Michael Harrison

Artist Statement

As a composer and pianist my works blend the classical music traditions of Europe and North India, while forging a new approach to composition through just intonation. This ancient form of pure tuning is constructed from musical intervals of perfect mathematical proportions and is considered the universal foundation for harmony. Throughout much of the history of Western classical music, just intonation was subsumed by the convenient and homogenized system of equal temperament and hierarchical staff notation. Just intonation survives today with a cappella music and in Indian ragas, engaging acoustically rich harmonies and nature-based time cycles. I seek expressions of universality via the physics of sound – music that brings one into a state of concentrated listening as a meditative and even mind-altering experience. My ongoing discoveries with just intonation have provided the foundation and inspiration to compose numerous works for re-tuned piano, string instruments, chamber ensembles, vocals, orchestra, and electronics, many of which explore the harmonic colors, special resonances and acoustical effects that are only available in extended just intonation. Just intonation further reveals and maximizes natural resonance and somatic listening, amplifying our beautifully complex acoustic universe. Fascinated by these qualities as well as possible new applications for sound, I often collaborate with filmmakers, visual artists, architects, and choreographers. As the world becomes more complex in this era of social and climatic acceleration, my work aspires to contextualize humans in ever-expanding space and time.

Michael Harrison at The Menil Collection, Houston, TX, 2022; all artworks © The Estate of Walter De Maria

Bio

Composer/pianist Michael Harrison forges a new approach to composition through just intonation (tuning based on perfect harmonic proportions). He is a Guggenheim Fellowship recipient. Harrison’s recent release Seven Sacred Names reached the top 10 classical albums on Billboard and was called “music of positively intoxicating beauty” in The New Yorker. "Just Constellations," commissioned and recorded by Grammy-winning Roomful of Teeth, was among NPR's Best 100 Songs of 2020. Time Loops was among NPR's Top 10 Classical Albums of 2012. His work, "Revelation," achieved international recognition and inclusion in the Best Classical Recordings of 2007 selections of The New York Times and Boston Globe. Harrison’s primary teachers are La Monte Young, Terry Riley, and Indian vocalists Pandit Pran Nath and Ustad Mashkoor Ali Khan. Harrison is on faculty at the Manhattan School of Music where he also received his Masters in Composition. Performances of Harrison’s music include BAM Next Wave Festival, Carnegie Hall, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Park Avenue Armory, United Nations, the Louvre, Pompidou Centre, MASS MoCA, Spoleto, Big Ears, Sundance, Klavier Festival Ruhr, Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, Minimal Music Festival in Amsterdam, Mattatoio Museum in Rome, DaCamera and The Menil Collection in Houston.

michaelharrison.com