Alvin Lucier was born in Nashua, New Hampshire in 1931. Educated at Yale and Brandeis, he also spent two years in Rome on a Fulbright Scholarship before returning to Brandeis in 1962 to teach and conduct the university's chamber chorus. Lucier met Gordon Mumma and Robert Ashley in 1963; the pair invited Lucier and the Brandeis chamber chorus to perform at the annual ONCE Festival in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Lucier then invited Mumma, Ashley, and David Behrman to perform at Brandeis in 1966. The four then formed the Sonic Arts Group, later changed to Sonic Arts Union, and presented concerts of their own works throughout America and Europe until the group disbanded in 1976.
Lucier's breakthrough composition, Music for Solo Performer (1964-65) for Enormously Amplified Brain Waves and Percussion, was the first work to feature sounds generated by brain waves in live performance. Biological stimuli played an increasing role in Lucier's subsequent work as well, most notably through his notation of performers' physical movements. In 1967, Lucier composed North American Time Capsule, a vocal-based piece using a prototype vocoder. Acoustical phenomena, meanwhile, was the subject of pieces such as 1968's Chambers and especially 1969's landmark I Am Sitting in a Room, in which several sentences of recorded speech were simultaneously played back into a room and re-recorded there dozens of times over, the space gradually filtering the speech into pure sound. 1972's The Duke of York (issued with Bird and Person Dyning in 1976) was a nearly psychedelic piece for electronically altered sung vocals.
Music on a Long Thin Wire was a further extension of Lucier's fascination with the physics of sound -- a conceptual piece featuring a taut 50-foot wire passed through the poles of a large magnet and driven by an oscillator, the amplified vibrations yielded beautifully ethereal results. Conceived in 1977, a recording of the work was released in 1980 by revered avant-garde label Lovely Music, which issued many of Lucier's recordings throughout the following decades. Still and Moving Lines of Silence in Families of Hyperbolas was issued in two installments between 1983 and 1984, and Sferics appeared in 1988. Crossings (Three Works for Classical Instruments and Oscillators) was issued in 1990.
Clocker, a piece for amplified clock, galvanic skin response sensor, and digital delay system, was released in 1994. Other Lovely Music releases of Lucier works included Panorama (1997) and Still Lives (2001). Vespers and Other Early Works (including North American Time Capsule) was issued by New World Records in 2002. The label also released 2005's Wind Shadows, a double-CD performed by the Barton Workshop. Ever Present was released by Mode in 2007, the same year Lucier was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from Plymouth University. Pogus Productions released Almost New York in 2011, as well as 2013's Still and Moving Lines (performed by Decibel). Dark Matter was issued by God Records in 2015. Broken Line (performed by Trio Nexus) was released by Mode in 2015, and Two Circles (performed by Alter Ego) appeared on the same label in 2016.
In 2017, Swiss label ZHdK released Illuminated by the Moon, a box set containing pieces recorded at Lucier's 85th Birthday Festival held in Zurich the previous year. The set was also released by Oren Ambarchi's Black Truffle label, which issued several additional works by Lucier. Criss Cross/Hanover (performed by Ambarchi and Stephen O'Malley) and So You... (Hermes, Orpheus, Eurydice) (for B flat clarinet, cello, female voice, and nine amplified wine jars) were both issued in 2018, with Ricochet Lady (for solo glockenspiel) following in early 2019. Lucier was 90 years old when he died on December 1, 2021. ~ Jason Ankeny & Paul Simpson, Rovi