alex keller
about news press projects resources
curation sound design discography performance/ composition public/
installation
writing

Beyond the Past: New Music for Extinct Instruments (2005)
Earshot: Voice and Vision (2002)
Electrons and Phonons 2008
John Cage's Songbooks (2005)
Olympia Experimental Music Festival (2001)
Seattle Improvised Music Festival (2002)
Seattle Poetry Festival (2002)
Toneburst (2007)
War and Peace (2003)
Alex Keller has performed or had works performed at the following other venues and festivals:

All the Transients
Arts-In-Nature Festival
Center for Contemporary Arts
Electromuse 2
Experience Music Project
In the Eye of the Ear
Investigations Into the Physical and Metaphorical Hole
Loop Dreams
Meet the Sonicabal!
Mixtaphonics
Nights of the Blue Rider
Nonsequitur's Short Circuits
Phoenix Festival
Resonant/Circuit
Seattle Art Museum
Sonicabal ArtsEdge Showcase
SoundCulture 96
The Show-off Gallery
The Sonic Circuits Music Festival of Toronto (1995)
ThomFariCraw's Loft Series (2003)
Waveforms: currents in sonic art
Yeast by Sweet Beast 2008
Rob Bigley, the director of the Shoreline Community College Chamber Chorale, asked me to write the piece that became Sunset on X-Ray for a concert he'd planned called War and Peace dealing with the just-launched Iraq War.

Take a look at the score here. Excerpted from the score:

Sunset on X-Ray is a piece in which the performers, constrained to a very simple tonality, improvise together. In it, the audience hears the sound of a buzzing fluorescent light created by an ensemble of four or more voices, mimicking the constant artificial light that the “unlawful combatants” indefinitely imprisoned in Guantanamo, Cuba are subject to. While the piece is performed, very bright lights will be directed at the audience.

The piece should feel like a mosaic in which the few elements are always the same but their relationships to each other are always changing. The lack of formal structure and development may seem to be a limitation but will create tension for an audience, and also will cause them to appreciate the more subtle changes that will happen.