari e Dispari Arte Club Internazionale, which had fostered prior contacts and opportunities. He settled in Reggio Emilia with his wife, the dancer and choreographer Phoebe Neville, who joined him there and continued as his performance collaborator. In his later years in Italy, Corner has remained active as a composer, visual artist, and performer, residing continuously in Reggio Emilia since the move. His post-1992 period corresponds to the Spirit/Soul phase of his work, beginning around 1999, which emphasizes integration, synthesis, and deeper spiritual dimensions in his artistic practice. He has sustained associations with local galleries and partners in Reggio Emilia, building on earlier Italian connections to support his ongoing experimental endeavors.

References

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