Our Mission is to preserve, protect, and share The TANK, Rangely Colorado’s world class center for sonic arts, as a unique and transformative audio laboratory for musicians, sound artists, educators, and town residents.
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My connection to The Tank started back in the 1990’s when I first met Bruce Odland. I was curating music at The Kitchen then and we presented his Cloud Chamber project with Sam Auinger. Bruce’s creative work has always been extremely compelling, and I was very intrigued when I heard about his development of The Tank during its early stages.
Other musicians and media reporting brought The Tank more to my attention, and in 2023 when I was planning a tour of the western US, I contacted Bruce about a possible performance. I was thrilled to be invited to perform on the Solstice Festival in June. The Tank was my last stop after a month spent traveling, performing, and finishing my book Diffusing Music. I was particularly drawn to play at The Tank because of my involvement with ambient music, both through my own work and as leader of La Monte Young’s Theater of Eternal Music Brass Ensemble. In recent years many of these performances were presented in churches or other highly reverberant spaces, so I was very excited to have the chance to bring my music to The Tank.
Beyond exploring the interior acoustics, I was equally fascinated by the idea of the outdoor presentation through spatially separated speakers. I had previously developed a wireless sound system that distributed the live-sampled sounds of my Mutantrumpet around a lake for ambient performances. The Tank’s blend of interior and exterior listening paralleled my interest in outdoor and indoor sonic environments, a theme also central to my opera Fantini Futuro.
When I arrived in Rangely and first set foot in The Tank I begin playing acoustically, before I had set up my electronic system. What I immediately realized was that The Tank is not just a space, it’s more like a giant instrument. As I played, I was struck by how the sound seemed to spiral upward, as if the notes were ascending into infinity. I found myself listening and reacting to what The Tank was giving back in ways that I never had before. Once the electronics were added the interactivity with The Tank became even more pronounced, and I continued to hear things generated by my playing that I had never experienced previously. Stepping outside and hearing the sounds being played over the expansive landscape was equally exhilarating for me, particularly with my recent interest in the relationship of indoor and outdoor sonic spaces.
The performance was unlike anything I’ve experienced in my long career; transcendent, mystical, and profoundly moving. The upward movement of the sound created a kind of anti-gravity sensation, like floating upward on the powerful resonances that were materializing inside of the space. The dynamic sensitivity was astonishing, even the quietest sounds produced complex responses. During the performance there was a strong wind blowing outside, which emphasized The Tank’s connection to wild nature and added another powerful sonic element.The next day it was great to have the chance to meet some other musicians and community members. The openness of the exchange felt very aligned with the inclusive, expansive nature of the experience I had the night before.
My experience with remote recording at The Tank is much more limited. I had a session in early 2025 in which I recorded my Mutantrumpet and live sampling through Sonobus. Everything worked well technically, but in the virtual situation it was more difficult for me to adjust to the The Tank’s remarkable acoustics due to my own monitoring setup. The session turned out to be more of an experiment, and I plan to do another recording sometime soon in which I focus more on listening to The Tank as an active collaborator.
The Tank is a space that compels us to listen in ways that we never have before. It sensitizes us to sonic phenomena and experiences in a way that lingers long after we leave its physical presence. I greatly look forward to having a chance of returning soon, either physically or virtually.
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I first became aware of The Tank from my good friend Larry Delinger, who was composing music for the Denver Center and working with composer/sound designer, Bruce Odland. Larry told me that Bruce had found this amazing acoustic space which was only known to a few underground composers and sound designers. From that moment on it was on my bucket list.
It wasn’t until April 30, 2021 when I got to experience The Tank remotely while beta testing the remote hook up from my Ashland house to The Tank, using Sonobus and my Buchla Music Easel (a semi-modular analog synth). It was a mind blowing revelation, putting my headsets on and playing a single note on my Easel and hearing 40 seconds of reverberation. As I continued to explore and improvise sounds, I thought I heard what was a hauntingly, beautiful female voice…nothing I was doing would have made that sound. It turns out Samantha Wade (one of the audio engineers at that time) had walked into The Tank and started singing with me. It was a sublime duet…or trio: Samantha, me and the Tank.
A month later in June on the summer solstice 2021 I invited to perform in The Tank. Actually being in the Tank and learning and breathing with it rewired my mind, body and soul. I learned a deeper and slower way of listening.
Just prior to my performance that evening I got to listen to a recoding of my soundcheck outside The Tank surrounded by the Meyer 5.1 sound system. Watching the sunset in Rangeley, Colorado and being immersed outdoors by the sound of The Tank was transcendent and an experience that stays with me to this day.
Fast forward to February, March and April 2022 during the pandemic. I invited 10 of my musician friends to give me 3 to 6 minute audio clips of their favorite tune or improvisation or sound effect and sent these to Samantha and Michael to be Re-Tanked. They played back the audio files from their speakers in The Tank and then recorded that from their eight microphones then gave me the eight channel .wav files. It was a revelation to hear the differences of individual instruments and how The Tank embraced and spoke with them. Didjeridoo, piano, voice, trumpet, guitar, modular synths, waterphone, shakuhachi and Taiko drum.
My next encounter with The Tank was September 14, 2024 when I invited 10 of my musician friends to join me in The Tank for a day of exploration, improvisation, and sublime sonic camaraderie. Most of these musicians did not know one another, but somehow the magic of The Tank embraced and inspired us all to a sense of play and deep listening.
I’m so honored, excited and inspired to now be on the Board of Directors with the amazingly creative and visionary thinkers and supporters.
Long Live the TANK!
Summer Solstice and Septemberfest multi-day events, concerts and installations. Free concerts by TANK recording artists. Residencies of U. Colorado ATLAS composers & musicians, and events in the ATLAS B2 black box. Record release parties. Open house Saturdays May through October. +50 on-site & remote recording sessions & experiments. Some details here, and some images below.
These albums, released in 2025 on other labels, were recorded partly or wholly in The TANK
Summer Solstice and Septemberfest multi-day events. Ten free concerts by TANK recording artists. Residencies of U. Colorado ATLAS and Stanford Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics composers & musicians. Events in the ATLAS B2 black box. Open house Saturdays May through October. 80 on-site & remote recording sessions & experiments. Visits from local school kids. And a birthday party!
The TANK’s 2023 Solstice & Septemberfest
Septemberfest, 2023
New York based Harpist electro-acoustic composer Zeena Parkins and Bay Area based drummer signal-treater Scott Amendola presented a work especially composed for The TANK.
Seventh Annual SOLSTICE Festival, 2023
Beth Custer, clarinets, along with her voice, percussion and toys. Ben Neill, the inventor of the Mutantrumpet, a hybrid electro-acoustic instrument. Sound Circle, an 18-voice a cappella women’s vocal ensemble, based in Boulder, Colorado

