Piece image

Music and Thought: Pushing The Limits

From: Barry Vogel
Series: Radio Curious
Length: 29:01

Embed_button
Trimpin, is the star of the movie that bears his name, which will be shown at the Mendocino Film Festival. He was the recipient of a Mac Arthur genius grant in 1997 for the creation of a huge variety of acoustic sounds from many unusual sources. Barry Vogel visits with Trimpin this week on Radio Curious. Read the full description.

Radio-curious-logosmall_small

Pushing limits in music and thought is the topic of this edition of Radio Curious as we visit with Trimpin, a man who makes music from unusual instruments.  He is the star of documentary film about his life’s work Trimpin, who uses a single word for his name received a Mac Arthur Genius Grant 1997. 

 

He asserts that he is trying to “go beyond human physical limitations to play instruments in such a way that no matter how complex the composition or the timing, it can be pushed over the limits.”  The music, he said, starts with a sound in his head.  He then transforms that notion for us to hear.  The film Trimpin will be show at the Mendocino Film Festival the first weekend of June 2012, in Mendocino California.

 

I spoke with Trimpin from his studio in Seattle, Washington, on May 19, 2012, and asked him to comment on the characterization where he is described as a mad-scientist, a magician, or possibly a tour guide.

 

Rather than recommending a book, Trimpin said that he gave up reading sometime ago and replaced it with thinking.  He’d “rather think than read”, he said.

 

 

Also in the Radio Curious series

Piece image

Alloy Orchestra: New Music for Silent Films (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with Terry Donahue, a member of the Alloy Orchestra, a group of multitalented musicians who provide live, in house, orchestral backup to silent films of ...
Piece image

20,000 Crows in Tokyo (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with filmmaker Kristine Samuelson, co-creator of the documentary, “Tokyo Waka: A City Poem” about the 20,000 crows that inhabit the city of Tokyo, Japan ...
Piece image

We Still Live Here: Revival of the Wampanoag Language (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with Anne Makepeace, the writer and director of the documentary film, “We Still Live Here,” which chronicles the movement to reclaim the lost Native ...
Piece image

Fresh Air (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with Terry Gross, host of the public radio show, Fresh Air.
Piece image

22,000 Songs = Under Currents with Gregg McVicar (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with Gregg McVicar host and producer of Under Currents.
Piece image

An Early American Conservationist (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious revisits a conversation with Chautauqua scholar Lee Stetson, who portrays environmental conservationist John Muir. Muir founded the Sierra Club and is credited ...
Piece image

The Music Man is Coming to River City (29:02)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with Reid Edelman, producer and director of The Music Man, a local theater production involving more than 100 people from the Ukiah, California area.
Piece image

Do We Really Know the People Around Us? (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious revisits a conversation with Mary Catherine Bateson, author of "“Full Circles: Overlapping Lives, Culture and Generation in Transition."
Piece image

The History of Feminism (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious revisits a conversation about the history and future of feminism with History Professor, Estelle B. Freedman, author of ""No Turning Back The History of ...
Piece image

The Foremother of Women's History (29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious visits with Dr. Gerda Lerner, a founder of the academic genre called Women's History. Lerner died January 2, 2013 at the age of 92.

Piece Description

Pushing limits in music and thought is the topic of this edition of Radio Curious as we visit with Trimpin, a man who makes music from unusual instruments.  He is the star of documentary film about his life’s work Trimpin, who uses a single word for his name received a Mac Arthur Genius Grant 1997. 

 

He asserts that he is trying to “go beyond human physical limitations to play instruments in such a way that no matter how complex the composition or the timing, it can be pushed over the limits.”  The music, he said, starts with a sound in his head.  He then transforms that notion for us to hear.  The film Trimpin will be show at the Mendocino Film Festival the first weekend of June 2012, in Mendocino California.

 

I spoke with Trimpin from his studio in Seattle, Washington, on May 19, 2012, and asked him to comment on the characterization where he is described as a mad-scientist, a magician, or possibly a tour guide.

 

Rather than recommending a book, Trimpin said that he gave up reading sometime ago and replaced it with thinking.  He’d “rather think than read”, he said.

 

 

Musical Works

Title Artist Album Label Year Length
The Lost Cowboy Peter Elman Durango Saloon. Acorn Music 00:30

Related Website

www.radiocurious.org