Something peculiar has been incubating here in Chicago for decades now, something that doesn’t look or sound quite like any other new music community. And it is, at long last, getting top billing. One of our champions here is composer Augusta Read Thomas, who with the help of an army of volunteers is about to unleash Ear Taxi Festival 2016, a city-wide series in which virtually every local new-music-identifying ensemble will participate, offering 54 world premieres and a total of 88 recent works by Chicago-based or Chicago-affiliated composers. We are a DIY music scene, and Ear Taxi Festival is an extension of that dynamic, assembled piece by piece.
“Gusty,” as she’s known to all of us, is one of those composers whose volume of output makes one’s brain do somersaults. The term “Energizer Bunny” pops up frequently when performers talk about her. An email from Gusty will almost always include personal praise that would make your mom jealous, and an affirming preponderance of exclamation points. This is all to say that she is an unshakably positive advocate for us here in Chicago…and that I have zero journalistic distance from my interviewee (Spektral Quartet performs on three of the festival’s concerts).
Traditional newspaper and magazine interviews of the Ear Taxi originator have been copious, so our intention here was to have a more spontaneous conversation, to move beyond the talking points that are admittedly necessary when promoting an endeavor of this scope. The decision to launch something this audacious – essentially from a living room – is nothing short of preposterous. It is also the most highly-anticipated celebration of new music in Chicago history, and, in a way, an opportunity for the city to be introduced to itself.
DOYLE ARMBRUST: I want to start out with a question that is as much to satisfy my own curiosity as it is for this piece, but in terms of the drive necessary to get something like this festival off the ground, what did middle school or high school Gusty’s motivation look like?
AUGUSTA READ THOMAS: I fear that speaking about my past can come across as immodest, but I will say that even in day school, I was incredibly focused and super-energized. I always tried to be nice, to be reliable, and to go out of my way to help someone out.
Read More