Composer Dr. Lydia Ayers (1952-2022)
passed away recently in her home in Hong Kong, where she and her husband, Dr. Andrew
Horner, had lived since the early 90s. She
was a prolific composer who also mastered flutes from a variety of cultural traditions. She
worked with extended vocal and woodwind techniques, including quarter tones,
multiphonics and other unusual flute timbres. She created native American,
Australian, Chinese and Indonesian computer music designs and extensively
researched and composed with microtonal tuning systems, especially unlimited
just intonation. She had a tubular percussion
instrument, the Woodstock Gamelan, built to her specifications using a 75-tone Indian/Partch scale. She modeled gamelan instruments using Csound. Among their several research collaborations, Lydia and Andrew co-authored
the book Cooking with Csound: Woodwind and Brass Recipes.
Among her many acoustic pieces are over
thirty solo and ensemble works for flutes.
Her computer music output was substantial. Often she was inspired by nature as in her
haunting work, Bioluminesence which
is included in her CD, Virtual Gamelan – Pieces in Just Intonation. Allen
Kozin, reviewing her flute and
electronics piece The Pearls
in the NY Times, wrote:
a work about Japanese pearl fishers who dive
without oxygen or masks and brave shark attacks and the bends. As scenarios for
electronic pieces go, that has plenty to offer, and Ms. Ayers responds with
distorted voices, instruments and sea birds, filtered to sound as if they were
being heard underwater. The score pivots
between energetic cacophony and an attractive otherworldliness.
Her love of theatre came out in her
intense mezzo solo called Another Victim
Found in Rubble (1986), portraying a woman descending into madness. She developed her love of puppet theatre from
her father and was later influenced by Asian traditions. In Hong Kong, Lydia formed a puppet group called Foggy Sound Garden and
created and performed many original shows around her music, as well as a
production to Stravinsky’s Petrushka with live music
I met Lydia while we were both studying
at Cal Arts in the 70s. Even in the
experimental milieu of CalArts, Lydia stood out as an original and there began
to develop her love of microtonality. From there she was led to study and
publish on Harry Partch’s work in depth as well as writing for her own
pleasure, a summary of scales found in Arab music. She had a prodigious power of concentration
and could work on her music for hours on end, all the while managing courses
and a full-time job. Lydia moved to New York City in the 1980s and
then decided to get her doctorate at the University of Illinois,
Champaign-Urbana. There she met Andrew and they moved to Hong Kong where Andrew teaches
at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Lydia also taught various
courses at HKUST, including a course on musical instrument building using
recycled materials and beach rubbish. Andrew
and Lydia co-directed the International Computer Music Conference in Hong Kong
in 1996, a mammoth undertaking of concerts, papers and HK cruises.
Her warm and creative persona touched
many people with the power of her spirituality in her compositions,
puppet productions, and creativity. She also had a deep love for
nature, vegetarian cooking, family and friends, travel and her beloved cats. Lydia
left a wonderful legacy of adventurous music and friendship and will be dearly missed.