Artist's albums
Dark Waters
2001 · album
Ingram Marshall: IKON and Other Early Works
2000 · album
Evensongs
1997 · album
Alcatraz: Ingram Marshall
1991 · album
Fog Tropes - Gradual Requiem
1988 · album
Fog Tropes / Gradual Requiem (2014 Edition)
2014 · album
Ingram Marshall: September Canons
2009 · compilation
Ingram Marshall: Savage Altars
2006 · album
Three Penitential Visions/Hidden Voices
2005 · album
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Biography
While composer Ingram Marshall's earliest compositions were electronic works, he has increasingly written for live musicians, including the Kronos Quartet. In the mid-'60s, he studied under Vladimir Ussachevsky, among others, while in another program at Columbia. Marshall then learned from Morton Subotnick, first (briefly) in Greenwich Village, then at Cal Arts as his assistant during the early '70s. It was while earning his masters at Cal Arts that Marshall was first exposed to Indonesian music, which he then added to his studies. While he blended his current musical interests in his own work (writing pieces for electronics and Balinese flute, for instance), Marshall continued to explore other styles of composition as well, as when he traveled to Sweden in the mid-'70s on a Fulbright Fellowship to study text-sound composition. "Fog Tropes" (1982) is the best known of his works that incorporate live (real time) electronic manipulation. From the mid-'80s on, Marshall has written ensemble music, not necessarily with electronics. His work for the Kronos Quartet includes "Voces Resonae" (1984) and, more recently, "Fog Tropes II." He also composed the orchestral, one-movement piece "Sinfonia 'Dolce far Niente.'"