By Tom McGeary, Noah Lenstra, Elizabeth Surles and Scott Schwartz
Title: Music and Performing Arts Library Harry Partch Collection, 1914-2016
ID: 35/3/82
Primary Creator: Partch, Harry (1901-1974)
Other Creators: Blackburn, Philip (1962-), Cutler, Jean (1927-2010), Daniel, Oliver (1911-1990), Freeman, Betty (1921-2009), Gaburo, Kenneth (1926-1993), Hewitt, Barnard (1906-1987), Johnston, Ben (1926-2019), Kostka, Robert (1928-2005), Ludlow, Lynn (1933-2025), Marshall, Lauriston C. (1902-1980), Mitchell, Danlee (1936-2024), Pouliot, Stephen L. (1945-), Tourtelot, Madeline (1915-2002), Yates, Peter (1909-1976)
Extent: 23.1 cubic feet
Arrangement:
Series 1: BMI Collection consists of the complete contents of their publicity file about Partch; given in December 1987.
Series 2: Jean Cutler Collection consists of a group of materials documenting Jean Cutler's association with Partch from 1962 to 1970; collection purchased from Jean Cutler in June 1996.
Series 3: Oliver Daniel Collection consists of photocopies (and some originals) of correspondence and articles between and about Partch and Daniel; obtained ca. 1988.
Series 4: Betty Freeman Collection consists of recordings of rehearsals, performances, and interviews, correspondence, transcripts, and publications; the bulk of the collection was donated in January 1979, with supplements in later years, especially 1999.
Series 5: John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Collection consists of photocopies of materials in the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation files.
Series 6: Barnard Hewitt Collection consists of original materials from Barnard Hewitt ; given in 1978.
Series 7: Robert Kostka Collection consists of original materials; purchased from Kostka in November 1987.
Series 8: Lynn Ludlow Collection consists of original and photocopies of brochures, programs, announcements, newspaper and magazine clippings; given in April 1989.
Series 9: Lauriston C. Marshall Collection consists of materials relating to Harry Partch; given to the University of Illinois Music Library by Larry and Lucie Marshall between 1976 and 1980.
Series 10: Danlee Mitchell Harry Partch Collection consists of personal materials relating to Partch; Donated in 1991 on the occasion of a commemorative concert to honor the retirement of Jack McKenzie as Dean of Fine and Applied Arts at UIUC.
Series 11: Stephen Pouliot Harry Partch Collection consists of materials given to the Archive by Stephen Pouliot, in 1990 and 1998.
Series 12: Peter Yates Harry Partch Collection consists of photocopies of materials available in the University of California, San Diego's Mandeville Special Collections Library's Peter Yates Collection.
Series 13: Subject Files consists of original materials collected or created for the Archive, not part of individual collections above.
Series 14: Musical Scores consists of blue-line original or photocopies of Partch autograph scores; assembled from various sources.
Series 15: Photographs consists of photographic material (slides, prints, and negatives transferred from various collections and/or folders.
Series 16: Bibliography Project files consists of originals or photocopies of articles (or sections in books) published about Partch.
Series 17: Oral History Tapes consists of recordings of interviews with or about Partch.
Series 18: Performance Tapes consists of recordings of performances and lectures.
Series 19: Microfilms, slide strips, video tapes and films consists of items in the titular formats.
Series 20: Philip Blackburn Harry Partch Collection consists of materials collected and created by Philip Blackburn in relation to his INNOVA and Enclosures products devoted to publishing materials about Partch under the auspices of the American Composers Forum, Minneapolis.
Series 21: Kenneth Gaburo Papers consist of materials related to The Bewitched and had been in the possession of Philip Blackburn, as part of his INNOVA and Enclosures publication project; transferred to the archive in April 2008.
Series 22: Oversize Materials consists of photograph and posters of Harry Partch and his instruments.
Series 23: Madeline Tourtelot Harry Partch Collection consists of Madeline Tourtelot's own cassettes, tapes, and a book that had been given to Philip Blackburn in relation to his Enclosures publishing project; transferred to the Partch Archive in April 2008 as part of Blackburn's donation of his Enclosures material.
Series 24: Duplicate Tapes consists of 15 1/4" audio tapes made as listening copies by the Music and Performing Arts Library's Special Collections department. These tapes were transferred from MPAL Special Collections in April, 2015, and correspond to the tapes listed on pages 87 to 93 of the 2005 Harry Partch Guide to the Collection linked in Administrative Information.
Date Acquired: 00/00/1975. More info below under Accruals.
Subjects: Composers, Compositions-Music, Films, Gaburo, Kenneth (1926-1993), Garvey, John (1921-2006), Graphic Notation--Music, Guggenheim Foundation, Instrumental music, Johnston, Ben (1926-2019), Luening, Otto (1900-1996), Music-Theory, Musical Instrument Makers, Musical Instrument Makers - United States, Music theater, Partch, Harry, Theatrical Productions, Thomson, Virgil (1896-1989), Tourtelot, Madeline (1915-2002)
Formats/Genres: Correspondence, Experimental Music, Financial Records, Librettos, Motion Pictures/Videotapes, Newspaper Clippings, Photographs, Scrapbooks, Sheet music, Sound Recordings
Languages: English
Consists of books, music, films, personal papers, artifacts and sound recordings collected by the staff of the Music and Performing Arts Library and the University of Illinois School of Music, documenting the life and career of composer and instrument builder Harry Partch from the vantage point of collaborators that were associated with him. Included among these collaborators are Jean Cutler, Betty Freeman, Robert Kostka, Bernard Hewitt, Lauriston Marshall, Danlee Mitchell, Stephen Pouliot, and Peter Yates. Of note are original music manuscripts, films, and photographs as well as audio recorded interviews, documenting the life of Harry Partch.
Harry Partch (1901-1974) was an American composer, theorist, instrument designer, and performer. Born in Oakland, California, he was the son of Virgil Franklin Partch and Jennie Partch. The youngest of three siblings, his older brother Paul and older sister Irene had been born in China, while his parents were serving as Presbyterian missionaries. After his mother contracted tuberculosis, the family moved to Benson, Arizona. Partch grew up learning Chinese lullabies from his mother. His sister played violin and and cello and his brother played mandolin. Partch's own musical training began on piano, which he performed well enough on to accompany silent films while the family was living in Albuquerque, New Mexico. After the Yaqui Nation was forcibily relocated near Benson, Partch encountered their musical traditions as well. After Partch's father died in 1918, Partch moved to Southern California, briefly studying piano at the University of Southern California. After his mother's death in 1920, he spent the next thirteen years working as a proofreader, piano teacher, and violist.
In 1923, Partch discovered Herman von Helmholtz's On the Sensation of Tone. From this and from his study of both Chinese and Native American music systems, he developed a 29-tone scale. This scale first appears in his "Exposition of Monophony" (1928). Partch would continue to develop this microtonal scale system, eventually settling on a 43-pitch system, composing pieces to showcase it, and building instruments upon which it could be played.
Throughout the early part of the 1930s, Partch travelled between California and the East Coast, riding the rails, living as a hobo, and picking up odd jobs to make money. During one of these short term jobs, Partch was hired by the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles (now the Southwest Museum of Pasadena) to transcribe Native American melodies recorded by the folklorists Eleanor Hague and Charles Fletcher Lummis. Around the same time, Partch made his first adapted viola to accomodate for his developing microtonal system. By 1933, he begun to develop several other instruments. In 1934, he earned a Carnegie Grant to study music in England, where he began working with Kathleen Schlesinger, who had reconsted an ancient Greek Kithara. After returning to the US in 1935, he returned to life as a hobo, writing a musical diary called Bitter Music, which was later published in 1940.
In 1941, Partch found himself in Chicago, where he began developing speech music, based on heightened speech used in ancient Greek dramas. During this time, he also constructed his first Kithara, Harmonic Canon, and Chromelodeon. Shortly thereafter, Partch began setting his experience of living as a hobo to music, composing works like Barstow, The Letter, and US Highball. During this period he received two Guggenheim grants and received support from composers like Otto Luening. From 1944 to 1947, he was briefly employed at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
In 1947, Partch finally completed his book A Genesis of Music, which outlined his rationale for adopting a 43-pitch system. By the early 1950s, he had begun to gain some notariety, establishing the Gate 5 Ensemble, a group that specialized in performing his music instruments, and record label. During this period, Partch completed his first major stage play King Oedipus (1952) and had it performed at Mills College in Oakland, CA. He had also begun a musical partnership with fellow composer Ben Johnston, who advocated for Partch to receive a visiting artist position at the University of Illinois in 1956.
While at Illinois, Partch premiered his large stage work, The Bewitched (1957), as part of the Festival of Contemporary Arts. He would premiere two additional music theater works at the University of Illinois, Revelation in the Courthouse Park (1960) and Water! Water! (1961). In 1958, he began collaborating with filmmaker Madeline Tourtelot, producing films for Windsong (1958), Harry Partch Music Studio (1960), US High Ball (1968), Rotate the Body in All Its Planes (1961), The Renascent (1963), and Delusion of the Fury (1969). Also in Urbana, Partch met Danlee Mitchell, a percussionist and student at the University who later became Partch's principal percussionist, assistant, amanuesis, and eventually the executor of Partch's Estate.
After failing to secure a permanent faculty position at the University of Illinois, Partch returned to California in 1962, where he completed his final projects, a stage drama based on a Japanese Noh play called The Delusion of the Fury (1966) and music for the Stephen Pouliout Film The Dreamer that Remains (1972). Partch died in San Diego, California in 1974.
Composers
Compositions-Music
Films
Gaburo, Kenneth (1926-1993)
Garvey, John (1921-2006)
Graphic Notation--Music
Guggenheim Foundation
Instrumental music
Johnston, Ben (1926-2019)
Luening, Otto (1900-1996)
Music-Theory
Musical Instrument Makers
Musical Instrument Makers - United States
Music theater
Partch, Harry
Theatrical Productions
Thomson, Virgil (1896-1989)
Tourtelot, Madeline (1915-2002)
Repository: The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music
Accruals: Many accruals between 1975 and 2015, both in the form of individual collections and individual items. Collected letters from Harry Partch, photographs, tape recordings, and masters thesis documentation donated by Stephen Pouliot September 24, 2025.
Acquisition Source: Donation and acquisition
Acquisition Method: In 1975 the Music and Performing Arts Library acquired a set of scores reproduced from Partch's vellum masters through Irv Wilson. The Music and Performing Arts Library Harry Partch Collection was created in 1978 by Professor Ben Johnston and Thomas McGeary for the purpose of collecting relevant material documenting the life and musical work of Harry Partch. The impetus for the Collection was a donation by Lauriston C. Marshall of a group of tapes, recordings, documents, and letters. Over the following decade, many more accretions were added to the archive. Much of the work of collecting, organizing, and cataloging the material has been make possible through a generous grant to the Archive made by Betty Freeman in 1986.
Related Materials:
Harry Partch Estate Archive 12/5/45.
See also record series number 35/3/68.



