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Although his name is familiar mainly to specialists,
James Tenney has been a highly influential figure in American music, particularly in promoting various strands of twentieth century avant-garde, from
Ives forward. He has also been a prolific composer, writing extensively for various unusual instrumental combinations (some involving electric guitar, gamelan, percussion, or tape delay), and he was a leading figure in the electro-acoustic movement of the 1960s, also creating some important early computer compositions.
Tenney's interest in computers, acoustics, psychoacoustics, and music cognition is not surprising considering he studied engineering at the University of Denver from 1952 to 1954. Only after that did he devote himself full-time to music, studying piano with Eduard Steuermann at Juilliard and composition with Lionel Nowak at Bennington College (from which he received his bachelor's degree in 1958). After this came studies at the University of Illinois (where he got his master's in 1961); mentors there were
Kenneth Gaburo in composition and
Lejaren Hiller in information theory and electronic music.
Tenney also worked for a while with such maverick figures as
Harry Partch,
Carl Ruggles, and
Edgard Varèse.
The 1960s found
Tenney conducting research at the Bell Laboratories (1961-1964), Yale (1964-1966), and the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute (1966-1970), where he deeply explored the early possibilities of electronic music. Later years saw him teaching at the California Institute of the Arts (1970-1975), the University of California at Santa Cruz (1975-1976), and finally at Toronto's York University (from 1976).
During the 1960s and '70s,
Tenney collaborated with live musicians even while he worked with electronics. He co-founded and directed the Tone Roads Ensemble, which from 1963 to 1970 was a significant force in the
Ives revival. He also performed with the ensembles of early minimalists
Steve Reich and
Philip Glass while fostering relationships with such figures as Stan Brakhage,
John Cage,
Morton Feldman, and
Max Neuhaus.
In later decades,
Tenney became more influential as a theorist than as a composer or performer. His approach to form stems from his understanding of the phenomenological bases of music perception. He has also investigated "harmonic space," his term for experimental intonation. His best-known publication is A History of Consonance and Dissonance (1988).