Constance Demby

Summary

Constance Mary Demby (née Eggers; May 9, 1939 – March 20, 2021) was an American musician, composer, painter, sculptor, and multimedia producer. Her music fell into several categories, most notably new age, ambient and space music.[1][2] She is best known for her 1986 album Novus Magnificat and her two experimental musical instruments, the sonic steel space bass and the whale sail.[1]

Constance Demby
Background information
Birth nameConstance Mary Eggers
Born(1939-05-09)May 9, 1939
Oakland, California
DiedMarch 20, 2021(2021-03-20) (aged 81)
Pasadena, California
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • composer
  • painter
  • sculptor
  • multimedia producer
Instrument(s)Various, including keyboards, hammered dulcimer, space bass, whale sail
Years active1960s–2021

Early life edit

Demby was born in Oakland, California in May 1939.[3] After the family moved to Connecticut, Demby began classical piano lessons at age 8, and soon became confident enough to perform solo and in a group. She continued with her music studies, during which Demby also took to painting and sculpture and received an Excellence in Art award for her work from Pine Manor College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Demby studied sculpture and painting at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where in 1960, she received a Highby Award for excellence in art.[4]

Career edit

1960–1978: Early career edit

In 1960, Demby quit her studies and moved to Greenwich Village in New York City. She continued to work as a musician and sculptor, combining these disciplines with her first sheet metal sound sculptures, built in 1966.[5][6] She had been torching a sheet of metal in her sculptural practice when she noticed the low tones and unusual sounds that the vibrating metal produced, which subsequently led to the development of her first handmade instruments.[1] In 1967 Demby used these sculptures in a series of happening-style events at the Charles Street Gallery named A Fly Can't Bird But a Bird Can Fly, owned by Robert Rutman. In one piece called "The Thing", Rutman wore a white cardboard box and banged on Demby's sheet metal creation with "a rock in a sock." Demby conceived a multimedia environmental experience called Space Mass, which featured a 24-foot altar, temples, and sculptures that acted as moving screens to project abstract films. Demby welded a curved metal sheet to several steel rods which she played as a percussion instrument. Rutman later remarked, "We thought it would sound good as a xylophone, but it didn't."[6] Throughout the decade Demby exhibited her work in solo and group settings in New York City, Boston, and Maine. In 1968, she held her first major solo show in New York City, combining her paintings, sculptures, and light and sound displays, by which time she had explored electronic music for the first time.[4]

After moving to Maine with Rutman, in 1971 the duo formed the Central Maine Power Music Company (CMPMC), a multimedia sound and light group influenced by their previous Space Mass exhibit. They used uncommon eastern instruments combined with electronic music with video and laser light projections. They toured the eastern US extensively,[4] with the group ranging from 6 to 20 members at any given performance. Among the guest musicians involved was hammer dulcimer player Dorothy Carter and video artist Bill Etra.[7] The band toured the East Coast, playing at planetariums in Massachusetts, as well as Lincoln Center, the World Trade Center, and at the United Nations Sculpture Garden in New York City. Demby's co-founder told a reporter in 1974:

The best way to describe our music is to call it 'not music.' You see, it often happens that when people hear us play, they say, either in anger or in delight, 'That's not music!' It's somewhat akin to the paintings of Jackson Pollock. When the art buffs first saw his work, with the paint drippings and all, they said, 'That's not painting.'[8]

In 1976, the CMPMC disbanded and its founders moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts. While Rutman went on to pursue directions in contemporary classical and industrial music with the sheet metal instruments that they had created, Demby headed down a quieter path. She studied yoga with Ajaib Singh and, in 1977, co-formed the Gandharva Performing Arts Company, a duo featuring the flute, tabla and dulcimer with Robert Bennett.[4]

1978–2017: Studio albums edit

By the late 1970s, Demby had become a multi-instrumentalist who was proficient in musical improvisation, vocals, hammered dulcimer, koto, tamboura, and various keyboards and synthesizers. She made her studio recording debut on Dorothy Carter's debut album, Troubadour (1976). Demby's first solo album, Skies Above Skies (1978), comprised devotional prayers set to music featuring hammer dulcimer, ch'eng, tambura, synthesizer, cello, piano, organ, and voice reciting lines from the Bible, Hindi scripture, and the Popol Vuh.

After a pilgrimage to India in 1979, Demby settled in Marin County, California, just north of San Francisco. She founded the record label Sound Currents to release her second album, Sunborne (1980), inspired by the Emerald Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean, a 20th century work by occultist Maurice Doreal.[1] Her hammer dulcimer-oriented album Sacred Space Music (1982) followed on the Hearts of Space Records label.[9] Demby performed at the Alaron Center in Sausalito, spawning her Live at Alaron (1984) album which displays themes the in her definitive studio album, Novus Magnificat (1986).

In 2000, Demby left California for Spain, eventually settling in Sitges near Barcelona. It was here where she recorded Sanctum Sanctuorum (2001), a reworked version of Faces of the Christ (2000) with added keyboard parts and choral and Gregorian chant.[10]

Demby returned to the US in 2004, touring the West Coast presenting concerts and healing workshops. Her Sound Currents label subsequently released Sonic Immersion (2004), a vibrational sound healing attunement through use of the Space Bass.

Instrument design edit

In addition to her studio albums, Demby is best known for creating two experimental musical instruments: the Whale Sail and the Sonic Steel Space Bass. These 10-foot-long sheet metal idiophones are played with a bass bow to create low resonating tones.[1] George Lucas' Skywalker Ranch licensed the sounds of the Space Bass for use in their film scores, and The Discovery Channel filmed the Space Bass in Gaudi's Park Güell in Barcelona for one of their specials. The Space Bass is also featured on the soundtrack for the IMAX film Chronos (1985), directed by Ron Fricke and featuring music by Michael Stearns.

The International Space Science Institute commissioned Demby to create a score for the film I AM, and Demby's album Spirit Trance (2004) features four selections from the film. The track "Legend" on the same album was composed for Alan Hauge's film James Dean – An American Legend, but due to complications with the James Dean Foundation the project was shelved.

Personal life and death edit

In 1961, Eggers married David Demby and they had one son, Joshua. The marriage ended in divorce in 1974.[11] Demby died from complications of a heart attack in Pasadena, California, on March 20, 2021, at age 81.[12] Demby's nephew is writer, editor, and publisher Dave Eggers.

Discography edit

Studio albums

  • Skies Above Skies (1978)
  • Sunborne (1980)
  • Sacred Space Music (1982)
  • Novus Magnificat: Through the Stargate (1986)
  • Set Free (1989)
  • Æterna (1995)
  • Faces of the Christ (2000)
  • Sanctum Sanctuorum (2001)
  • Spirit Trance (2004)
  • Sonic Immersion: A Vibratory Tonal Attunement (2004)
  • Ambrosial Waves – Healing Waters (2011)
  • Ambrosial Waves – Tidal Pools (2013)
  • Novus Magnificat: Through the Stargate – 30th Anniversary Edition (2017)

Live albums

  • Constance Demby at Alaron – Live Concert Recording (1984)
  • Attunement: Live in Concert (2000)
  • Live in Tokyo (2003)

Videos

  • Live in Tokyo
  • Meet Constance Demby

Compilations

  • Light of This World (1987)

Appearances

  • Dorothy CarterTroubadour (1976)
  • Michael StearnsChronos (Original Soundtrack Recording) (1984)
  • Stephen Coughlin – Breeze at Dawn (1989)
  • Various Artists – Polar Shift (1991)
  • Various Artists – Illumination
  • Arjuna Ardagh and Constance Demby – Guided Meditations: The Heart Meditation (1998)
  • Arjuna Ardagh and Constance Demby – Guided Meditations: The Beloved (1998)
  • Eterna (Linda Bandino) and Constance Demby – The Journey Home
  • Eterna (Linda Bandino) and Constance Demby – The Master Healing Ray

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Wright, Carol. Constance Demby biography at AllMusic
  2. ^ "Why new age music is more punk than you think". q. CBC Radio. Feb 11, 2016. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  3. ^ ASCAP (2009). "Works written by: Demby Constance Mary, CAE/IPI No. 127.53.77.66", database of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers
  4. ^ a b c d "Constance Demby appearing in Ukiah Friday". Ukiah Daily Journal. July 14, 1981. p. 7. Retrieved July 20, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Bob Rutman's Steel Cello Ensemble". Klangraum Krems Minoritenkirche. 2007. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  6. ^ a b Palka, Adrian (2015). Dogantan-Dack, Mine (ed.). Artistic Practice as Research in Music: Theory, Criticism, Practice. London: Routledge. pp. 219–36.
  7. ^ Continuo (Dec 11, 2012). "Central Maine Power Music Company". Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  8. ^ Van Der Heide, Anna (1974). "Central Maine musicians play 'not music' music". Athens. Central Maine Morning Sentinel. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  9. ^ Murphy, Tom (May 11, 2015). "Recap: Ambient Music Legend Robert Rich in a Parker Living Room". Westworld.com. Denver Westword, LLC. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  10. ^ Wright, Carol. ""ProFile" – Constance Demby in Spain: A New Authentico". ConstanceDemby.com. Archived from the original on October 22, 2004. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  11. ^ "Skowhegan court grants 21 divorces". The Bangor Daily News. July 4, 1974. p. 18. Retrieved July 19, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Genzlinger, Neil (April 2, 2021). "Constance Demby, New Age Composer, Is Dead at 81". The New York Times. Retrieved March 23, 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Winters, Kelly (2005). "Demby, Constance", Contemporary Musicians, Gale Research Inc, 2005. Retrieved May 31, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com

External links edit