Martha Mooke, Electric Violist
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Martha Mooke, Electric Violist

Nyack, New York, United States | INDIE

Nyack, New York, United States | INDIE
Solo Classical Avant-garde

Calendar

Music

Press


"Crossroads, Guild Hall And WPPB Team Up For All-Star Concert"

"Electro-acoustic violist Martha Mooke doesn't visit the Hamptons much. But on Friday, November 18, she made an exception. That day, she traveled from her home in Nyack, New York to the East End for the "Hamptons Take 2 Documentary Film Festival." Her reason for travelling so far to take in the festival: to see her Manhattan-based string quartet/quintet, Scorchio Quartet, featured in the film "Inside the Perfect Circle," which was screened on Saturday night at Bay Street Theatre in Sag Harbor. Later that night, after watching the film, she found herself at the Stephen Talkhouse in Amagansett..." - The East Hampton Press & The Southampton Press


"'X-ING' marks the spot for violinist, and former Staten Islander, Martha Mooke"

'X-ING' marks the spot for violinist, and former Staten Islander, Martha Mooke (Michael J. Fressola, Staten Island Advance)
"Violist/composer Martha Mooke is busy: The ex-Islander will be the star attraction Dec. 3 at an upmarket "Artful Dining" dinner party fund-raiser for Symphony Space..." - Staten Island Advance


"At This Marathon, No Running Shoes Are Required"

"Even with so much promiscuous eclecticism on display, two segments of the concert stood out. Martha Mooke, using electric violas and effects pedals, bridged the gap between Romantic virtuoso composer-performers like Paganini and Liszt and MIDI-friendly successors like Todd Reynolds and Zoe Keating." - The New York Times


"At This Marathon, No Running Shoes Are Required"

"Even with so much promiscuous eclecticism on display, two segments of the concert stood out. Martha Mooke, using electric violas and effects pedals, bridged the gap between Romantic virtuoso composer-performers like Paganini and Liszt and MIDI-friendly successors like Todd Reynolds and Zoe Keating." - The New York Times


"Words Belied by Music by Kyle Gann"

Eleven days later, Martha Mooke and Randy Hudson, who call their duo Bowing, aimed at a smoother blend in a regrettably underattended concert at Exit Art. Mooke, who played solo for the first half, used to play a blue electric viola and now plays a red one, but the striking contrast with her white hair remains the same. By looping and pitch-bending herself via foot pedals she creates an entire string quartet without assistance. This means that all of her music turns on the device of the ostinato, the repeating loop, though when she wants to, she can so obscure that device that we don't notice it.Joining her on electric guitar, Hudson relied more on delay units, setting up textures ofquickly repeating figures that blended with Mooke's ostinatos.

Bowing's music, and Mooke's soloing as well, have plenty of what I call negative virtues: Nothing ever goes on too long, no effect is too obvious, every move is tasteful. Positive virtues—inspired images, elegant structures—are present, but less uniformly. If these works were an accurate indication, Mooke's music has gotten darker and thicker than it used to be, and has given up the Terry Riley-ish spaciness it once had. After the Fall was dense and mournful, like Harold Budd, and in Virtual Corridors she played over dissonantly intertwined ostinatos. In older works she made the viola sound like electric guitar and train whistles, while Hudson's cascading echoes reminded me of Robert Fripp's "Frippertronics" of the late '70s (which Fripp ripped off from Riley somewhat).

If the sonic images were precise, the forms were agreeably loose, making each piece feel like a sonic landscape: Sometimes desert imperceptibly morphed into forest; other times, at the push of a foot pedal, we'd turn a corner and suddenly encounter a completely different vista. And despite the jazz licks and odd meters, Mooke never had to worry about straying too far from romanticism: By nature the viola carries its romanticism along with it. - The Village Voice


"Martha Mooke, Reach Inside, Find your inner voice"

To ground-breaking violist Martha Mooke, musical talent without the soul is pointless. For more than 20 years, Mooke has sought to infuse the maximum amount of feeling, passion and creativity into her acclaimed performances, compositions and master classes. By breaking free from the conventions of the classical music world, Mooke has established a career that's truly unique.
As a young student in New York, Mooke shunned the mainstream. When the time came to choose between the less trendy viola vs. the more popular violin as her principal instrument, the choice was clear. "Everyone went for the violin," she recalls. "But true violists are different; I have a true viola soul."
Following her essential nature – and defying the rules – has helped Mooke go on to become one of the industry's most sought after instrumentalists. "Versatility is the key to survival," says Mooke, who is fluent in multiple genres, including classical, experimental, free jazz, crossover and Broadway. "It's incredibly important in the current music world to open up your possibilities and not just play what's on the page. There's a whole other universe of making music out there."
Beyond her catalog of works for solo and ensemble electric strings, she has also composed music for theater, ballet and films. Mooke's diverse schedule includes touring, clinics and lecture demonstrations. She has toured internationally as a member of the orchestra for Barbra Streisand's North American 2006 and European 2007 tours. She has attracted wide critical acclaim for her genre-defying recordings Enharmonic Vision and Cafe Mars, featuring guitarist Randolph Hudson, III. Her current Broadway orchestra credits include Spamalot, The Color Purple and Wicked.
By synthesizing her extensive classical music training with extended techniques, digital effects processing and improvisation, Mooke retains the depth and soul of the instrument, while bringing out innovative sounds and styles. She has performed and recorded with musicians such as David Bowie, Philip Glass, Patti Smith, Bon Jovi, David Byrne, Moby, Lou Reed, Trey Anastasio, Enya, Rufus Wainwright, and the Kronos Quartet. An important highlight for Mooke has been creating and producing ASCAP's music showcase Thru The Walls, featuring artists whose work defies categorization. The highly popular concert series has enabled her to express her artistic talent and collaborate with some of the leading independent artists of our generation.
Mooke's affiliation with Yamaha began in 1998, when she was invited to offer input into the creation of the Company's Electric Viola and Violin series. She even traveled to Japan in 2001 to sample the prototypes and to lend insight into their development. "When I first played the prototype, I saw its incredible potential. It was very gratifying to help the instruments come to fruition." One of her favorite instruments remains a custom red EV-205 created specifically for her by Yamaha.
A pioneer and leading advocate of both the electric violin and the five-string electric viola, Mooke celebrates her 10th anniversary as a Yamaha Artist in 2008. As an enormously popular clinician, Mooke has garnered many fans and admirers by focusing on alternative approaches to playing electric strings. Her clinics showcase the use of electronics, extended techniques and the importance of improvisation. The success of her interactive teaching approach is seen through the spellbound responses of the attendees who are encouraged to bring their own instruments and join in improvising and playing along with her. "Do what your gut tells you," she advises students. "Play what's in your spirit."
Her exciting artistry continues to inspire musicians and fans – but the key to creating the ultimate musical experience, according to Mooke, goes beyond technical virtuosity. "The creative soul has to always be in play."
- Yamaha Signature Sounds


"An Interview with Electro-Acoustic Violist Martha Mooke"

Innovative electro-acoustic violist, composer, and clinician Martha Mooke will appear at the Hand House Parlor in Elizabethtown on September 18th and 19th as part of the Rites of Strings concert series. Over the years, Mooke has developed a unique musical voice, blending classical music with modern digital effects. Her permutation in the field of five string viola/violin has led to numerous concerts, daytime and late night television talk show appearances, inclusion in the Broadway pit orchestras of Wicked and South Pacific, performing in the touring Star Wars in Concert show, and alongside such artists as David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Tony Bennett, David Byrne, Peter Gabriel, Moby, Andrea Bocelli, and Luciano Pavarotti.

Mooke’s genre-bending debut solo CD, Enharmonic Vision has garnered widespread critical acclaim. Aside from performing solo, she also plays in a guitar-viola duo titled Bowing and in The Scorchio Quartet. Martha Mooke not only spreads her love of music through performance, but also in the way of workshops. She is a clinician teaching numerous classes, such as “Violas on the Verge” and “Zen and the Art of Conceptual Improvisation.” She received an ASCAP 2001 Concert Music Award for producing and creating the Thru the Walls showcase which features work, not unlike her own, that defies genres and categorization.

The Free George: I read that you synthesize your classical music training with extended techniques, digital effects, and improvisation. Could you explain a little about your classical training? When did you start playing the viola/violin?
Martha Mooke: I started playing viola when I was 10 years old, in the fifth grade. The music teacher from the Intermediate School came to my elementary school and offered classes. Everyone wanted to play the violin or cello because no one knew what a viola was – so I picked the viola! Usually students start on violin and switch, it’s a bit unusual to actually begin on viola. I discovered I had an affinity for the instrument and stayed with it. At that time the public schools I attended on Staten Island had string programs and orchestras, so I received a great initial training. I have two degrees in viola performance: a B.A. from the State University of NY at Albany, and a Master of Music from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

TFG: How did your current electro-acoustic violist style evolve out of your past training?
MM: One of the points I like to make when I’m leading a workshop or demonstration is that you have to be able to speak a first language before you can speak a second. I was able to bring my skills as a traditionally trained violist to a non-traditional instrument. At first, all I had was the alphabet, and since they weren’t teaching anything like this in school, I needed to develop my own vocabulary and way of communicating with this new voice.

Martha Mooke with Iggy PopTFG: You’re billed as an electro-acoustic violist. Can you tell us a little about the instruments you currently have and play?
MM: When I’m playing in an orchestra, normally I play “unplugged,” or acoustically. I have a pickup built into the bridge of my acoustic instrument, so that when I’m called upon to “plug in,” meaning if my string quartet, Scorchio, is performing with a rock artist at a club that requires us to be amplified, I can do so easily, and I’ll know it will sound good. When I play solo or with an “electric” ensemble, like my duo with electric guitar, or my new trio with bass and electric djembe, I use my electric instruments. I have an array of 4 and 5 string violins/violas. When I first began exploring the world of electric strings, there weren’t as many makers of these instruments as there are now.

Jean-Luc Ponty was a major influence on me, and one of the reasons I decided to pursue this unconventional route. A friend loaned me one of his albums, and on the cover he’s cradling a beautiful blue five string violin. After I listened to the album, I made my parents drive me to 48th Street in New York City, and I purchased the exact same model, an old Barcus Berry, which I still own. A few years later I heard a band called The Horseflies, they’re from Ithaca, and I befriended Judy Hyman, the violinist, who was playing a very sexy electric violin. Shortly after I was the proud owner of the first 5-string electric viola model from Ithaca String Instruments.

I was also experimenting with different effects units and delays around this time, and was developing my own sound and style of playing. When I began my affiliation with Yamaha over 10 years ago, they were designing their first line of electric strings. They sent me a prototype of their Silent Violin, and the next thing I knew, I was invited to consult with the design team in Hamamatsu, Japan on some new models, including a viola and a 5-string electric hybrid, which is my primary electric instrument these days. Each instrument has somewhat different features than the other, from tone to - The Free George


"Press Reviews"

Reviews of Martha Mooke

"The Scorchio String Quartet played "Quantum" by the quartet's leader and violist, Martha Mooke, with songful melodies accompanied by tremulous chords and Asian-flavored glissandos". - Jon Pareles, The New York Times

***

"With her white hair and blue five-stringed viola, Mooke is a striking figure, with a Terry Riley-ish array of electronic enhancements and a wider range of styles (from Cagean to minimalist to free jazz and beyond) than many improvisers can boast." - The Village Voice

***

"In performance, a relatively traditional-sounding solo passage will give way to a mesmerizing mood sequence and then, seemingly, half an electronic orchestra has arrived - but it's all her." - Staten Island Advance

***

"Mooke shows off both an impressive dynamic range and a drop-dead-gorgeous tone on her custom five-string electric viola. In her hands, the instrument can sound like a keyboard synthesizer, a guitar, or even a saxophone. … she seems to be able to translate almost any musical impulse into sound." - Alternative Press

***

"The very original Martha Mooke uses space age musical colors and patterns, with her five-string electric viola leading the way, altogether exotic, hypnotic, and personal." - The Wax Works

***

"Mookestueck, written for the electric 5-string viola of local string whiz Martha Mooke...Mooke's performance is superb and impassioned. - WaterfrontWeek
- NY Times, et al.


"Press Reviews"

Reviews of Martha Mooke

"The Scorchio String Quartet played "Quantum" by the quartet's leader and violist, Martha Mooke, with songful melodies accompanied by tremulous chords and Asian-flavored glissandos". - Jon Pareles, The New York Times

***

"With her white hair and blue five-stringed viola, Mooke is a striking figure, with a Terry Riley-ish array of electronic enhancements and a wider range of styles (from Cagean to minimalist to free jazz and beyond) than many improvisers can boast." - The Village Voice

***

"In performance, a relatively traditional-sounding solo passage will give way to a mesmerizing mood sequence and then, seemingly, half an electronic orchestra has arrived - but it's all her." - Staten Island Advance

***

"Mooke shows off both an impressive dynamic range and a drop-dead-gorgeous tone on her custom five-string electric viola. In her hands, the instrument can sound like a keyboard synthesizer, a guitar, or even a saxophone. … she seems to be able to translate almost any musical impulse into sound." - Alternative Press

***

"The very original Martha Mooke uses space age musical colors and patterns, with her five-string electric viola leading the way, altogether exotic, hypnotic, and personal." - The Wax Works

***

"Mookestueck, written for the electric 5-string viola of local string whiz Martha Mooke...Mooke's performance is superb and impassioned. - WaterfrontWeek
- NY Times, et al.


Discography

Trey Anastasio and the Scorchio Quintet: Live from Princeton
David Bowie: iSelect (Astralwerks)
Barbra Streisand: Live in Concert (Columbia)
Linda Thompson: Versatile Heart (Decca)
Philip Glass - Taking Lives (Warner Bros.)
Osvaldo Golijov - Klezmer Concertos and Encores (Naxos)
Ziggy Marley – Dragonfly (Private Music)
Bowing - Café Mars (2105 AD)
David Bowie: "Heathen" (ISO/Columbia)
Mercury Rev-All is Dream (V2 Records, Inc.)
Prefab Sprout-The Gunman and Other Stories (EMI Records)
Big Pun - Endangered Species (Loud Records)
Ron Sexsmith – Whereabouts (Polydor Group)
Muzzle - Actual Size (Warner Bros / Wea)
Fat Joe - Don Cartagena (Atlantic)
Philip Glass – Koyaanisqatsi (Nonesuch)
Martha Mooke: Enharmonic Vision (Maximum Music Connections) 1
Steve Reich - Works: 1965-1995 (Nonesuch)
Philip Glass – Kundun (Nonesuch)
John Cale - Eat/Kiss (Hannibal Records)
John Cale - Walking on Locusts (Hannibal Records)
Richard Barone - Clouds Over Eden (Line Records)

Photos

Bio

Martha Mooke, composer/electro-acoustic violist, a pioneer in the field of electric five string viola, transcends musical boundaries by synthesizing her classical music training with extended techniques, digital effects processing and improvisation, while retaining the depth and soul of the instrument.

She is a Yamaha Artist and leading clinician on electric and alternative approaches to string playing. Mooke is founder and violist of the adventurous electro-acoustic Scorchio Quartet, which has performed with David Bowie, Trey Anastasio, Philip Glass, Iggy Pop, Patti Smith and Lou Reed among others.

Mooke has toured internationally as a member of Barbra Streisands acclaimed orchestra and with Star Wars: in Concert. She has also worked with Bon Jovi, Enya, Peter Gabriel, Andrea Bocelli, Tony Bennett, David Byrne, Moby, John Cale, Ziggy Marley, Luciano Pavorotti and the Orchestra of St. Lukes.

Mookes genre-defying recordings, Enharmonic Vision and Bowing's Caf Mars (duo with electric guitarist Randolph Hudson) have attracted wide critical acclaim. Her catalog includes works for electric and acoustic instruments, film, theater, dance and multimedia productions. She has premiered many works written for her by a broad spectrum of composers.

She has received awards from ASCAP, Meet the Composer and Arts International among others. She was honored with an ASCAP Concert Music Award for conceiving and producing the new music showcase THRU THE WALLS featuring ASCAP composer/performers whose work defies categorization.