BT (USA)

Given
his enviable resume and illustrious fifteen+ year career, it is
difficult to imagine that platinum-selling artist, visionary producer,
film composer and technologist BT may only now be beginning to
create the best work of his career. An internationally-renowned
recording artist himself, he is trusted by superstars such as Sting,
Britney Spears, Sarah McLachlan, Tori Amos, Madonna, Seal and Peter
Gabriel to produce modernist and memorable hits, with a bleeding-edge
electronic flair. He has composed unforgettable scores for films
The Fast and the Furious, Go, Stealth and Oscar-award winning Monster.
With his latest two-hour, double-disk opus, These Hopeful Machines,
BT definitively weaves both the technical prowess and compositional
mastery that reminds us all why he’s the composer that all other
composers and producers study.
On his last full-length LP, This Binary Universe, he created an
entirely new genre of evocative electro-acoustic music. As Keyboard
Magazine wrote in their review of the album, “In a hundred years,
it could well be studied as the first major work of the new millennium.
It's that good.” Throughout his illustrious career, BT has been
able to seamlessly weave together complex, groundbreaking musical
elements into compositions that resonate with listeners of all
types without seeming academic and incomprehensible.
From an early age, BT, born Brian Transeau, demonstrated a remarkable
aptitude for playing and understanding classical music. He was
heavily influenced by avant-garde and romantic composers such as
Stravinsky, Bartok, Debussy and Rachmaninov. His biggest influences,
however, were from everyday sounds that most would take for granted.
Growing up in his childhood home in Maryland, BT would notice the
meter of the grandfather clock in his foyer, the micro-rhythms
of crickets and cicadas and the ambience of passing trains at night.
“When examining my creation process, it makes perfect sense why
I am a forced technologist,” he explains. ”I frequently face the
fact that the tools I need to compose music simply don't exist.
It is like being an architect without bricks or mortar. I routinely
create my own bricks and connective tissue as the diving off point
to the compositional process.” The drive to actualize the tools
BT envisions has led to his evolution as one of the most cutting-edge
programmers and technologists in music today. He has expanded this
reach into a visionary software venture, Sonik Architects which
launched its critically- and commercially-acclaimed iPhone application,
Sonifi™, last fall.
“I make protracted compositions in classical form with a modern
tonal palette. I like to incorporate expanded harmonic structures
and tonalities that you don't typically hear in popular music,”
remarks BT. “The goal is for my audience to feel something evocative
and meaningful but qualitatively different than anything they’ve
heard or experienced. It's like searching for a new species of
music. In a way, I am more of an explorer than an composer.”
BT is the earliest of early adopters and widely accredited as a
maven of modern sound techniques. “There is a very specific lineage
of great composers who blazed a new path in music because they
weren't afraid to experiment with new sounds, new techniques and
new technologies. These progenitors - Cage, Stockhausen, Xenakis
- are the people who set the foundation. Let’s not forget that
the piano was a radical new technology in its time. I had a music
theory teacher as a boy who once said to me, ‘Nothing new will
ever happen in the arts again. It's all about studying what's already
been done and how you combine things.’ I don’t think I slept for
weeks after that. I knew that was an incomplete idea and set out
to prove it wrong ever since.”
An avid lover of both mathematics and physics, BT looks for inspiration
by experiencing natural phenomena, frequently discovering complex
mathematical patterns and structural relationships in everyday
objects and environments that are often taken for granted. “I find
things in the natural world that resonate with me on a very humanist
level, those things are typically the core drive for the creation
process. My music is an expression of that awe and admiration of
the natural world”, he explains. “Quite simply, music is applied
mathematics. It is aesthetically beautiful as well as practically
beautiful. Rhythm, harmony and structure are all mathematical and
math, quite simply, is beautiful.”
“I am looking for the symmetry between patterns that are embedded
in the natural world and emotions, feeling states and the human
condition. I think my life's work is about dissecting, studying
and defining that overlap. Music and mathematics are two sides
of the same thing. I am constantly looking for a meeting point
of these two ideas,” BT clarifies. “I am looking for the symmetry
between patterns that are embedded in the natural world and emotions,
feeling states and the human condition. I think my life's work
is about dissecting, studying and defining that overlap.”
“My ultimate goal is to keep the emotional counterpoint and the
integrity of the song intact, even when pushing the envelope with
style and technique. The faster things get, the less people are
willing to take in a body of creative work. How many people can
stand in front of a painting and deeply take it in? There are so
few things now that will engage us. The intent of consuming music
is usually to have an awareness or a feeling, to have a truly,
empathic connection to others. Whatever it is that you're going
through, music makes you feel less alone. You feel a primordial
connection to people and the natural world. My hope is to create
something that make people feel that they have consumed something
that completes a void. I want to create something lasting.”