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Sunday, May 10, 2026

Making Space: The Work of Access in Experimental Music

David Byrne. Photo by Cora Wagoner*
By Jeff Arnal 

Making Space: The Work of Access in Experimental Music  
Reflections from Big Ears on Democracy and the Avant-Garde
 

Across multiple traditions of creative practice in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, there is a recurring commitment to autonomy, resourcefulness, and collective invention that transcends style and genre. In the punk world, Michael Azerrad’s 2001 book Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Underground 1981–1991 chronicled a generation of American underground bands that survived and thrived outside mainstream structures by building their own circuits of support: booking tours, releasing records on their own terms, and forging direct relationships with audiences without corporate mediation. The book’s title comes from a line in the Minutemen’s song “History Lesson Part Two”: “Our band could be your life,” an invitation to listeners to see themselves in the creative process and a declaration that meaningful art does not depend on institutional sanction or approval. The Minutemen’s “jam econo” philosophy carried this even further, a way of working that stripped everything down to what was necessary, touring constantly, moving light, sharing gear, and keeping production lean so the music stayed close to lived experience. It fused punk urgency with a kind of jazz openness, a disciplined but flexible approach to making and surviving on the road, where interdependence and adaptability were not abstract values but daily practice.

This punk DIY ethos connects backward and outward into other experimental milieus. In 1970s New York, the loft jazz movement saw musicians transform abandoned industrial settings into venues, rehearsal rooms, and recording environments when commercial support was absent. Jazz artists such as Rashied Ali, Ornette Coleman, John Fischer, Sam Rivers, and others built performance opportunities with and for their communities. Earlier, the Judson Church collective in downtown Manhattan brought together dancers, composers, visual artists, and improvisers in a context that resisted institutional hierarchy, privileging openness, chance, and intermedia collaboration. In the 1960s, the Fluxus collective, with figures like George Maciunas and Nam June Paik, enacted gestures that foregrounded event scores, indeterminacy, and audience participation, making participation itself part of the work. These moments, punk, free improvisation, and interdisciplinary performance art, are not isolated facts but shared methods. They emphasize resourcefulness, collective forms of support, boundary-crossing practice, and the formation of contexts where participation is not pre-defined but discovered in practice. Each tradition demonstrates that creative practice does not wait for permission; it invents its own platforms, its own audiences, and its own ways of circulating ideas. 

Before going further, it is worth saying that there is not a single term that holds all of this. Creative music, contemporary classical , noise, DIY, jazz, free jazz, improvised music , electronic music, avant-garde: each name points to something real and each falls short. These labels carry histories, communities, and also the weight of institutions and markets that shaped them. I do not mind the term experimental music, and for the sake of this piece I am using it as a kind of shorthand, knowing it has its own baggage, its own history, its own residue. It feels less like a fixed category than like a moving one, a way of pointing toward practices that question form, resist easy definition, and stay open to change. 

Mary Halvorson with Tomas Fujiwara, Henry Fraser, and Dave Adewumi. 
Photo by Cora Wagoner

The Audience Is Already Onstage

In experimental music, the audience is rarely an external body waiting to be reached. It is already embedded in the work. The same people circulate through multiple roles as performer, listener, organizer, label operator, archivist, critic. These roles are not fixed. They rotate, overlap, and collapse into one another, and in doing so they blur the line between maker and receiver.

This is not unique in an absolute sense. From the work and ideas of Marcel Duchamp onward, modern and contemporary art already unsettles the idea of a passive viewer: Meaning is completed through perception and participation rather than simple looking. But in experimental music the overlap becomes more continuous and more social. It is not only that meaning is activated in interpretation. It is that the same small networks are involved across the full cycle of the work, from making and performing to documenting, distributing, and sustaining it over time.

What emerges is less a separation between audience and artist than a shared field of participation. The work is carried by the same relationships that receive it. 

At venues like Roulette, a Brooklyn nonprofit performance organization that grew out of the late 1970s downtown loft scene, and Issue Project Room, a Brooklyn-based venue for experimental and durational performance, this overlap is not incidental. Rhizome DC, a Washington, DC experimental and community arts venue known for presenting improvisation, electronic music, and interdisciplinary performance in an intimate, artist-run setting, operates less like a venue and more like a switching station. Downtown Music Gallery, a long-running New York record store and informal hub for experimental and improvised music, functions as a living archive, a place where circulation and memory coexist. The audience is not something to be developed or expanded in the abstract. It is already present, already participating, already shaping what the work becomes.

This condition has historical precedent. The Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) in Chicago in the 1960s, free improvisation circles in London, the 1970s New York loft scene, and punk basements in California all formed around informal, self-made settings where music existed outside institutional permission. These were not separate audiences so much as overlapping communities of players, listeners, and documenters, often the same people moving fluidly between roles. What appears from the outside as a limited audience is, from within, a dense and active network of participation, a self resonating circuit in which production and reception continuously fold back into one another. 

Tyshawn Sorey. Photo by Ryan Clackner

A Turning Point in Listening

Any attempt to understand this field passes through John Cage and his 4’33” , a work shaped as much by Zen Buddhism as by the radical propositions of Duchamp. Cage did not simply expand music; he removed its center. Sound was no longer something organized solely by the composer. It was already present, already happening, already available to anyone willing to listen.

What Cage opened was aesthetic and conceptual but also social. By removing hierarchy from sound, he destabilized authority over who gets to make music and how it is received. Pauline Oliveros extended this into what she termed Deep Listening, grounding it in attention, embodiment, and collective practice. Julius Eastman insisted on presence, naming, and identity within experimental composition, making clear that sound is never separate from the conditions of power, visibility, and survival that shape it. 

David Tudor collapsed performance and composition into generative live systems, shaping environments in which sound was emergent and collective. Laurie Spiegel used early computer music to expand access and participation, anticipating the distributed, system-driven approaches that are now commonplace. Alvin Lucier made listening itself a material, revealing space, resonance, and time as active forces in perception. Artists like Daphne Oram, Wendy Carlos, Maryanne Amacher, and Laurie Anderson helped define early electronic and multimedia approaches, building tools and conceptual frameworks that reshaped expectations about sound, audience engagement, and temporal experience.

Time-based, transmedia, and durational practices also exemplify this openness. Works that unfold over hours or across extended processes, like Alvin Lucier’s I Am Sitting in a Room, where repeated playback allows architectural acoustics to gradually replace spoken language with resonance, or Maryanne Amacher’s City-Links and mini-sound series , where psychoacoustic tones are composed to be completed by the listener’s nervous system and the acoustics of specific sites, treat sound not as fixed material but as something activated through time, perception, and environment. Pauline Oliveros’s multi-channel sound environments extend this further, grounding listening in attention, embodiment, and collective presence. These works demand sustained attention and situational awareness. They challenge conventional performance boundaries, blurring distinctions between composer, performer, audience, and environment itself. 

Isaiah Collier plays Coltrane with Dave Whitfield, Conway Campbell, and Tim Regis. 
Photo by Andy Feliu

Earbuds, Art Centers, and the Concert Hall

The geography is now fractured. Music and other sounds circulate through overlapping systems that no longer align neatly with older distinctions between underground and institutional contexts. A track can move from Bandcamp to independent radio to a performance in another country within days. Distribution is now widely available. Tools that once required studios, labels, promotional channels, and of course the financial resources that sustained them are increasingly shared.

At the same time, listening has become stratified. Earbuds create intensely private encounters with sound. Art centers frame work through curatorial context. Concert halls place it within historical lineage and institutional authority. These contexts overlap constantly. A work can move among them without changing form, only context. Small, locally rooted communities continue to invent their own practices and spaces, becoming microcosms of experimentation that circulate back into broader networks.  

Entry is no longer the central barrier, and this shift is visible in how certain works and practices now travel across these overlapping systems. For example, albums released independently on platforms like Bandcamp often circulate first through artist-run or listener-run channels before moving into independent radio ecosystems such as WFMU or NTS, and from there into live performance contexts that include both DIY venues and major international festivals. Live coding and algorithmic performance practices, as developed in communities like Algorave, similarly move between informal club spaces, academic research contexts, and large-scale festival environments, with the same core work shifting meaning depending on framing rather than changing materially. Likewise, sound-based installations by artists working in both gallery and performance contexts, such as Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller’s walking audio works, circulate between museum presentation, headphone-based individual listening, and site-specific public activation, depending on where and how they are encountered.

What emerges across these examples is not a single unified system, but a set of porous circuits where production, distribution, and reception no longer align in stable ways. The same work can be private and collective, informal and institutional, local and transnational, often within the span of its own circulation.

The question is how to maintain meaning in an environment of near-infinite production. 

Experimental music doesn’t wait for permission to take shape. It builds its own systems and its own audiences through the structures it creates and the people who gather around it. The audiences who show up for events like Big Ears reflect this. Big Ears draws tens of thousands of visitors each year, with a substantial portion of its attendees coming from outside Tennessee and from across the country and beyond. Many visitors commit multiple days to listening, dialogue, workshops, talks, and community programming, seeking connection, discovery, and deep engagement rather than passive entertainment. Some attendees are cultural professionals, curators, programmers, and label representatives whose presence signals that this field operates across overlapping scales, at once local, translocal, and networked. This expanding and engaged audience underscores that participation in the field is shaped by curiosity, commitment, and intentional cultivation, not solely by commercial logic or passive consumption.

Maria Chavez, Greg Saunier, Shahzad Ismaily. Photo by Jess Maples

Democracy Without Filters

When experimental music is described as democratic, it is not a claim that sits in one place. It moves through the field itself, through artists describing how they work, through presenters and curators trying to account for forms that do not fit institutional expectations, and through critics and listeners trying to find language for practices that are already happening before they are named.

What it tends to point toward is not equal representation in any simple sense, but something closer to distributed authority inside the work. Equal representation suggests balance in who is present or visible. Distributed authority describes how decisions actually happen in real time, how form is shaped through response, interruption, listening, and adjustment among performers, and sometimes listeners and organizers as well. It is not that everyone has the same role, but that no single role fully determines the outcome in performance.

In improvised music, and especially in lineages connected to the AACM, this becomes a lived practice rather than an idea. Structure emerges through interaction rather than being delivered from above. A piece is not executed so much as negotiated in time. Roscoe Mitchell’s ensemble work, or the intergenerational networks around artists like Tyshawn Sorey or Tomeka Reid, make this visible as a sustained practice of listening and recalibration rather than a fixed model of participation.

Across the broader field, including at events like Big Ears, this produces something closer to interdependence than symmetry. Artists move between roles as performers, composers, and organizers. Audiences are often deeply embedded in the field itself, sometimes including other musicians whose presence is part of what supports the work. Attention circulates across these roles rather than resting in a single center.

Value does not disappear in this system. It stops being universal and instead forms through repetition, proximity, and sustained engagement within specific communities of practice. What counts is not fixed in advance but built over time through shared listening, shared risk, and continued return to the work.

This form of democracy exists in tension with the world around it. At a moment when broader systems feel fragile, exclusionary, or in some cases actively regressive, experimental music offers another model. Not utopian, not pure, but functional. Small, interdependent communities form around sound. People organize their own platforms, define their own values, and maintain practices collectively over time.

At the same time, it is not clear that these formations are simply democratic in any straightforward sense. They operate more as situated or practiced forms of democracy, where participation is real but shaped by access, knowledge, proximity, and time. What can feel open from the inside often looks quite different from the outside, where the same formation may appear specialized, coded, or difficult to enter without prior context or connection.

The history of the AACM makes this tension legible. It emerged as a response to exclusion from dominant cultural and economic systems, creating a space where Black experimental musicians could define their own artistic and organizational terms. That autonomy required building its own structure, its own set of expectations, and its own forms of accountability. The aim was self-determination, but self-determination also meant drawing boundaries in order to sustain a shared practice over time.

What emerges is not a contradiction so much as a condition the field lives with. These communities are democratic in the sense that authority is distributed and participation matters, and they are also selective in the sense that they depend on sustained engagement, shared language, and forms of labor that are not equally available to everyone. They are built through relationships that deepen over time, and that depth itself naturally produces thresholds.

In that sense, the question is not whether these spaces are democratic or exclusive. They are both, and they have to be. Their openness is real, but it is not abstract. It is shaped through practice, maintained through participation, and continually negotiated in real time.

Engagement in this practice is not a solution to isolation, fragmentation, or exclusion within the field or outside it. It does not resolve the uneven access that shapes who gets to participate, who has the time and resources to stay engaged, or who is able to move through these networks with any consistency. Those conditions remain in place, and in some cases they are reproduced inside the very structures that are trying to work differently.

What these small communities do instead is something more limited and more specific. They create working methods inside those conditions. They build situations where people can actually show up for each other, listen, collaborate, and take shared risk over time. They make room for forms of relation that are harder to maintain elsewhere, but they do not remove the larger structures they are operating within.

In that sense, music in this context is not a fix. It is closer to a practice of rehearsal. A way of testing how people might organize together under real constraints, without assuming those constraints disappear. It is infrastructural in a quiet way. It builds relationships that can hold, sometimes loosely and sometimes tightly, but always under pressure from the conditions around them.

Seen this way, the value is not in resolution. It is in continuity. In the ability to keep making and listening together, even when nothing about the broader situation is settled. 

Caroline Shaw. Photo by Cora Wagoner
A Music That Builds Its Own World

A consistent thread across these practices is the way experimental music builds its own systems of relation, rather than relying on existing ones.

The AACM emerged in Chicago in the mid-1960s as a self-organized collective that created its own concerts, education programs, and distribution networks out of necessity. The model of self-determination it developed has been extensively documented by the musician and scholar George Lewis, who has written and composed deeply on improvisation, technology, and Black experimental practice. Within this tradition, the bassist and composer William Parker understands music as inseparable from daily life, a continuous practice of listening, responsibility, and community. The saxophonist Charles Gayle speaks openly about the difficulty of sustaining that life, maintaining artistic commitment and material survival in conditions that are often unstable or indifferent. The drummer, visionary artist, and polymath Milford Graves approached improvisation as ritual and healing, a way of aligning body, rhythm, and spirit through sound as lived process rather than performance. Cecil Taylor, pianist, composer, and free jazz pioneer, treated music as energy in motion, a system of forces rather than fixed forms, framing each performance as something alive in the moment, never repeatable in the same way twice.

Miles Davis insisted on transformation, urging musicians: “Don’t play what’s there, play what’s not there,” a directive that emphasized invention over replication and placed responsibility on the performer to imagine new possibilities in real time. Herbie Hancock framed creativity as inseparable from life itself, and contemporary artists like Caroline Shaw and Tyshawn Sorey continue this line, moving fluidly across forms, genres, and ensembles, demonstrating that commitment and attention, not labels, define experimental practice.

In practice, these ideas are not abstract. They are enacted through the music itself. In works like George Lewis’s Voyager, a computer system improvises alongside human performers, creating a shifting sonic environment in which no single agent controls the outcome. Authority is distributed, and listening becomes an ethical act. Each participant must respond, adapt, and make space for others in real time. Similarly, the broader AACM approach treats composition and improvisation as collective problem solving, a way of modeling social interaction through sound. Early AACM statements made this explicit, asserting that musicians could determine their own strategies for political and economic freedom through collective organization and creative practice.

Throughout these examples, one sees a consistent thread. The work is not simply musical. It is infrastructural, social, and ethical. It creates spaces in which community, improvisation, risk, and care coexist. Each artist reminds us that experimental music is sustained as much by belief, practice, and labor as by sound itself.

The DIY ethos of the late twentieth century required building infrastructure from scratch. Bands created their own circuits, economies, and audiences.

Now much of that infrastructure is readily available. Anyone can record, release, and distribute music. What once depended on studios, labels, and the logistical weight of physical circulation now exists in more immediate, dispersed forms, often built from tools that are widely shared and relatively easy to access. This shift lowers the barrier to entry, but it also changes the conditions of attention. The question is no longer only how to make work visible, but how to sustain it in a field where everything is already moving.

This changes independence. It lowers the barrier to entry while raising the difficulty of sustaining attention. The challenge is no longer access but continuity, how to keep going, build relationships, and make work that persists over time. What looks like freedom in this context is never separate from the conditions that hold it up. It is made in the ongoing work of rehearsal, organization, care, and return. Freedom is tied to labor, not as constraint but as the steady practice through which anything shared or lasting is actually made.

Despite fragmentation, certain traditions remain active as methods.

In Europe, Stockhausen and Xenakis expanded composition into systems and architecture, shifting musical thought toward structure, spatial form, and process. Roscoe Mitchell treats ensemble practice as ritual, where form emerges through sustained collective attention. Anthony Braxton extends composition into language and philosophy, building frameworks that move between sound, notation, and conceptual structure. George Lewis integrates improvisation, history, and computation, connecting experimental practice to technological systems and shifting histories of agency.

Other currents move through spirituality and transcendence, from John Coltrane to Alice Coltrane, reappearing in contemporary practices that merge sound with devotion and expanded states of listening. The downtown continuum extends through artists like Laurie Anderson, where performance, media, and narrative fold into one another, while diasporic and global traditions reshape the field through ongoing exchange, translation, and return.

These are not fixed inheritances. They remain in motion, carried forward through practice rather than preservation. 

Wild Up: Arthur Russell's 24 to 24 up. Photo by Taryn Ferro
A Living Cross Section: Big Ears 2026 and Other Festivals

What this looks like in practice can be felt in the density of Big Ears 2026. Not as a lineup, but as a temporary ecosystem where histories, communities, and practices intersect.

The presence at the festival of John Zorn and the Masada projects connects decades of composer-performer networks to artists like Ikue Mori, Ches Smith, and Brian Marsella, who move fluidly across improvisation, composition, and electronics. The AACM lineage continues through Roscoe Mitchell, Tomeka Reid, and collaborations with Tyshawn Sorey and Jeff Parker, extending the AACM’s foundational commitment to collective self-determination, original composition, and the integration of improvisation with structured and experimental systems. Emerging from Chicago in the 1960s, AACM artists not only redefined approaches to timbre, form, and instrumentation, but also built their own institutions, performance spaces, and educational models in response to structural exclusion. That legacy persists as both sound and method: a practice grounded in artist-run infrastructure, interdisciplinary experimentation, and the understanding of creative music as a social and cultural force. Another cluster forms around artists connecting Chicago, Los Angeles, and global scenes through figures like Carlos Niño, Nate Mercereau, Josh Johnson, and Isaiah Collier. Their work intersects with artists like Sam Gendel and Shabaka, linking spiritual jazz, ambient practice, and contemporary improvisation.

Composer-performer ensembles sit alongside artist-driven projects where composition and improvisation are inseparable. Artists move between configurations across the festival, appearing in multiple contexts. This is the network made visible, built through ongoing collaboration rather than isolated work.

Global traditions are integral to this context. Carnatic and Hindustani music, Ethiopian jazz, Gnawa, and cross-cultural collaborations unfold alongside experimental pop, folk, noise, and large-scale multimedia work. Artists like Laurie Anderson and David Byrne extend the field outward by translating experimental practices into more widely accessible forms, connecting them to broader audiences and cultural contexts without fully abandoning their underlying complexity. Their work operates as a bridge, making experimental approaches legible across disciplines and publics, while other performers remain committed to more intimate, durational, or deeply situated practices. Electronic and computer music legacies from the likes of Laurie Spiegel, David Tudor, and Alvin Lucier continue to inform new generations.

Underlying all this are shared support systems. Labels, independent radio, critics, archivists, venues, and informal networks. What emerges is not diversity as a surface condition but interconnection as a lived reality. Different histories and identities are not parallel. They are entangled.

The scale of the gathering reveals a dense layering of infrastructures that support the work. Labels function as archives and distribution networks. Radio creates continuity across generations. Writers and critics trace lineages and create context. The same names appear across projects not as repetition but as evidence of relationship.

Festivals make this visible. They compress what is usually dispersed.

The Vision Festival nurtures a long-term community. Founded in 1996 and held annually in New York City, typically in June, the Vision Festival brings together multiple generations of improvisers, dancers, poets, and visual artists within a self-organized, artist-run framework. Big Ears creates a temporary environment of openness, particularly in a region where that openness is not guaranteed. In Tennessee, where cultural policy has moved to restrict forms of expression, including attempts to ban drag performances, the presence and success of this kind of gathering is not neutral.

From a southern perspective, this carries a particular weight. In places like Western North Carolina, and in the longer shadow of the Deep South I grew up in, cultural life has often been shaped by distance from major institutional centers, by uneven access, and by the way communities build meaning without relying on sustained formal infrastructure. In that context, gatherings like this do not simply add another cultural option. They briefly reorganize what public life can feel like.

Audiences move between radically different forms within a shared environment, not as isolated encounters but as a kind of collective attention that is not always available in everyday life. What matters is not contrast for its own sake, but the experience of proximity itself, of being in a place where different histories, practices, and ways of listening can sit beside one another in real time, and where that co-presence becomes a kind of temporary commons.

What emerges is not a single narrative but a field of relations. Aesthetic questions remain open. What matters, what lasts, what holds attention over time, these are not settled questions. But the scale of activity itself is significant. The number of artists, practices, and connections forms something like a laboratory, a testing ground where ideas about sound, community, and value are constantly being proposed and revised. It is uneven, sometimes overwhelming, but it is alive.

What holds this field together is not agreement, but participation. Artists become audiences. Audiences become organizers. Organizers become archivists. Agents, curators, and promoters facilitate movement across contexts. The system does not stabilize into a single structure. It circulates across contexts, practices, and communities. Experimental music is not defined by a fixed audience. It is defined by those who choose to engage with it, to carry it forward, and to listen deeply enough for it to matter.

Despite its density, what is described here is only a partial record of a wider field that is always in motion. There are informal settings that never get documented, scenes that flare up and dissolve, small labels that circulate quietly, artists who step away and others who continue under difficult conditions. There are also networks of relation that shift depending on where you stand, and forms of labor that remain largely unmarked even as they hold everything else in place. Attention is never evenly distributed. Participation is always shaped by geography, by access, by race, gender, class, and ability in ways that no single account can resolve.

None of this completes the picture. It simply returns it to the conditions in which it is already unfolding. What holds is not resolution but continuity, the ongoing fact of the work as it moves through different registers, across places, through different hands. The field is not something to be finished or fully seen, but something partial, contingent, and in process. It is entered partway, listened to from within, and left while the motion continues. 

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Jeff Arnal (b. 1971) is a percussionist, curator, and arts organizer based in Asheville, North Carolina. His work moves across performance, writing, publishing, and organizational practice within experimental music, shaped by long engagement with artist-built infrastructures. Since the 1990s he has performed internationally, including duos with Charles Gayle and appearances at venues and festivals such as Big Ears Festival, Blurred Edges Festival, the Vision Festival, Issue Project Room, and Roulette.

He currently works in projects including Chrononox with Camila Nebbia, Dietrich Eichmann, and John Hughes; a trio with Bonnie Han Jones and Ken Vandermark; and Drum Major Instinct with Curt Cloninger. Since 2016 he has served as Executive Director of the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, where he has expanded exhibitions, performance, publishing, residencies, and research in dialogue with contemporary artists and scholars. He studied with Stuart Saunders Smith and Milford Graves, and holds degrees from the University of Maryland and Bennington College. 

*All Photos courtesy of Big Ear


 

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