Steve Roden

Steve Roden obituary, Pasadena, CA

Steve Roden

Steve Roden Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Sep. 6, 2023.
STEVE RODEN

Visual artist and pioneer of "lowercase" music Steve Roden was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2017. With his wife, Sari Roden, at his side, and surrounded by family and friends, he passed away peacefully on September 6, 2023 in Los Angeles at the age of 59.

Steven Bryan Roden was born April 27, 1964 in Los Angeles. His parents Susan and James Roden, along with his extended family, filled his life with art, architecture, music, and travel. At age 15, Steve began his musical career while attending Beverly Hills High School by forming a punk rock band with Steve Graham and David Bornstein called Seditionaries (1979-1982). The band performed in bowling alleys, garages, and nightclubs including Cathay de Grande, Godzilla's, and the Troubadour. They played with noted bands like Circle Jerks, T.S.O.L., and The Damned. According to Jon Weisbart, a friend since childhood, "Steve was at center stage of the Seditionaries. He wrote the lyrics for all the songs more like poetry than punk verses. He was a different person on stage. Not the timid artist that cringed at talking at art openings, but a singer who performed, jumped around, and had fun. He was a prince and a jester." The group self-produced one 7-inch album Wherewolf in 1982.

Attending two of Los Angeles's premier art schools, Steve attained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Otis Art Institute of Parsons School of Design in 1986 and a Master of Fine Arts degree from ArtCenter in 1989. He studied with artists Emerson Woelffer, Mike Kelley, Stephen Prina, Gary Panter and others. About 1987, a mutual friend introduced Steve to artist/designer Sari Takahashi; a romance ensued, and they married in 1993. The couple lived in Park La Brea and this is where Steve housed the legendary cereal box collection he established with artist and fellow "swap-meet rag picker" Dan Goodsell. Their obsessive collection later became the subject of a book, "Krazy Kids Food!" (Taschen, 2002). Beyond pop advertising, Steve's collecting interests included modernist furniture, art, and ceramics. In 1998, the couple purchased the Wallace Neff Airform Bubble House (1946) in Pasadena and established a physical location for his "in be tween noise" studio.

Steve centered his life upon the making of connections and meaning by experimenting with visual imagery, music, language, code, translation, listening, and the amassing of various collections of objects and ephemera. In a KCET Artbound interview with Sharon Mizota from 2012, he shared, "It's a very personal way of moving through the world to connect things that really weren't meant to be connected." Steve built his life in much the same way as he constructed his visual musical scores or his paintings, drawings, collages, sound installations, and films. He thoughtfully translated his intimate observations of the "unnoticed" things in his environment or another artist, writer, philosopher, architect, or musician's work and made something new-always bringing the past forward, personalizing his conversation with the material, and churning it into a poetic and relevant aesthetic experience for the present. In a recent email exchange with Fulcrum Arts Executive Director Robert Crouch, he shared "Steve could create a simple set of rules, inspired by the most humble and mundane materials, and through his process, create and share something utterly gorgeous, unique, and transcendent."

Since 1986, Steve has consistently exhibited and performed his work in the United States and abroad. His artwork is held in many public and private collections including Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and San Diego, and National Museum of Contemporary Art in Athens, Greece. Steve was featured in the Hammer Museum's landmark exhibition "SNAPSHOT: New Art From Los Angeles" in 2001. In 2003, he had his first solo exhibition with his LA gallerist Susanne Vielmetter at her first location on Wilshire Boulevard. Vielmetter plans to present an exhibition of his work in fall 2024. In 2010, the Armory Center for the Arts organized "in between: a 20- year survey" and Pomona College Museum of Art simultaneously mounted "when words become forms." In his review of these projects, Los Angeles Times Art Critic Christopher Knight wrote, "Looking at a Roden painting, sculpture or projected film, you sense this interaction of formal system and cryptic intuition," and he likened Steve's art to the work of Paul Klee, Alfred Jensen, and Arthur Dove.

Throughout his life as Steve's musical interests expanded from punk and post-punk to electronic, minimalist, and beyond, the artist tuned his attention to listening. Inspired by experimental sound artists and composers like Brian Eno, Meredith Monk, Rolf Julius, and Morton Feldman, Steve developed his own style of music and performing known as "lowercase." Steve's vast and impressive discography and landmark releases include "forms and paper" (2001, 2011 Line, and on vinyl 2024 Aurora Central Records); "i listen to the wind that obliterates my traces" (2011, Dust to Digital); and "Oionos" (2022, Room 40), a track originally created for the exhibition "The Grand Promenade" (2006), Athens, Greece. Musician, friend, and producer Lawrence English expressed, "In this world there are some artists who listen so very deeply, who cherish the minor, the incidental, the unexpected, the hushed; Steve was one such artist." English elaborates, "Not only did Steve cast his ears outward, with a generosity equaled only by his curiosity, but he asked us to do the same. Together, we leaned into a world of sound so rich that we might not believe it could be possible. Steve not only guided us to and through that world, but he created it."

Traveling the world to perform in sound art festivals and exhibit at museums and kunsthalles, Steve met and collaborated with many like-minded contemporaries including Steve Peters, Doug Aiken, Stas Orlovski, Michael Ned Holte, Michael Raphael, Alexandra Grant, Simone Forti, John David O'Brien, Toti Mercadante, Alison O'Daniel, Jeffrey Roden, and others. Visual and sound artist Stephen Vitiello, who performed with Steve in the Rothko Chapel in Houston, and in a Donald Judd desert installation for the "Marfa Sessions" exhibition (2008), recalls a recent and personal moment, "What I'll remember for the rest of my life is my last visit with Steve. He was deep into the illness, and he seemed to have stopped making music and logic was slipping. He wanted me to see his father's guitar. We spontaneously started to jam and played for a whole hour. His guitar was out of tune, but he was actively listening and responding. He managed to retain his singular sound and make something strangely beautiful and deep."

Having a penchant for archives, ephemera, and the work of deceased 19th and 20th century artists, poets, and philosophers, Steve dug through notes, old letters, catalogs, manuscripts, and sketchbooks to look for ways to have an aesthetic conversation with the likes of Walter Benjamin, John Cage, Par Lagerkvist, Rainer Maria Rilke, and Harry Bertoia. In 2008, curator and former LACE director, Carol Stakenas, collaborated with Steve and the Getty Research Institute in partnership with the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles on a re-invention of Allan Kaprow's seminal "18 Happenings in 6 Parts," originally presented in 1959 at the Reuben Gallery in New York. Stakenas had this to say, "What made working with Steve on 18/6 remarkable was how it brought us into the generative/creative space . . . full of improvisation, curiosity, and presence. Regularly, I re-read the letter he wrote for the event program 'dear mr. kaprow (an approach to 18 happenings in 6 parts).' Now, when I read the text, this line of Steve's stands out. . . 'i think your work suggests that struggle only gets you to the starting point, while an open mind is needed to truly embark upon the journey.'"

Steve Roden leaves behind a prolific and profound body of work. In the 2012 Artbound segment he speaks about the making of art as a learning process and the only way to do it is by experimentation and failure. He also says, ". . . painting is like the sun and all of the other media hover around it." Glenn R. Phillips, Senior Curator at the Getty Research Institute, has commented, "Steve Roden had that wide-ranging curiosity and joy in experimentation that all great artists have. At the heart of his work is an incredible sense of play that can delight in taking an idea from the mind to the page, to the canvas, into sound, into space, and then back to the mind again. He understood the beauty of slowing down and allowing an experience to fully work its way through the body and the self."

The artist is survived by his wife Sari Takahashi Roden, his mother Susan Roden, and a large circle of friends and family. A Celebration of Life will be announced at a later date. To send messages to the family, please email the studio at [email protected].

--Meg Linton

Artworker, Curator, Writer, Producer

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August 31, 2024

Marsha Mason Soltz posted to the memorial.

November 16, 2023

Kaleb Fowler posted to the memorial.

October 3, 2023

Diane Granahan posted to the memorial.

Marsha Mason Soltz

August 31, 2024

Steve and my son Jonathan playing at 4 years old. The world has lost a special man and artist.

Kaleb Fowler

November 16, 2023

I never knew Steve Roden personally, but his music changed my entire perception of music, and in a way, changed my life. I found him through his fantastic album, Stars of Ice, which is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I've ever heard. It completely changed my view on music, and art in general. Truly a once in a lifetime experience from a once in a lifetime person. I give my condolences to all of his family and friends.

Diane Granahan

October 3, 2023

Diane Granahan

October 2, 2023

Diane Granahan

October 2, 2023

Diane Granahan

October 2, 2023

The first photo is an original red light drawing from Steve Roden´s "i speak through a hole in my head..." I will forever treasure this drawing and booklet.

The second photo is the cover of his CD "four possible landscapes". In 2000 (or 2001?) a friend played this for me and I was hooked. A couple years later, I got to know Steve a little from going to some of his art openings throughout NY (where I was living at the time). He said to send an email and he would send me some of his CDs. I also bought many- as well as many of his records and catalogs-but it was also the beginning of a humble acquaintance and correspondence, which meant the world to me. He was generous like no other and I don´t know anyone that would say otherwise. One time he said to me, "The thing for me is finding the connective tissue in everything." A deep truth. The point is really to know and understand that. Steve lived by this. You could see it in everything he did. His gentle connectivity with people, and the seemingly disparate connections he made in creating his art... He was beyond a visual artist and beyond a sound artist. He was a gatherer, a poet and he saw through all the BS. "inbetweennoise". It is a wonderful breath of fresh air and entirely inspiring to me. He always will be. The following is a post where I wrote about his CD "four possible landscapes" on a now archived blog called Aught Music... The track I wrote about specifically was of course my favorite on the CD, "reflection. refraction. (third bench). https://aughtmusic.blogspot.com/search?q=Steve+roden

You can find an excerpt of this beautiful track on Richard Chartier´s exquisite one hour memorial to Steve on Dublab here: https://www.dublab.com/archive/richard-chartier-between-two-points-09-26-23

For the lack of being articulate lately, grief is weird and hard. There are so many forms of it and it seeps out in unexpected ways. I´ve struggled in expressing how I feel on a public level. For better or worse, all I can say is there is a worldwide network of people who miss you dearly, Steve.

Holly

September 21, 2023

Holly

September 21, 2023

Holly

September 21, 2023

Holly

September 21, 2023

Holly

September 21, 2023

Avi A

September 20, 2023

I may not have interacted with him in person or went to one of his concerts, bur hearing his music for the first time at age 12 opened up a whole new world for me of what music is and how people push the boundaries of it, and his music has influenced my life so much. Thanks for everything Steve, and may your memory be a blessing. Also, condolences to Sari and Steve's other relatives.

Ernst Karel

September 13, 2023

shanti shanti shanti

Single Memorial Tree

Liza

Planted Trees

Maurizio and Roberto Opalio

September 12, 2023

Maurizio and Roberto Opalio

September 12, 2023

Maurizio and Roberto Opalio

September 12, 2023

Maurizio and Roberto Opalio

September 12, 2023

we're deeply saddened by the passing of Steve -- no doubt one of the most talented musician, sound and visual artists of our time, and such a humble and gentle soul -- the way he would "listen to" the world and "give voice" to even the most apparently insignificant objects was truly unique... no one else could create such soft and soulful, intimate musical dimensions of pure magic playing "in-be-tween-noise" and "at low volume" --
we feel so lucky we had the chance to collaborate with Steve sharing Volume II in My Cat Is An Alien's second series of split Art-LPs called 'Cosmic Debris' -- we spoke to him about this project the first time we met in our hometown Torino at one of his audiovisual gallery exhibitions back in 2004... the human & artistic connection was immediate, his enthusiasm overwhelming -- Steve had a non-academic approach and a punk background -- we loved (and shared) his self-declared romantic aesthetic, his profound approach to music&art=life, his tactile need in the process of creation vs computer´s sterile culture, his philosophy of never learning to read music or to play an instrument in a proper way as celebration of the magic of imperfection... and of course his unlimited passion as collector (of American primitives´ old shellac 78s too, some collected in his wonderful '...i listen to the wind that obliterates my traces' book+2CD) --
At the time Steve and his sweet wife Sari had a dog called Yufo, so one of the two pieces he sent us for our collaborative Art-LP is entitled "My Dog Is A Yufo" ...his subtle sense of humor embraced our project together so deeply to make it even more close to our (alien)hearts --
once he said that in a future collaboration we should have sung together... unfortunately we never did, but rest assured Steve, we´ll sing together one day in the eternity of the spheres... "at low volume" ---

Alien Love 4ever!-------------------Maurizio+Roberto / MCIAA

our deepest condolences to Sari, his family and close friends

Robert Foulkes

September 12, 2023

So sorry to read about this today. I bonded with Steve in an art class at Beverly Hills High but then fell out of touch. I was the high school newspaper cartoonist and always hoping to run into him again one day, and thought I might when I attended a show of his in Pasadena years ago, but alas. He was a great guy and turned me on to bands, I have a memory of him requesting to play certain music in class while we were all drawing/painting - I think he turned me onto The Tubes specifically as I recall. I still have one of his Seditionaries business cards that he gave me! I´m a location manager, and in the back of mind I was also always hoping to be on a production where his incredible unique house would be right for it, so I could knock on his door and surprise him with a "hey remember me, I´d like to scout your house," but again, alas. I also still have the LA magazine I believe it was that featured great photos of the house. Anyway, I´m rambling - my heartfelt condolences to to you and all his family and friends. Take care and be well. - Robert Foulkes

Kirston Lightowler

September 11, 2023

Steve had the most brilliant mind. He was deeply kind, so darn funny, immensely generous, and humble. He was also exquisitely rare in his openness as both an artist and a friend. I came to know Steve more than twenty years ago, through his music, but we quickly bonded over a shared love of literature, landscapes, and translation. My work as a maker, a reader, an archivist, and a publisher has been greatly shaped and forever deepened by his presence in my life.

The evening I learned of Steve´s passing, I opened one of his emails at random, because I wanted to hear his voice in his words. At the end of the message (sent to me in 2009) he told me he had been asked to donate a book & related artwork to an auction, and had chosen a personal copy of Hermann Hesse´s Wandering-which included some of his favorite passages on trees. Steve had underlined a single line on each page-hoping the book might fall into the hands of an intuitive reader, who would one day discover the hidden poem he had left for them. It could be found by reading each underlined passage in chronological order. He then typed out the entire found poem for me to read. As I read the lines again just a few days ago, part of the text felt a little bit like a message from Steve to us all. I hope it will bring a smile to your eyes. It goes like this:

wandering without any special direction
we lightly scatter:

luminously
around me, a magic circle glows.

the land, it had trumpets.
the bridge sang in me, and echoed
what the sky said
in the moonlight curving gently away.

tenderly with inward, beloved things
ringing the bell
in my tongue, on the souls of my feet.

everywhere. the world resonates
blue between the growing things and the stone,
humming the song of eternity

and clouds, i have written
on my knees,
the gentle music of passing things.

::

Sending so much love to wonderful Sari & Steve's family and many friends.

Joel Woodard

September 10, 2023

I was in Grad School at Cal. State Long Beach when I first met Steve Roden at an artist talk in the Fall of 2010. I was instantly impressed by his unconventional ideas about making art, and I knew I had to get to know him better. Lucky for me, the art dept. decided to hire him for a grad level class in the Spring semester of 2011 and I jumped at getting a spot in that critique class.

Steve was someone who was always generous with his time and energy as a mentor. Always talking out ideas thoroughly, and always quick to respond to emails. I still have almost 100 emails from him saved in my old Yahoo account! He was so generous that he agreed to be on my committee later that Fall. He always had the right idea about how an artist should work. The idea of feeling your way through the work, which was a new idea to me at the time. During studio visits I can remember him saying, "If you´re not feeling right about the work then something is missing." Hearing that about a painting that I thought was finished was always hard, but he was always right about that. Forcing me to rethink what I was doing and realizing that more had to go into the work. He reminded me that all the impulses I was feeling as an artist were always ingredients to a painting that I needed to pay attention to. Put simply, he was someone who gave me permission to be myself.

We always had art and music to share with each other. It was always an ego boost when he hadn´t heard of some band or artist that I shared with him. And always he would share things with me that I had never heard of! After I graduated, we stayed in touch a little. Going to an art show or two, an email here and there, but we ultimately lost touch with each other. Considering the successful artist that he was and the demands on his time, I accepted the fact that I wouldn´t be close with him anymore as I was in Grad School. The last time I saw him was in June of 2014 at a sound performance he gave in Santa Ana, which was where this picture was taken. It would just be three years later that he would learn of his condition. I had always hoped since then that I would somehow be friends with him again. I imagined having a big solo show somewhere in LA with Steve showing up, admiring the work, and having a renewed and fresh dialogue.

Now that I´m teaching, I can still feel his influence when I interact with my own students. It´s important for me to guide students to who they naturally will become, and to nurture their interests as students of art. It´s because of Steve that I have that attitude as a teacher, and every time I have some kind of exchange of music or art with a student, Steve isn´t too far away from my thoughts.

I´m missing Steve right now, along with everyone that knew him. I regret being too afraid to pick up the phone to give him a call or typing out an email after the last time I saw him. If only just to let him know that he mattered to me. But despite that regret, I have two years' worth of memories to look back on during a very important time in my life. I´ll be forever grateful for the wealth of knowledge Steve kindly shared that has guided me to the artist and teacher that I am today. Steve is someone I will never forget.

Joel Woodard

Christoph Cox

September 10, 2023

Steve was such a delightful human being. He was smart and wise, enormously knowledgeable about art, literature, and music; and, at the same time, he cultivated a sort of childlike naivete ... which is maybe just to say that he was unwilling to relinquish a sense of wonder and joy, even about unfashionable things. We met in 2001 or 2002, when he asked me to write a catalog essay for an exhibition at the Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum. I later wrote a profile about him for The Wire and invited him to talk and perform at Hampshire College. I remember that he stayed at my house, played with my kids, and left us a copy of his Krazy Kids Food book, which revealed a whole other side of him. (I still remember him telling me that, when he was on the road, he never shaved. That peculiarity stuck with me as emblematic somehow). Despite living on separate coasts, the two of us crossed paths a number of times and he was always a joy to see and spend time with. In 2011, I invited him to contribute a piece to a video festival I was curating in Greenfield Massachusetts. Steve's piece was projected on a huge wall in the lobby of a grand but dilapidated art deco bank building. He never saw the installation, but I thought he would have liked it. Over the years, we occasionally fell out of touch, but I got regular updates from mutual friends who had seen or worked with him. I hadn't spoken to him in a while when I heard he had Alzheimer's. On a trip to LA in early July of this year, I drove by his house in Pasadena. Fear kept me from stopping in to say hello, but I paid a silent tribute. Vita brevis, ars longa. The wonderful art remains but I will miss the beautiful soul Steve was.

Anne-laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

It was such a pleasure to meet this great artist. I already miss our discussions, and your great kindness and your curious, poetic and amused way of looking at the world. Rest in peace dear friend.

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Anne-Laure Chamboissier

September 10, 2023

Robert Takahashi Crouch

September 9, 2023

Robert Takahashi Crouch

September 9, 2023

Robert Takahashi Crouch

September 9, 2023

Robert Takahashi Crouch

September 9, 2023

This is so difficult to write. Steve was an integral part of my life in so many ways that I don´t know where to start. I sometimes say that I´ll work with any artist once, and if I work with them again, it´s because they are an amazing person. What does that say about Steve, who I have worked with time and time again? I can remember the exact moment when I knew I had to work with him. My instinct was equally informed by the quality of his work and by how warm, funny, and kind he was.

I remember when Sari e-mailed me about his diagnosis. I was at a party at Karen´s, and I had to leave. When she asked what was wrong, I just cried. I remember texting Richard to check his email immediately. We were speechless. Steve had a truly beautiful mind, and he shared that curiosity and intellectual rigor with all of us, every day, through every painting, album, performance, and every conversation.

Even with Alzheimer´s, he remained that same beautiful person. The last time I saw Steve, I was in his studio gathering archival materials to put together a proposal to refabricate "ear(th)" for PST. He still had that same curiosity, same smile we all loved. The same smile he could get when he´d order a Frito chili cheeseburger at Slater´s. I now think he neglected to let Sari know how many Frito chili cheeseburgers he was eating at the time.

He didn´t really know this, but he was the center of an incredible circle of artists and musicians. My friendship and professional relationship with Lawrence English started when we were both at an ICAS meeting at Unsound in 2011, and I mentioned I was working with Steve on a new installation at LACE. Lawrence made a beeline to me and enthusiastically shared his admiration for Steve´s work. Fast forward to today, Lawrence and I are refabricating "ear(th)" for PST in 2024. Sari would share how happy this made him. It´s both a way for me to continue championing his work, as well as a way for me to process my grief.

My heart goes out to Sari, Steve´s family, and Meg Linton, who has been doing an absolutely incredible job of managing Steve´s studio since his diagnosis. We are all here to celebrate the life of someone who has meant so much to all of us. Let´s hold those memories close to our hearts.

John Jensen

September 9, 2023

I have tender recollections of Steve as a young rascal at Beverly Vista and in high school. We shared many sweet times and some amazing experiences, London, the clash, and all that music. I recall many hours playing music, listening to music, and generally exploring the world. Anything seemed possible, we thought that the world could be changed, and we could bring good things to life. I fondly remember Steve loved to draw, loved his sheep dog George, loved his mom Susan, fishing with his Dad, Hendrix, Carlin, his VW, and collecting comics, rare imports, and idiosyncratic oddballs. I recall times hanging out basically doing nothing for hours on end, perhaps days on end, simmering, brewing. Steve would laugh heartily, and then move onto the next passion. Although there were misunderstandings and disagreements, I still felt a close kinship to him, almost like with a brother for a time. Steve always was a unique, good guy and compelling artist with a buzzing curious mind. He did many wonderful things and influenced many people. It´s terribly sad. I share my sincere deepest condolences to Susan, Sari, and Steve´s many friends. Hopefully he´s listening to and making music. At least, that´s the way I picture him. Chilling out, peacefully engaged with some good noise.

Adrienne Woong

September 9, 2023

I've known Steve (and Sari!) since we were in art school and in a performance together, so we go way back. I've always loved Steve for his humor and his creativity and all those great conversations only art school kids can have. (Painting is not dead! Long live painting!) Watching him grow into the artist he became was magic to behold. And to know him was so inspiring. If you were his friend, you were lucky, he was so generous. And the ultimate act of his friendship was to collaborate with you. I felt so seen by him! To work with him- through books (we did 5!) or collecting (oh those collectables!*) - was to know him intimately. I will never forget his thought process, his unique way of looking at things, of making sound, of his process of interacting with the world. *Example: "What are you going to do with that?" "I don't know but it makes a chirp and its MINE now".

I have learned so much from him and inspiration will be drawn over and over again through discovery of all his work. He was so prolific. I find comfort in that I will find new depths, he was such a multi-talented artist. I look forward to seeing him in new ways for the rest of my life.

I am forever grateful for his friendship and happy he's free and making mischief on the other side. Until then Steve, you did good in this life! And we will try to continue to remind the world of your joy, your generosity and visionary influence.

Much love to Sari and Susan and all family and friends. I miss him so much.
xoxoxoxox Adrienne Wong

YoungTseng Wong

September 9, 2023

Steve was one of my teachers. I didn´t know him well and never got the chance to know him better. We had maybe 3 or 4 conversations in all. He asked many questions, quietly.

Soon after our 2nd or 3rd conversation a book of poetry arrived from Steve. It was a brand new book. There was no note, no inscription, no explanation. And he didn´t say much about it the next time we met.

Steve saw what I was trying to do and where it came from long before I knew it or could name it. He opened a window that let me know it was okay to say of my work, "I am standing still."

Thank you Steve.

Asuka Hisa

September 9, 2023

I´ve been listening to the sounds and music of artist, friend, and inspiration to many: Steve Roden.

I first encountered his sculpture in an exhibition and when we met, I discovered his fascinating approaches to music and everything. He was also a goofball who loved pop culture paraphernalia. All of these discerning and diverse interests lived in a Wallace Neff Bubble House and in his beautiful mind. He carried "An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles" by Gebhard and Winter in his car and would look up buildings and houses while he cruised around LA. I bought the book to copy him but didn´t use it as diligently; at all.

Years ago, Steve accepted my invitation to do a youth art workshop at the Santa Monica Museum of Art (SMMoA). We blindfolded a dozen kids, put infrared wireless headphones on all, put drawing implements in each of their hands, and paper in front of them. They listened to a range of sounds created by Steve and drew what they heard. No peeking! Removal of the blindfolds and headphones revealed drawings that were created differently. We laughed at how the photo documentation of the workshop with blindfolded/headphoned children looked strange. So fun.

His own marvelous drawings, paintings, collages, and constructions incorporated conceptual dimensions about sound, sequences, and notations. His work is a gift.

I learned some about making and being from Steve. May he rest in peace. Deep condolences to Sari Roden, his family, and Meg Linton who has been helping Steve and Sari with so much. He is forever special

Marsha Mason

September 9, 2023

Dear Sari: I am so saddened that Steve is not longer in this world. He was so
special. His talent was amazing and he was a real gentleman. There will never be another!!! My condolences .. Marsha Mason

Marsha Mason

September 9, 2023

I have know Steve since he was 4 years old and my son Jon's best friend. He is so talented. He is one of the nicest people I know..The world has lost a very special man and the day of our lose of Steve was the very saddest.
Rest In Peace Dear Steve Marsha Mason
t\

Paul Yates

September 9, 2023

Steve´s work was always so full or ideas, he always made you think while enjoying the most exquisite minimal sounds, and intricate drawings and paintings. RIP Steve

Richard Meyrick

September 9, 2023

The collaboration that Steve did with Steve Peters 'Not A leaf Remains As It Was' is one of my favourite albums, not just in the ambient genre, but of all time. A total masterpiece. The music world has lost an exceptionally talented and forward thinking individual. My love and thoughts to all who knew Steve, and were touched by his music.

Single Memorial Tree

Kit

Planted Trees

Fran Siegel

September 8, 2023

2003 (?) hanging out with Chris Miles and Steve after his inspiring visiting artist lecture at CSULB (students loved Steve- he would later teach several classes) and dinner shortly after my arrival in LA. I remember being startled by the depth honesty and generosity this conversation about the art world and studio was. But this was only the beginning...
In 2008 Steve asked me to participate in dear mr. kaprow (an approach to 18 happenings in 6 parts) at LACE. With Steve's oddball sense of humor he paired me with Brad Eberhard to simultaneously make a double-sided painting- but with our size difference it became slapstick.
Steve had such an admirable range in his work- always curious. And always at a high level.
Sending love to dear Sari, condolences to his family, close friends and our community.

Loren Chasse

September 8, 2023

You know so well the lines the boat makes in the evening.

You might be light years away,
but your constellation stays.

We are your wood and paint now,
your transistors and bells,
Your encoded pages of poetry
and collected photographs.

We are bound by you
in
be
tween.

When we crackle, hiss, and sough,
When we listen at ground level,
It´s a love that finds you singing.

Eve Wood

September 8, 2023

First off, let me say that Steve was one of the most decent humans I have ever known, and decent in a business that can often be mean-spirited and painful. He was the real deal as both a person and an artist. I met Steve years ago as a fellow maker of things, and had the privilege of reviewing several of his amazing shows. One such occasion stands out to me as I was asked to review one of his shows at Susanne Vielmetter, a gallery that had once represented me but had dropped me from their roster in quite a sudden and unceremonious way. Steve was still showing there, and recognized how difficult it would be for me to "go back there" to walk through the gallery in order to write about his show. In true Steve Fashion, he met me outside the gallery and escorted me through his wondrously kinetic world so I would feel a bit more at ease. It was a gesture of kindness and compassion I will never forget.

Lawrence English

September 8, 2023

That smile. The electric interest he had for the world around him and the wonderful universe of opportunity that unlocked for him, and for us. Thank you old friend!

Diane Fine

September 8, 2023

I am so sad to hear of Steve´s passing. He was one of my favorite people in high school. We both hated PE so we would walk slowly around the track together each period, laughing at our very non-PE clothes and trading notes about the latest punk bands and new wave albums. He was a kind, gentle, hilarious person. I ran into him a few times after high school and he was always delightful. I was so excited to hear or read about his amazing music, sound and art installations over the years. I will remember his sweet, self-deprecating smile forever.

Sam Shalabi

September 8, 2023

I discovered Steve's music in the mid 90s and since then have been hooked - his music is so singular and pioneering that even the more ' lower case ' music he pioneered is immediately recognizable..later I began to to discover his visual art and writing and it expanded my perception of an already very deep and visionary artist ..Steve and I had mutual friends- we never met though - and they all confirmed the impression I got from his art of a very kind ,funny razor sharp sensitive mind .my deepest condolences to you and all who knew and love him.His memory and art will be blessing and live on.

Ken Field

September 8, 2023

Sending my sympathies to Steve's family, friends, and collaborators.

Robert Millis

September 8, 2023

Robert Millis

September 8, 2023

Robert Millis

September 8, 2023

Two photos from the last time I saw Steve and Sari--just before the pandemic in early February 2020. I gave Steve a copy of a book I had done full of music from India and the Middle East. I hope he was able to enjoy it, or maybe things had progressed "too far" by then for extended music attention. The photos I really want to find are of an evening I spent at their place in LA many years ago--Sari made a great meal of okinomiyaki, we drank some beer and made silly photographs with the MacBook "Photo Booth" app. That evening has always stuck in my mind. So warm and welcoming, creative and fun...

I wrote an instagram post yesterday...I will repost it here:

"Rummaging through old hard drives looking for memories of Steve Roden who died on September 6, I was struck, so sadly, by how many emails we wrote to each other that ended with lines like "hope we can work on something together again soon" or "hope we will be in the same city soon..." Is there ever enough time? We did work together on his lovely "...i listen to the wind that obliterates my traces" book (with John Hubbard) a project close to my heart. We played as a duet at the Stone in NYC. Climax Golden Twins and Steve played at the Schindler House in LA. I stayed at his place several times. We had great afternoons listening to records with Jon Ward. We exchanged music. Joked. Shared meals. Visited flea markets. He gave me a box of 78rpm records the sleeves of which still have his notes on them. I had one in my hands just yesterday: "Sara Martin" it said, in his distinctive and scrawling handwriting. Steve likely would have worked out an inscrutable and private set of artistic rules to turn all that rummaging into something strangely connected and beautiful. A painting, a series of recordings, something. He was a like-minded friend and was dealt a pretty terrible blow by life--His traces will not be obliterated, but I´m sure he would have wanted us to keep listening to the wind. Thanks, Steve. You were one of a kind and I'm glad our paths crossed.

Max Presneill

September 8, 2023

Remarkable artist, inventive, experimental and quirky. A man of depth and insight, openness and humility. A true loss to the art world.

Chris Miles

September 8, 2023

In my days working as an art critic, the very first review I ever published was about a show by Steve, and it was the very first review ever published about Steve´s work. We had never met at the time, but not long after I was at an event and he introduced himself and thanked me for the review and we became friends. I visited his studio often during those years, and we co-taught a couple of courses at UC Santa Barbara. A few years back, Steve also taught part-time at CSULB where I continue to teach and have so often wished that he was still among our faculty. He was an artist of incredible commitment and vision, and a teacher and person of immense insight, generosity, and kindness. He had so much more to offer the world if only he´d had more years.

Yann Novak

September 8, 2023

Yann Novak

September 8, 2023

Yann Novak

September 8, 2023

Yann Novak

September 8, 2023

I am heartbroken by the passing of Steve Roden. He was a friend, mentor, and inspiration. I would not be working with sound in the way I do if I had not discovered his work in The Wire in 2003. We first met is 2006 and became friends when I moved to LA in 2008. I had the privilege of working with Steve in so many ways: I built him a website, I edited his videos, I organized performances and exhibitions, I shared the stage with him, I helped him sell things, I even got to publish some of his work on my label. In every context he was a humble, kind, and patient friend who treated every opportunity-big or small-with respect, because he cherished every opportunity to create.

He was an amazing, one of a kind person and I feel lucky that he touched so many aspects of my life because his influence will live on in all those things.

Photos:
1. Steve performing on KCHUNG radio when I was hosting for a VOLUME show.

2. Me trying to make myself as small as possible while running video for Steve´s performance inside Cocky Eek´s SPHÆRÆ.

3. Steve performing at Human Resources in front of EJ Hills work for a VOLUME event I helped organize.

Mike Harding

September 8, 2023

Steve was a sweet, gentle, curious and funny man, great company and a huge creative force. In September 2015, with Mark Van Hoen and Simon Scott, Touch visited Mare Island Shoreline Heritage Preserve to play a show in an old ammunition bunker. His set that night filled what was a storage of destruction with positive, defiant sound. He had lugged his full modular synth set up all the way from Pasadena. Steve was a real joy to interview and his set at dublab was a very special event, full of risk-taking and spontaneity. We will miss him.

Asuka Hisa

September 8, 2023

Asuka Hisa

September 8, 2023

Asuka Hisa

September 8, 2023

Asuka Hisa

September 8, 2023

Doug Aitken

September 8, 2023

The Steve I knew was sharp and hilarious, always making me laugh. His humor was irreverent, and he had a healthy disdain for conformity. But that wasn´t all; another side to him was deeply sensitive and in touch with the frequencies of everyday life that we often ignore.

We became friends after I heard "in between noise" in 1996. I called him out of the blue, and he welcomed me over to his flat in Park La Brea, where I was given a tour of his apartment and exposed to his vintage cereal box collection, which was something I could never have imagined. I loved it when he told me about finding one of the vintage ´60s cereal boxes, still completely sealed with cereal inside. I asked him if he ever tried to eat it. Steve said, "I did, and after I poured milk into the bowl of this 50-year-old cereal and placed the spoon into my mouth, the cereal exploded into little pellets of acid, and it started burning my entire mouth."

To me, that story captures Steve´s unique eccentricities. Who else would eat some of the most disgusting vintage processed chemicals while simultaneously making such nuanced art and incredibly sublime, understated music?

Steve was a beautiful kaleidoscope of ideas, compassion, creativity, and contradictions, whom within everything, seemed to reflect in perfect choreography. An incredibly unique friend, Steve, will live inside us all. He has impacted the way we see the world through his unique vision.
Thank you, Steve, for being there!

peace,
Doug Aitken

Mark McNeill

September 7, 2023

Mark McNeill

September 7, 2023

Mark McNeill

September 7, 2023

A generous gentle spirit who could blow your mind with simple gestures that reached the sublime. Thank you Steve.

Loren Chasse

September 7, 2023

My 5th grade students were making these when I learned of Steve's passing. I imagined the music he would make from such a 'score' and assembled this as a sort of map, in the moment, hoping it might help him on his way through the stars. Such a beautiful spaceman!

Ricardo Messina

September 7, 2023

My first contact with Steve was his personal recollection about Harry Bertoia's sonic sculptures, featured on the Wire magazine's "Epiphanies" page. I was so intrigued about Bertoia (whom I knew nothing about) and the author of the piece... His enthusiasm and risky manoeuvres to get to record some of the huge metallic sculptures... I searched for his music (which was impossible to get hold here in Argentina) and thanks to some kind relatives living in Europe was able to receive "The radio" and "Winter couplet". Soon I contacted Steve via e-mail, to which he gracefully answered. We shared our mutual love for Tarkovsky's films, the music of Stephan Micus and the paintings of Fra Angelico. I kept on searching and collecting his releases, and when he finally came to Buenos Aires in 2016 we met in person. I had a small B&W photograph from the early forties of a kid grinning while listening to a huge old radio with big headphones on, which I'd found in a flea market and kept for him. He was delighted and gave me a copy of his then recent album, "Striations". I was drawn by his inquiring spirit, his delicate, spiralling compositions, patiently unfolding and blooming in tiny details... In recent years we lost contact, but I was really touched this morning when I heard of his passing. My condolences to his family & friends.

Susie Wyshak

September 7, 2023

I am so sorry to hear about Steve´s passing. I have lots of high school photos of Steve in his element!

Loren

September 7, 2023

Loren

September 7, 2023

Loren

September 7, 2023

Bertrand Grimault

September 7, 2023

It is with deep sadness that I learn of the passing of Steve Roden, a much-admired artist.
My sincere condolences to Sari, his family and his dearest friends.

Thanks to Meg Linton for her tribute.

I'm writing from Bordeaux, France, a city where we have a special relationship with Steve's work.
I remember the winter evening in 1998 when Franck Laplaine, who had recently set up the Sonoris label, invited me to his home to listen to a cassette sent to him by an American musician calling himself In be tween noise, then unknown in France.
It was a real revelation to listen exclusively and privately to a delicate, bewitching 18'33 piece entitled the radio, which Franck would publish on cd a few months later.
This would be followed by three roots curved to look like stones and, almost miraculously by two boxed sets featuring rare or previously unreleased pieces created by Steve between 1988 and 2008.
Suffice to say, as a fan of Steve's work, I felt privileged to have these records released just a stone's throw from my home.
As a freelance arts programmer, it seemed inconceivable to me not to organize a concert for Steve when he visited Europe in 2014 for a vey short time, accompanied by Stephen Vitiello.
The two of them gave a wonderful concert on February 22, 2014, at Éclats in Bordeaux.
You can listen to it here:
https://vimeo.com/90310038

Thank you Steve for all you have given us and that stays with us, and rest in peace.
We miss you already.
Bertrand

Stephen Vitiello

September 7, 2023

I think that was the last time I saw Steve. Was getting in the taxi and Sari snapped this

TJ Norris

September 7, 2023

TJ Norris

September 7, 2023

TJ Norris

September 7, 2023

I just heard the news, and am completely floored as I had just connected with Steve recently. He loved my book, he was so generous to send me a box set of earlier works. We first met in 2006. One of my favorite memories was including Steve in an exhibition I curated called 'Invisible.Other' (2007) - he created a small edition of a 45RPM single ('one stone. and arcs and ears.') exclusively for the event (he even sent me a specific turntable). Always great in conversation. His spirit is flying high, and I am so fortunate to have had the opportunity to collaborate with him. Big love, TJ Norris

Richard di Santo

September 7, 2023

Steve was a wonderful artist and a generous person - especially in his desire to share traces of how he perceived life, the world, and could link the outside world at large to the most intimate whisper, or to the beatings of a heart. He had a gift for listening and for inspiring so many of us to listen, too. I didn't know him well, but felt enriched just by crossing his path those few times, and by continuing to encounter him through his beautiful sound work, which never ceases to give generously, true to his spirit. Love to you, Steve, and love to all those who will miss you. Forever inbetweennoise.

Richard Chartier

September 7, 2023

Steve was a brilliant sound artist, visual artist, sculptor, installation artist. But beyond that he was one of the most honest, sincere, and kind people I have known. The scope of his work is astounding. He loved to create, it brought him joy. The complexities of his work are beguiling. He was always creating, always making, and always playing.

As I think of Steve and listen to his work today, as always, I think of kindness and joy.

The joy of listening, the joy he had creating these works, and the kindness and humility with which he presented them to the world. Small sonic experiences of great power. His simple suggestion to all: "listen..."

Many condolences to Sari, and the rest of his family, and also to those who´s eyes and ears were drawn to his infinitely fascinating world.

I will miss him dearly.

giorgio magnanensi

September 7, 2023

An imagination and poetry explorer, Steve brough his beautiful energy in Vancouver when we invited hin to present his woek at Vancouver New Music.
We are saddened by his departure but will tresure the power of his vision and energy as a wonderful and everlasting gift, with love, Giorgio Magnanensi, artistic director Vancouver New Music

Christina Kubisch

September 7, 2023

in february 2017 I got thelastpersonal mail from Steve. We had talked about the experience of making sound installations and he wrote:

"yes, i agree as well. installations can be a lot of "pre-work" and even more so, more gear to deal with. to be honest, i would rather work in the studio and making records or CDs. i do like performing live - it´s pretty uncomfortable for me, but it feels honest and it´s nice to share the work with people in the same room."

Sharing experiences with the public was something we both considered of most importance and we often talked about it. The photo was taken in Dortmund, Germany (as far as I remember) in the museum of modern art : steve listens to my soundinstallation "Cloud"

Group of 10 Memorial Trees

Mike Linton and MK McKenna

Planted Trees

Olivia Block

September 7, 2023

Steve's work with field recordings and special attention to quiet and micro sounds were very influential to me and other composers in my generation. Despite his intelligence he was a lovely unpretentious person-always listening.

Rupert Loydell

September 7, 2023

My first contact with Steve was a review copy of the first in be tween noise CD, possibly via Brandon Labelle who played at an event I set up. Since that first review we have been in email contact and numerous CDs, a map/text publication and a small drawing have come my way. The drawing is called Silent, and this is what it feels like today, hearing the news of Steve's death.

Rod Stasick

September 7, 2023

Steve had a very distinctive style that led to a special form of music that many found engaging. I´m forever thankful that he allowed me to be a part of various compilations of this type of music and that he graciously shared his knowledge, for years, with a lot of us on online forums as well as within physical art spaces. I think the most lasting part of his legacy is that he shone a light on the delicate aspects of sound reassuring others that you never needed to be overt in order to communicate beauty. Condolences to his friends and family.

David Grubbs

September 7, 2023

The last (second-to-last?) time I saw Steve was when we played as a trio with David Watson in a parking garage in downtown LA. The three performers set up as far apart from one another as possible -- we were just barely, barely audible to one another -- and the audience responded by shuffling as a nomadic group from one "soloist" to another. Afterward I was sad that I hadn't been able to attend more closely to the subtleties of Steve's performance; it had a particular kind of beauty in being out of reach, but also I wanted to have been closer, I wanted more. And it seemed of a piece with my comparatively few opportunities to spend time with Steve, the two of us on opposite coasts, always wishing for more time.

David Grubbs

September 7, 2023

I first connected with Steve long-distance in the mid-1990s through emails and packages of CDs -- Ralf Wehowsky was the person who put us in touch. As I began to spend more time in Los Angeles on Red Krayola duty, part of the pleasure was getting to see Steve on a semi-regular basis. His way of being always seemed of a piece with his art-making -- gentle, unhurried, human-scale, exploratory, and possessed of a subtle humor.

Robin Rimbaud

September 7, 2023

Three nerdy boys - Michael Raphael on the left, Steve in the middle, and myself on the right hand side, try to look cool in LA in the very early 2000s. We asked a passer-by to take the photo, which as you might imagine in LA was seen as a very suspicious activity indeed. But I think they took one look at us and realised how unthreatening we really were and we have this happy little moment.
Farewell to a very young fellow indeed. No more laughter together but plenty of memories and an astonishing body of work to continue to inspire others

William Basinski

September 6, 2023

James Elaine introduced me to precious Steve in New York when they visited Arcadia. I had just finished Watermusic and didn't know what I was going to do with it and Steve, the angel, gave me a list of 25 names to send the CDRs to and I did...well, that was the right list of names, because I got wonderful responses from Richard Chartier, Taylor Dupree, and everyone on his list and I started to get distribution and that was Steve. Just so generous and smart and darling! Jamie and I are heartbroken to hear the news of the loss of dear Steve.  I was just crying over the phone with Richard Chartier and we send Sari and the family and all of his friends and compadres all over the world deepest condolences, love and prayers.  Steve is free of his troublesome body now.  I think he'll like that!  What a wonderful man! What a brilliant artist!  We will cherish his work and our memories of him in our hearts forever.  All our love, William Basinski and James Elaine

Helen Mirra

September 6, 2023

shanti shanti shanti

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