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Susan Alcorn
Susan Alcorn
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Susan Alcorn (April 4, 1953 – January 31, 2025) was an American composer, improvisor, and pedal steel guitarist.

Key Information

Life and career

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Born in Cleveland, Ohio,[1] Alcorn started playing guitar at the age of twelve and quickly immersed herself in folk music, blues, and the pop music of the 1960s. A chance encounter with blues musician Muddy Waters steered her towards playing slide guitar.[2] By the time she was 21, she had immersed herself in the pedal steel guitar, playing in country and western swing bands in Texas.

Soon, she began to combine the techniques of country-western pedal steel with her own extended techniques to form a personal style influenced by free jazz, avant-garde classical music, Indian ragas, Indigenous traditions, and various folk musics of the world. By the early 1990s her music began to show an influence of the holistic and feminist "deep listening" philosophies of Pauline Oliveros.

Though mostly a solo performer, Alcorn collaborated with numerous artists including Pauline Oliveros, Eugene Chadbourne, Peter Kowald, Chris Cutler, Joe Giardullo, Caroline Kraabel, Ingrid Laubrock, Le Quan Ninh, Josephine Foster, Joe McPhee, Vinny Golia and Ken Vandermark, LaDonna Smith, Mike Cooper, Walter Daniels, Ellen Fullman, Jandek, George Burt, Janel Leppin, Michael Formanek, Ellery Eskelin, Fred Frith, Maggie Nicols, Evan Parker, Johanna Varner, Zane Campbell, Mary Halvorson and Bill Embleton and the Severn Run Country Band.

She wrote on the subject of music for the UK magazine Resonance and CounterPunch. Her article "The Road the Radio, and the Full Moon" was included in "The Best Music Writing of 2006" published by Da Capo Press.

Alcorn lived in Houston,[3][4] then Baltimore later in life.[5] She was married to photographer David Lobato. Alcorn died of natural causes at her home in northeast Baltimore on January 31, 2025.[2][6][7]

Discography

[edit]
  • "Uma" (Loveletter 2000)
  • "Curandera" (Uma Sounds 2005),[8] "Concentration" (Recorded 2004)
  • "And I Await the Resurrection of the Pedal Steel Guitar" (Olde English Spelling Bee 2007)
  • "Touch This Moment" (Uma Sounds 2010)
  • "Soledad" (Relative Pitch, 2015)
  • "Evening Tales" (Mystra 2016).[9]
  • "Prism Mirror Lens" (with Phillip Greenlief, VG+ 2019)
  • "Invitation to a Dream (with Joe McPhee and Ken Vandermark, Astral Spirits 2019)
  • "Pedernal" (Susan Alcorn Quinet, Relative Pitch 2020)
  • "Bird Meets Wire" (with Ingrid Laubrock, Leila Bordreuil, Relative Pitch 2020)
  • "From Union Pool" (with Patrick Holmes and Ryan Sawyer, Relative Pitch 2022)
  • "Manifesto" (with Hernâni Faustino and Jose Lencastre, Relative Pitch 2020)
  • "Canto" (Septeto del Sur, Relative Pitch 2020)
  • "Thollem / Susan Alcorn - Thollem's Astral Traveling Sessions" (Astral Spirits, 2021)
  • "Filament" (with Catherine Sikora Mingus, Relative Pitch 2024)
  • "In-Yun" (Longform Editions 2024)

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Susan Alcorn was an American pedal steel guitarist, composer, and improviser known for pioneering the expansion of the pedal steel guitar far beyond its traditional country music associations into jazz, free improvisation, contemporary classical, and experimental music. She devised a new lexicon and expressive range for the instrument, transforming its role through virtuosic technique, melodic depth, and influences from diverse traditions including visionary jazz, 20th-century classical music, nueva canción, and more. Born on April 4, 1953, in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Alcorn grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, and began her career playing pedal steel in traditional country-western bands and honky-tonk bars after switching from standard guitar during college. Her approach shifted dramatically in 1990 after studying with composer Pauline Oliveros, whose Deep Listening philosophy shaped her emphasis on sonic awareness and profound musical communication. She later lived in Houston, Texas, before settling in Baltimore, Maryland, around 2007–2008, where she became a central figure in the experimental scene following her 2004 appearance at the High Zero festival. Alcorn died in Baltimore on January 31, 2025, at age 71 due to natural causes. Alcorn collaborated with numerous prominent figures in creative music, including Mary Halvorson on albums such as Away with You and Pedernal, Nate Wooley in the Columbia Icefield project, Ingrid Laubrock, Michael Formanek, and others, while also engaging with ensembles like the London Improvisers Orchestra and Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra. Her discography includes critically acclaimed solo and collaborative releases such as Canto and Filament, reflecting her ability to blend free improvisation, composed works, and adaptations across genres. She received recognition including top placement in the DownBeat International Critics Poll for best miscellaneous instrument in 2016, the Baker Artist Award in 2017, and the Instant Award in Improvised Music in 2018. Her legacy endures as that of a visionary who elevated the pedal steel guitar to a serious and versatile voice in contemporary music through innovation, intensity, and deep musical insight.

Early life

Childhood and early musical experiences

Susan Alcorn was born on April 4, 1953, in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Her earliest musical experiences began at age 3, when she would sit beneath her mother's spinet piano and press the foot pedals as her mother played church music or light classical pieces. In school, she studied viola, cornet, and guitar. She took up guitar around age 12 or 13, becoming immersed in blues, folk, and related styles. As a teenager, a chance encounter with Muddy Waters, whose slide guitar performance she witnessed in Chicago, inspired her to experiment with slide techniques. Alcorn was raised in the Cleveland area following her birth in Pennsylvania. Her family later moved to Arlington Heights, a Chicago suburb, around 1970. At age 21, she discovered the pedal steel guitar.

Discovery and adoption of pedal steel guitar

Alcorn discovered the pedal steel guitar at age 21, around 1975, after seeing it played in a nightclub in the Chicago area while in college. This encounter produced an immediate attraction to the instrument's metallic timbre and its capacity for highly expressive, gliding phrases that extended the possibilities she had explored on slide guitar. The way the steel bar floated across the strings, creating ethereal and sustained tones, captivated her and prompted her to adopt the pedal steel as her principal instrument. She went on to perform with country and western swing bands in the Chicago area in the late 1970s, honing her technique within traditional contexts. After moving with her family to Houston, Texas, in 1981, she continued performing with country and western swing bands across Texas throughout the 1980s, becoming a fixture in the local country music scene.

Career

Work in country and western music

Alcorn began her professional career playing pedal steel guitar in traditional country-western bands in the Chicago area shortly after taking up the instrument in 1975 while a college student. She performed with groups including the Phantom Prairie Dusters during this period. As a beginner, she encountered a rigorous initiation into Chicago-style country music, facing criticism and unexpected musical challenges from fellow musicians, an experience she later described as brutal but ultimately educational. In 1981, Alcorn moved to Houston, Texas, where she found immediate and plentiful work as a pedal steel player amid a booming country scene fueled by the early 1980s popularity of the genre. She performed steadily in dance halls, honky-tonks, and cowboy bars across Houston and East Texas, often as part of local and regional touring country and western swing groups. Success in these commercial settings required mastery of conventional pedal steel techniques, including precise knowledge of intros, turnarounds, signature licks, and rides from classic repertoire dating back to artists like Ernest Tubb in the 1940s. She also joined regular jam sessions at Frank’s Ice House on Waugh Street, sitting in with veteran western swing musicians such as Cliff Bruner, Bucky Meadows, Herb Remington, and Ernie Hunter.

Transition to experimental and improvised music

In the late 1980s, Susan Alcorn began shifting away from her earlier immersion in country and western bands toward experimental and improvised music, seeking to expand the expressive range of the pedal steel guitar beyond traditional idioms. She developed extended techniques, alternative tunings, and various preparations for the instrument during this period, allowing it to generate novel timbres and textures. A pivotal influence came in 1990 when she attended her first Deep Listening retreat led by Pauline Oliveros, an experience that reshaped her approach to sound, perception, and improvisation. This engagement culminated in her first public performance of free improvisation in 1997. Her work increasingly integrated diverse influences, drawing from free jazz, avant-garde classical composers including Olivier Messiaen, Indian ragas, Indigenous musical traditions, tango nuevo pioneered by Astor Piazzolla, and global folk musics. In 2007, Alcorn relocated to Baltimore, where she became more deeply involved in the local improvised music community, including participation in the High Zero Festival as early as 2004. These developments solidified the pedal steel guitar's role as a distinctive and versatile voice in contemporary composition and free improvisation.

Solo recordings and performances

Susan Alcorn built a distinguished catalog of solo and leader-driven recordings that emphasized her virtuosic and exploratory approach to the pedal steel guitar. Her work in this area often featured unaccompanied performances or compositions where she served as the primary voice and bandleader, highlighting the instrument's potential for extended techniques, improvisation, and reinterpretation of diverse musical material. Her solo album Uma appeared in 2000, marking an early statement of her departure from conventional styles toward more abstract and personal expressions on the instrument. This was followed by Curandera (2005), a fully solo pedal steel recording that demonstrated a wide array of extended techniques, including scrapings, harmonics, pick-sounds, vocal-like swells, choral sonorities, and harp-like chromaticism, while fusing melody, harmony, and pure sound into evocative sonic architectures. The album includes her transcription of Olivier Messiaen's "O Sacrum Convivium," adapting the composer's choral writing to the pedal steel's chromatic capabilities. Subsequent solo releases include And I Await the Resurrection of the Pedal Steel Guitar (2007), Touch This Moment (2010), Soledad (2015), and Evening Tales (2016), each further exploring the instrument's textural and emotional range in unaccompanied settings. Alcorn also undertook ambitious arrangements for solo pedal steel, including Olivier Messiaen's Quartet for the End of Time, which she performed and adapted to showcase the instrument's expressive depth in classical contexts. In later years, Alcorn led larger ensembles on recordings while maintaining her solo practice. Pedernal (2020), credited to the Susan Alcorn Quintet, presents her as leader on a studio album following a tour, featuring original compositions that blend her signature pedal steel lines with group interplay. More recent releases include the duo project Filament (2024) with Catherine Sikora and the purely solo In-Yun (2024) on Longform Editions, the latter consisting of unaccompanied pedal steel guitar without overdubbing, fixed tonal center, or meter. Alcorn's primarily solo concert practice earned her international recognition, with performances in diverse venues worldwide that underscored her status as a singular voice in contemporary improvised and experimental music.

Key collaborations

Susan Alcorn was an active collaborator in the international free improvisation and experimental music scenes, frequently teaming up with leading figures in avant-garde jazz and improvised music to explore the pedal steel guitar in unconventional contexts. These partnerships often resulted in duo, trio, or small ensemble recordings and performances that highlighted her instrument's textural and harmonic possibilities alongside diverse instrumental approaches. One prominent collaboration is the 2019 trio album Invitation to a Dream with saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist Joe McPhee and reed player Ken Vandermark, featuring extended improvisations recorded live in Chicago. That same year, she recorded the duo album Prism Mirror Lens with saxophonist Phillip Greenlief, consisting of four improvised tracks emphasizing coloristic interplay between pedal steel and saxophone. In 2020, Alcorn collaborated with saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock and cellist Leila Bordreuil on Bird Meets Wire, a seven-track album of spontaneous compositions released by Relative Pitch Records. Also in 2020, she joined Portuguese bassist Hernâni Faustino and saxophonist José Lencastre for the trio album Manifesto, documenting further explorations in free improvisation. Alcorn performed and recorded as part of larger improvising ensembles, including the London Improvisers Orchestra. She led or co-led smaller groups such as the Susan Alcorn Quintet, which included frequent collaborator guitarist Mary Halvorson and appeared on the album Pedernal, and Septeto del Sur, featured on Canto. Other notable partnerships included duo work with saxophonist Catherine Sikora on Filament and collaborations with figures such as Pauline Oliveros, Evan Parker, Fred Frith, Eugene Chadbourne, Chris Cutler, and Michael Formanek in various improvisational settings.

Musical style and innovations

Recognition and awards

Personal life and death

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