Transplant
My sister had ovarian cancer. I gave her a stem-cell transplant and sent my family daily emails during our time at MD Anderson Medical Center. (Prologue: Photo number 4–from the apheresis series, at the end). Joe says, “Place your attention elsewhere,” while he jams a large-bore catheter in my right arm. Can you see in the photo just how skillfully I’m directing my attention elsewhere? Houston 01 Arrival I’m in the apartment in Houston. All well. Ellen is fine. We had a beer. We’re “hydrating”, in Ellen’s words, in order to get ready for our blood draws. I’m getting…
Brain Scan
The Laboratory for Affective Neuroscience is the center that Richard Davidson started. That facility looks into the inner brain workings of autistic children, teens, depressed adults, and those with other sorts of cognitive issues. The Center for Investigating Healthy Minds is an adjunct faculty that deals with what is calls “contemplative neuroscience.” I was referred to Richie by Cortland Dahl, one of his PhD grad students in Minneapolis. Cortland knew I’d logged the requisite hours of meditation over the years and Antoine recruited me for this study.
Hellbound Questions
A Dozen Hellbound Questions from The ECM office: 1a. What was the original impetus (if you can remember back that far ;-.)) for this anthology? 2a. What was the criteria for inclusion—how did you select the pieces? 2b. Is this The Best Of Steve Tibbetts?
Logorrhea: Hellbound Train
Photos, Dogs, Teaching, and Travel—My ECM From 1985-1997 I worked occasionally for the Naropa Institute Study Abroad programs in Nepal and Bali. I spent autumn in Nepal and spring in Bali. It was good seasonal work, free travel, and the opportunity to observe things that would cause me to pause and say to myself, “I can’t believe I’m actually seeing this.” When that job ended I organized some excursions for like-minded travelers to interesting spots in South Asia.
Things I Did (Press resources for “Life Of.”)
Things I Did 2009-16. 1. Sent Messages With Foxes. 2. Curated a Playlist for ECM. 3. Had Brain Scanned for Science. 4. Gave a Transplant. 5.Handed Out Diplomas in Nepal. 6. Organized Some Trips to Tibet. 7. Shipped Triplets to College. 8. Took Care of a Friend’s Corpse. 9. Taught at a Three-year Retreat.
Life Of–Bio & Press Page
I like the physicality of playing 12-string. I don’t use a pick. If I’m drifting off to sleep at night and feel my fingertips throbbing I know I had a good day.
Chö–Rykodisc Press Release
“If the pairing of a guitarist from Wisconsin and a Tibetan expatriate nun seems rather extraordinary, Tibbetts’ narrative makes the encounter seem very predictable, even predestined.”
Natural Causes–ECM Bio
It has been eight years since Steve Tibbetts gave us the fiery electric guitar album “A Man About A Horse” (ECM 1814). Now he returns with a different kind of recording: an album of, primarily, acoustic sounds. The making of “Natural Causes” took place in a period when Tibbetts was reconsidering some fundamental aspects of his art and craft – in parallel with daily studies of Bach, Bartók, and music theory.
Å–Rykodisc / Hannibal Bio
In 1976 I had a job in a record store in St. Paul. One of my co-workers was a guy named Morrey Nellis. He became director of intramural athletics at Macalester College where I used to go for a run every now and then. In 1990 or ’91 he gave me a tape of Hardingfele music saying, “Listen to this.” He got it from his wife who was director of the Hardingfele Society of America.
A Man About A Horse–ECM bio pt. 1
Every piece in this new album is rich in color and landscape. There’s a plot, intention and meaning. Do I want anybody to know the specifics of plot, intention, and meaning? Definitely not.
A Man About A Horse–ECM bio pt. 2
“When someone opened up a guitar case and pulled out a guitar they may as well have been pulling a sword out of a stone. The room was magnetized. This was not lost on me, the smallest and most sports-challenged kid in school.”
First Album–Cuneiform Bio
By late summer of 1976 I had enough music for an album but little chance of getting a label to put it out. I did have something I could use for a cover from my work as an art major and a little money saved from my night shift job at Minnesota Public Radio, so I found a pressing plant in Arizona that would manufacture 200 albums for $600 and I sent them my stuff.
The Fall of Us All–ECM Bio
“Most reviews of Steve Tibbetts’s music describe it in the context of what it’s not; what it is, plain and simple, is Tibbettsian.”
Music and Trance in Bali
After a good three hours in the blazing sun we saw the gates open and villagers in trance being led out to circumambulate the temple. I’ll never forget the look on one young Balinese woman’s face: an incredible mix of astonishment, grief and transcendence.
Chö–Minneapolis Star-Tribune 1998
“The lead singer sits at a low table on the garage-studio floor. Wrapped in a purple robe, she sings with her nearly shaved head bowed slightly, eyes closed, hands folded in her lap. Her face shows nothing but calm. Her lips barely move, and at times it’s difficult to tell whether she is singing or it’s a recording that’s being played back.”














