Dr. James Phelps
Dr. James Phelps, Associate Professor of Music and Director of NIUCMS
James Phelps (b. 1954, Paris, Tennessee) is Associate
Professor of Music at Northern Illinois University and Director of
NIUCMS (NIU Computer Music Studios) and of the
experimental/computer-music ensemble Annex Group in DeKalb. He has
renovated and updated the existing program there to offer students
opportunities with some of the most prevalent as well as newest
technologies, including software synthesis and realtime audio
processing in a Macintosh/Protools/MAX-MSP computer music network,
CD-ROM/DVD authoring and interactive and realtime video/audio in
network forums. He has instigated a guest artist series at NIU which
has featured world-class composers/performers such as Larry Austin,
Paul Lansky, Phil Winsor, Stephen Montague, Philip Mead, Cort Lippe,
Zack Settel, among others, as well as composers-in-residence
Vladimir Volkov from Ekaterinburg, Russia, and Hu Xiao from Sichuan
Conservatory of Music in Chengdu, Sichuan, China. Phelps designed
and installed two degree plans in Computer Music and New Media
Technology: a Bachelors degree in a contract major track and a
Masters degree under the Individualized Studies Program.
Dr.Phelps' music is performed frequently in the US and abroad at
various venues, including SEAMUS and ICMA conferences, and is
distributed on the BELLA, SEAMUS, CENTAUR and THIRTEENTH labels. He
composes primarily with/for computer-music systems, such systems
often being integrated with other performance resources. Three such
works are "OperaEffects", a computer-music opera for 8 singers,
video and NeXT computer, "about Myron: a monodrama", for bass Myron
Myers and tape and "Sax Houses", for soprano saxophone, tape and
NeXT computer, the first two premiering in Chicago and "Sax Houses"
in Aarhus, Denmark. "Chordlines", a computer music work on CD, was
choreographed by South Indian classical dancer/choreographer Siri
Rama and performed at the International Computer Music Conference in
Hong Kong in August, 1996. Currently he as renewed his electric
guitar "chops" and enjoys blending various styles of music while
re-exploring the sonic world of rock, pop and other club musics. For
several years he has worked with two digital video artists, Bart
Woodstrup and Kurt Schultz, producing both fixed-media and
realtime-interactive works for various venues
representing both
club and concert settings.
Recent pieces include "RickLicks", for Rickenbacker "Hamburg" electric guitar, guitar processor and computer music on CD (also exists with realtime-processed digital video by Bart Woodstrup) and "Twenty Down", for the Hamburg guitar, classical guitar and computer music on CD.
On October 20 of 2004, in celebration of Phelps' 50th birthday, THIRTEENTH Records released his newest CD entitled "Hide Wind" under the name JULULU. JULULU represents a group of artists who have only worked together, thus far, remotely: Phelps, Ms. Luo Ting-Yi (Shanghai), Bart Woodstrup (Chicago) and Mike Taylor (Chicago). In some respects JULULU is Phelps' "Plastic Ono Band" which John Lennon used to reflect various efforts, interests and people, at various times. Material found on "Hide Wind" is diverse and varies from sampled-based concrete electronic music to pop-influenced grooves.
Phelps studied with composer Dwight Gatwood at the University of
Tennessee in Martin while an undergraduate student. Specialties
included composition, theory studies, piano and harpsichord
performance. While completing an M.M. degree in music theory at the
University of North Texas he studied with Robert Ottman, Thomas
Clark, Gene Cho and Graham Phipps, among other theorists and with
pianist Stefan Bardas. His Masters thesis was a linguistic-based
analysis of late nineteenth-century harmonic practices and was
directed by
Paul Dworak.
Dr. Phelps began teaching professionally in 1980 at Brookhaven College in Dallas where he helped design and implement one of the country's first entirely self-paced music theory/skills programs. During this time he performed many concerts as pianist of a guitar/piano duo with internationally known, award-winning guitarist, Carlo Pezzimenti. After their debut at Carnegie Hall in 1982 the duo recorded an album together entitled "Pezzimenti Plays Tedesco" on the ELBA label. The relationship continues into the 21st century with the duo performing original works by Phelps.
In 1985 Phelps began work toward the D.M.A. degree in composition at UNT where he studied with Larry Austin, Phil Winsor, Thomas Clark and Cindy McTee and was awarded a four-year teaching fellowship. His emphases were computer music and various styles of theoretical analysis. There he produced many concerts of his music in the Merrill Ellis Intermedia Theatre of CEMI. His dissertation was "Computer Simulacra" for instrumental ensemble and computer music on tape.
Phelps is a member of ICMA, SEAMUS and Sonic Arts Network. While serving on the Board of SEAMUS he designed, installed and maintained SEAMUS' first FTP and Web Site.
He has also held an Advanced Class Amateur Radio Operators license since the age of 15, is a Beatles aficionado and spends as much time as possible in the flavorful, colorful Indian/Pakastani neighborhoods of Chicago.