Skip to main content

Ramon Sender

Image
Interview Date: April 14, 16 and 21, 2014
Conservatory Affiliation: Alum, B.M. Composition, '62
Interviewer: Tessa Updike and MaryClare Brzytwa

Ramon Sender was born in Madrid, Spain in October of 1934 to Ramon and Amparo Sender. Among his music teachers were George Copeland, Elliott Carter, Henry Cowell and Robert Erickson. Ramon studied at the Conservatorio di Santa Cecilia in Rome, received his Bachelors of Music in Composition from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, and his Masters from Mills College.

As a student at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Ramon built an electronic music studio in the attic of the school's previous location at 1201 Ortega Street. Upon graduating from the Conservatory in 1962, he co-founded with Morton Subotnick the San Francisco Tape Music Center, which was later renamed the Mills Center for Contemporary Music, and is still in existence today. Through the years, Ramon has collaborated with a number of composers and visual artists, including Anthony Martin, Pauline Oliveros and Terry Riley.

In 1966, he co-produced the Trips Festival with Ken Kesey and Stewart Brand; a large psychedelic event in San Francisco that featured, among others, the Grateful Dead and Big Brother and the Holding Company.

Aside from his music, Ramon is the author of a number of novels, novels, short stories and essays. Samples of his writings can be found on his website (www.raysender.com).

Read Interview

Topics

Early years (Spain)
New York and Julia Davis
Early education
George Copeland
Studies in Rome
Boston and New York
California for the first time
Bruderhof
San Francisco Conservatory of Music
San Francisco Tape Music Center
Los Angeles
San Francisco and Mills College
Trips Festival
Brief retreat
Morning Star
Floating Lotus Opera Company
Dousing for spirits
Zero the Clown
Mills Retrospective
Creating sounds
Reflections and thoughts on electronic music today

Audio

Early education

George Copeland

Studies in Rome

Conservatory

San Francisco Tape Music Center

Dousing for spirits

Oral history interviews are a method of collecting historical information from a narrator with firsthand knowledge of historically significant events. These interviews are primary materials, and by nature reflect the personal opinion of the narrators. As with any primary resource, these interviews are not to be viewed as the final and definitive source for any subject.

All literary rights to audio and manuscript, including the right to publish, are reserved for the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. Requests for permission to quote for publication should be addressed to archives@sfcm.edu.