28 minute read

Safe and Affordable?

Residents of San Antonio’s subsidized housing complexes say they’re fed up with their lack of security

BY MICHAEL KARLIS

Last year, the Alamo City recorded 54% more homicides and 55% more car thefts than in 2021, according to San Antonio Police Department statistics.

However, as those rates rise, an already vulnerable part of the city’s population says it’s grappling with a worrying lack of security.

People living in subsidized low-income housing owned and operated by Opportunity Home — formerly known as the San Antonio Housing Authority — told the Current that the housing agency has abolished security guards at its complexes. What’s more, tenants maintain that their complaints about rising crime at Opportunity Home facilities have largely gone ignored.

Frank “Pancho” Valdez, a San Antonio Tenants Union organizer who’s lived in The Lofts at Marie McGuire for eight years, said instances of robbery, vandalism and drug dealing at the downtown development have skyrocketed in recent months. However, when tenants complain to the property managers, their concerns often fall upon deaf ears, he added.

“We’re treated like inmates, and when we have legitimate grievances, they’re ignored,” Valdez said. “Most people in [Opportunity Home] housing worked most of their lives. It’s not like we’re welfare bums.”

In an email to the Current, Opportunity Home spokesperson Bianca Garcia said the agency stopped hiring security personnel at properties in which the majority of residents are elderly after funds from the pandemic-era CARES Act were exhausted.

“With limited non-federal funds, we have a contracted security company that provides regular patrols throughout our nearly 100 properties,” Garcia said.

Management woes

Tenants at the Lewis Chatham Apartments on San Antonio’s South Side said their concerns about lack of security are compounded by what they said amounts to Opportunity Home’s inability to conduct internal investigations.

Tenant James Hamilton said that in December 2020, he was approached by another resident who pulled a gun on him while he waited at a bus stop located at the apartment complex.

Hamiltin managed to alert a security guard, who was stationed at the complex thanks to funding from the CARES Act. The man who threatened Hamilton then fled the scene, according to a police report obtained by the Current.

Hamilton told the Current he’s unsure whether he’d still be alive if the guard hadn’t been there.

The suspect was ultimately arrested and charged with making a terroristic threat, according to SAPD records. Even though the man ultimately pled guilty to the charges in Bexar County court, Hamilton said Opportunity Home’s internal investigation turned up nothing.

“Even after the guy was convicted, the CEO of [Opportunity Home], Mr. Ed Hinojosa, said there wasn’t evidence that it even happened,” Hamilton said.

The investigation into Hamilton’s run-in with the armed man isn’t the first time Opportunity Home has dropped the ball during an inquiry into an incident at the Chatham Apartments, tenants allege.

Emilio Quinones suffered a stroke eight years ago, which hindered his ability to walk, write and speak clearly, his sister Yolanda Alcorta told the Current.

On March 15, 2022, a tenant whom Chatham residents allege files frequent false police reports accused Quinones of public intoxication and making lewd remarks, according to Opportunity Home paperwork

“He’s not an alcoholic,” Alcorta said. “He had a stroke. He doesn’t walk right, and he doesn’t talk right. But [management] always assumes he’s drunk.”

After the tenant filed the police report, Opportunity Home began the process of evicting Quinones from his apartment, she said.

However, Alcorta — along with residents who witnessed the incident — sought help from Texas RioGrande Legal Aid (TRLA), a nonprofit that offers free legal services. After TRLA intervened, the housing agency dropped the eviction, citing the lack of evidence against Quinones, documents show.

If there had been security on the property, Alcorta said the incident likely would never have made it to court. She said guards would have been familiar with Quinones’ condition and would have stopped management from pursuing an eviction.

Opportunity Home officials said in an email that disputes between neighbors can’t be resolved by security guards.

Focused on Development

Even though Opportunity Home sends third-party security patrols through its complexes, Valdez, Hamilton and Alcorta said their appearances are few and far between.

Resident Maureen Galindo, who lives at the Refugio Place Apartment Homes near Southtown, argues that Opportunity home would have the funds to hire more security if it wasn’t so focused on developing mixed-income housing.

Prior to the early 2000s, Opportunity Home – then SAHA – owned and operated apartment complexes comprising only low-income subsidized housing.

One such example is Victoria Courts, which opened in 1940.

However, the Lavaca-neighborhood complex was demolished in 2000 to make way for a new mixed-income development called Victoria Commons.

The 213-unit master-planned Victoria Commons would be owned and operated by Opportunity Home, but only 20% would be subsidized and set aside for low-income housing. The remaining 169 units would be leased at market rates, according to now-defunct news site the San Antonio Heron.

“[Opportunity Home] isn’t really taking care of its tenants or residents anymore,” said Galindo, a Tenant Union organizer whose master’s thesis was on gentrification. “If you go to the board meetings, so much of their time and energy goes towards these new developments.”

Opportunity Home is diverting funding needed for security and maintenance toward these new developments, Galindo alleges. The new mixed-income developments also increase neighborhoods’ desirability, meaning that rents — even for those living in subsidized housing — go up, she added.

However, in public comments, Opportunity Home officials maintain that mixed-income developments improve the standard of services offered to low-income tenants and reduce crime by preventing high concentrations of poverty.

Garcia said the agency doesn’t funnel funds away from security to fund new developments.

“An ongoing misperception that the organization has the allocated funding in its possession is often formed by those with little, to no, knowledge in housing finance,” she said. “Funds are not readily available and instead are housing credits for new development projects.”

Valdez of the Tenant’s Union said he just wants someone to listen to tenants’ concerns. To that end, his group has spoken to District 1 City Councilman Mario Bravo and plans to meet with U.S. Rep Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, in coming weeks.

Even so, with developers snatching up SA housing properties and citywide rents rising more than 20% last year, according to a report by online real estate marketplace Redfin, Valdez acknowledges that time is running short to get results.

ART

Cam Perennial

March is San Antonio’s Contemporary Art Month, both a celebration of and spotlight for local artists and contemporary artwork within the city. Each year’s festivities include a keystone exhibition developed by a curator from outside of San Antonio dubbed the CAM Perennial. This year’s CAM Perennial is titled “Picking at Scabs,” curated by Gil Rocha from Laredo. Featuring works from both San Antonio and Laredo artists, including Anthony Francis, Juan Carlos Escobedo, Anthony Rundblade, Erika Ordoñez, Gary Sweeney and more, the exhibition is billed as a “metaphor for hereditary injuries” — that is, tales of generational suffering, attempts to heal and accepting the scars left behind. The pieces, which come from artists specializing in media ranging from sculpture and painting to photography and prints, are compiled as varied expressions on social, individual, community and generational wounds. Free, opening reception 5-7 p.m. Wednesday, Mar. 8, on view 1-5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday through Apr. 8, Michael and Noémi Neidorff Art Gallery, Trinity University, One Trinity Place, contemporaryartmonth.org.

— Dalia Gulca

expression through art. $10-$20, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Wednesday and Friday, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, noon-5 p.m. Sunday through July 2, McNay Art Museum, 6000 N. New Braunfels Ave., (210) 824-5368, mcnayart.org. — DG

FRI | 03.10

SPORTS SPURS VS. NUGGETS

In the midst of a franchise record 16-game losing streak, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich offered a frank assessment of his young team’s effort on the defensive end. “Youth’s got nothing to do with it,” he told reporters after a listless 120-110 loss to the Charlotte Hornets. “At some point, you have to take pride in what you are doing execution-wise and competitively, and that starts with defense — and we really suck. That’s on me.” San Antonio’s defense has ranked among the worst in the

WED | 03.08SUN | 07.02

ART

‘WOMANISH: AUDACIOUS, COURAGEOUS, WILLFUL ART’

On view now at the McNay Art Museum, “Womanish” is presented as a second chapter to 2010’s “Neither Model Nor Muse,” a collection featuring works of art made by women that the museum has acquired since its 1954 inception. Now, in this follow-up exhibition of woman-made work, the McNay has compiled a new set of pieces acquired in the years since that pioneering exhibition. “Womanish” showcases more than 70 regional, national and international artists, spanning 90-plus years. Featured artworks include landscapes, abstract works, portraits and more. The title comes from Alice Walker’s definition of the word “womanish” in a 1983 essay and it seeks to surmount the word’s oft-demeaning implications by celebrating the ways women produce league this season, and with less than a month left in a lost campaign, it seems unlikely to make a dramatic improvement. Things don’t get any easier for the Spurs this Friday against league MVP frontrunner Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets. Jokic is averaging an astounding 24 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists for the Nuggets, and will likely collect his third consecutive MVP trophy this summer. Expect another strong showing from Keldon Johnson, who led all scorers with 30 points the last time these two teams met. $12 and up, 7 p.m., AT&T Center, One AT&T Center Parkway, (210) 444-5000, attcenter.com, Bally Sports SW-SA. — M. Solis

FRI | 03.10SAT | 03.11

CLASSICAL MUSIC

Our Planet Live In Concert

A live 44-piece orchestra will bring favorite scenes from the beloved Netflix docuseries Our Planet from TV screens to the big stage, all with the show’s soundtrack composer, Steven Price, conducting. British broadcasting legend and biologist David Attenborough and William Shatner, the Emmy Award-winning actor known for portraying Captain James T. Kirk on Star Trek, will provide onscreen co-narration as striking scenes of the natural world come to life. The live performance will last around two hours with an intermission, and proceeds from the performances will benefit the World Wildlife Fund’s global Our Planet education and awareness initiatives. $36.40-$75.50, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, H-E-B Performance Hall, Tobin Center for the Performing Arts, 100 Auditorium Circle, (210) 223-8624, tobincenter.org. — Macks Cook

FRI | 03.10

Film

Hidden Figures

H-E-B Cinema on Will’s Plaza is bringing the critically acclaimed 2016 drama Hidden Figures back to the screen for one night. Set during the 1960s space race, the film tells the true story of Black female mathematicians Katherine Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), Mary Jackson (Janelle Monáe) and Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer), who worked as human computers to get astronaut John Glenn into orbit. Facing racism and misogyny in addition to the threat of being replaced by machines, the women triumphed by contributing to one of history’s boldest scientific advances. Arrive early at 6:35 p.m. for a lecture from UTSA Physics Professor Kelly Nash to learn more about the incredible women who inspired the award-winning film. Science demonstrations and other activities are scheduled beforehand. Full concessions and bar will be available, and attendees are welcome to bring lawn chairs or blankets, though chairs are also available at the venue. Free, 7:30 p.m., Will Naylor Smith River Walk Plaza, Tobin Center for the Performing Arts, 100 Auditorium Circle, (210) 223-8624, tobincenter.org. — Christianna Davies

SAT | 03.11

SPECIAL EVENT

Creative Confluence

Spirituality, respect for nature and creativity collide at this community event in which San Antonio-area artists celebrate World Water Day. Featured performances at Creative Confluence will include music for dancing, a drum circle, poetry and storytelling, and guests can enjoy snacks from a range of vendors. Creators of all ages can join the fun with hands-on activities such as plant potting, giant bubble blowing and Gyotaku printing of fish, turtles and frogs, courtesy of the Blue Star Arts Collective. Guests can even bring their own bag or T-shirt, and Crooked Arm Printing will silkscreen it with a commemorative image. Free, 3-6 p.m., Confluence Park, 310 W. Mitchell St., celebrationcircle.org. — MC

SAT | 03.11

Special Event Fest Of Tails

The San Antonio Parks Foundation is presenting the latest iteration of this family friendly event celebrating both dogs and kites. In addition to kite demonstrations and family kite flying, the gathering will include live music, food and a variety of vendors, including some selling pet products and treats. What’s more City of San Antonio’s Urban Forestry program will conduct a tree giveaway, visitors will participate in the Tour de Tails bike ride and the longtime favorite Pooch Parade & Costume Contest invites attendees to dress up their furry friends. (Register at saparks.org.) A variety of animal welfare organizations will be on hand to offer pet registration, vaccinations, rescues and more. Free, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., McAllister Park, 13102 Jones Maltsberger Road, saparks.org. — CD

FRI | 03.17 -

SAT | 03.18

SPECIAL EVENT

BUD LIGHT ST. PATRICK’S FESTIVAL AND RIVER PARADE

There’s more to this tradition than dyeing the San Antonio River a slightly brighter shade of green, although spectators can watch that happen on both Friday and Saturday. However, the high point occurs Saturday, when 12 Irish-themed floats carrying bagpipers and other entertainers will drift down for the St. Patrick’s River Parade. The parade will take place at both 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Saturday, hitting the Museum Reach and downtown sections of the River Walk, respectively. Both days, the Patrick’s Day Artisan Show will feature more than 40 artisan vendors selling handmade goods. Free, 3-8 p.m. Friday, 1-6 p.m. Saturday, (river dyeing ar 1 p.m. Firday, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturdsay, thesanantonioriverwalk.com — DG

Reminder:

Although live events have returned, the COVID-19 pandemic is still with us. Check with venues to make sure scheduled events are still happening, and please follow all health and safety guidelines.

SAT | 03.18

ART

Nancy Rubins Celebration

As part of Contemporary Art Month, Ruby City’s Sculpture Garden will celebrate Nancy Rubins, who’s known for her larger-than-life, gravity-defying sculptures. The location is fitting since Rubins’ monumental sculpture, 5,000 lbs. of Sonny’s Airplane Parts, Linda’s Place, and 550 lbs. of Tire-Wire (1997), is permanently installed in the garden. This event, based around STEAM (STEM + arts), will feature Rubins-inspired interactive physics demonstrations from Trinity University’s Physics Department. An artist-led project and an aerial performance by Cirque Aria will round out the afternoon. Rubins will also take part in a March 16 artist talk with curator Sara Softness that will be streamed at 3 p.m. via Facebook Live. Free, 3-5 p.m., Ruby City, 150 Camp St., (210) 227-8400, rubycity.org. — CD

FRI | 03.17 -

SUN | 03.19

COMEDY

DERAY DAVIS

Actor and stand-up comic DeRay Davis is perhaps best known for his

SUN | 03.19

SPECIAL EVENT

YAMATO: THE DRUMMERS OF JAPAN

The youthful energy of Yamato’s performers belies the taiko drumming troupe’s decades of experience. Founded in Japan’s Nara Prefecture in 1993, Yamato has racked up more than 4,000 performances in 54 countries and regions. The group’s lively performances feature original compositions for taiko drums and sometimes showcase other traditional Japanese instruments such as the three-stringed shamisen. Yamato is marking its 30th anniversary with its latest tour, Hinotori: The Wings of the Phoenix. In an interview with Broadway World, Yamato founder and artistic director Masa Ogawa explained his approach to creating each touring show: “Since Taiko is more like music, it seems that I would create a show based on the ears, but I think I probably create a show based more on the eyes, on the scenery I can see between them, and on the energy I feel from them, rather than on the ears.” He also revealed one secret behind the contagious energy of Yamato’s members — everyone runs around 10 kilometers each morning as part of their training. $45.50-$75.50, 8 p.m., H-E-B Performance Hall, Tobin Center for the Performing Arts, 100 Auditorium Circle, (210) 223-8624, tobincenter.org. — Kelly Nelson comedic takes on what it means to grow up Black and poor on Chicago’s South Side, including how to explain why you have “whack-ass shoes” and how to sell crack for your uncle. Similar gritty-yet-hilarious observations — along with humorous takes on the United States’ pervasive racial issues — fill his hit 2017 Netflix Special How to Act Black. Davis’ work beyond stand-up includes appearances in Scary Movie 4, 21 Jump Street and the Fox series Empire. He also has a recurring role as Peaches in the FX series Snowfall Tables for $80-$320, 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. Friday, 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Laugh Out Loud Comedy Club, 618 NW Loop 410, (210) 541-8805, improvtx.com/sanantonio.

— Michael Karlis

SUN | 03.19

SPORTS BRAHMAS VS. RENEGADES

With the best viewership and attendance in the relaunched XFL football league, it’s clear Alamo City sports fans are taking a shine to the Brahmas. Led by retired NFL super champion Hines Ward, the Yellow and Black are taking on the dominant Arlington Renegades at the Alamodome following a three-game road trip. The matchup against the Renegades will be the Brahmas’ first home game since Feb. 19, and it stands to reason that the team is looking forward to playing in front of what’s shaping up to be the most dedicated fan base in the XFL, even if the league’s having trouble racking up big TV numbers. $24 and up, 9 p.m., Alamodome, 100 Montana St., (210) 207-3663, alamodome.com, ESPN

2. — MK

Composer and Catalyst

For decades, Philip Krumm served as the living embodiment of San Antonio’s avant garde

BY BILL BAIRD

Lauded composer Philip Krumm has been at the center of multiple significant art movements. In addition to performing with 20th-century masters and having his own music catalogued in multiple releases, he’s been a decades-long creative catalyst for San Antonio — a metro not always on the cutting edge. Krumm orga- nized the city’s first concerts showcasing “new music” composers such as John Cage, helped drag it kicking and screaming into the psychedelic ’60s and eventually provided a stage for some of its greatest literary minds.

It’s a role the 82-year-old has embraced with a wink and a smile.

“Phil is a genius, a real genius,” says Louis Cabaza, keyboardist for The Children — a band that emerged as San Antonio’s chief psychedelic ’60s export — and later for Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Natalie Cole. “You could almost hear him thinking. I always thought if there were people from outer space — travelers — it’d be him.”

In the late 1950s, while still a teen, Krumm and a fellow San Antonio musician hosted a series of DIY concerts at the fledgling McNay Art Institute, premiering works by John Cage, Richard Maxfield and others now revered as some of the last century’s most significant composers.

Eventually, Krumm went on to work with Cage and other icons — Yoko Ono and Karlheinz Stockhausen among them — and contributed to two of the most significant 1960s art movements, the ONCE Group and Fluxus.

Later, Krumm helped usher in the Alamo City’s 1960s counterculture. He programmed the innovative Youth Pavilion at Hemisfair ’68, founded the city’s first psychedelic lightshow company, managed rock bands and hosted parties at his apartment that were attended by Beat writers Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs.

“The ’60s were amazing,” Krumm says. “It was like Paris in the ’20s. Boundaries breaking down, creativity exploding. Not sure you’ll see anything like it again.”

After the seismic ’60s, Krumm’s life slowed down a bit. But even then, he remained a creative force, running San Antonio bookstores including Clipper Ship Book Store and King William Books. He also helmed the award-winning Musica Nova radio program at long-running classical music station KPACFM.

Still witty and sharp in his eighth decade, Krumm is one of San Antonio’s living links to the giants of the 20th-century avant garde. But for all his brilliance, and all the effort he’s made to move the city ahead, he hasn’t reaped much financial reward.

Krumm is surviving on a modest social security check and living in a portion of the house he inherited from his family. Until recently, was losing his vision. After a year of battling the health system, he’s regained his sight thanks to cataract surgery.

His road hasn’t been an easy one, but this is often the case for those in the vanguard.

The recent inclusion of Krumm’s work in “Jerry Hunt: Transmissions From the Pleroma,” an exhibit of composer-performer Hunt’s sculptures and video at New York’s prestigious Blank Forms Editions, could bring a renewed — and long overdue — focus back to this overlooked icon.

Portrait of the artist

Krumm was born in Baltimore in 1941, the son of a union organizer father and mother who funneled her talents as an aspiring writer into penning ad copy. H.L. Mencken, one of the 20th century’s most famous literary critics, was a family friend. However, due to young Philip’s health problems, the Krumm clan relocated to San Antonio’s more favorable climate.

After a childhood immersed in music — he was a Stravinsky fan by age 5 — the teenaged Krumm became assistant to the librarian for the San Antonio Symphony and overheard rehearsals of innumerable classical works. He also worked for the San Antonio opera and met some of the era’s stars.

Eventually, Krumm’s insatiable musical appetite led him to “new music,” a movement that employed dissonance, chance and electronics to expand classical music’s boundaries. It was often performed in a playful, deliberately confrontational manner.

“Part of the fun of new music was seeing who you could get rid of first,” Krumm said in 2015 to the blog Astronauta Pinguim. “Who would be the biggest chicken? Who would be the first one out? I know I took pride in running people out of the auditorium when I got the chance.”

Partners in crime

Krumm’s early partner in stretching San Antonio’s musical sensibilities was Robert Sheff, later known as “Blue” Gene Tyranny. The late piano prodigy went on to become a respected composer in his own right and toured supporting artists including Iggy Pop.

“He was so brilliant,” Krumm says of Sheff. “Just an astonishing piano player. Could sight read anything — I mean anything — at age 16, and just got better.”

Krumm and Sheff organized a series of new music concerts at the fledgling McNay Art Institute, Texas’ first modern art museum. Eager to jumpstart the series, a fearless Krumm reached out to his hero John Cage directly.

“I got interested in Cage’s stuff and wrote a letter to his Stony Point address. Which, at that time, was just ‘John Cage, Stony Point, New York.’ There were no ZIP codes,” Krumm says. “His publisher sent me a wad of scores.”

Through the McNay concerts, Krumm and Sheff connected with the greatest avant-garde musicians of the era — Terry Riley, Richard Maxfield, La Monte Young and Tom Constanten, the latter of whom later found fame as a member of the Grateful Dead.

“I met the other guys from the Grateful Dead, but I can’t remember their names anymore,” Krumm says with a sly grin.

Those McNay concerts remain unprecedented in Texas music history, according to observers.

San Antonio native and music critic Andy Beta, who has written for Pitchfork and the New York Times, says he was stunned to learn about Krumm’s concert series when he was commissioned to write the liner notes for the composer’s 2003 album Formations.

“Growing up in San Antonio, the McNay was this stuffy institution,” Beta says. “To think that the work of distant luminaries had world premieres down in Texas — staged by two teenagers nonetheless — still feels inspiring. That these two teens took it upon themselves to disrupt the status quo, to startle, to try and shock life into the populace is important ... . And I hope it inspires another Texas teenager to take it upon herself to envision and enact a different present and future.”

Harsh critics

The first guy through the wall always gets bloody, or so it’s said. Given his eagerness to overturn the status quo, Krumm was no exception.

As Krumm began showcasing some of his own works, which relied on dissonance and unconventional scoring techniques, the now-defunct San Antonio Light ran a full-page attack on his work. In the article “Krummy? It’s Simply ‘New Music’,” critic Glenn Tucker excoriated the young creator, even fabricating absurd titles to mock his compositions.

“When young San Antonio composer Philip Krumm sits down to play, some people laugh,” Tucker wrote. “Children usually weep.”

From the perspective of our jaded, seen-itall 2022, it’s difficult to imagine a fledgling composer generating such vitriol, much less any kind of attention in the mainstream press.

Asked about the piece now, Krumm shakes his head.

“What an asshole. Capital ‘A,’ capital ‘H,’” he says of Tucker. “But you have to put up with that kind of stuff if you’re doing really radical art.” Gerald Ashford, a critic at 21

19 the Express-News, also weighed in with the absurdly titled but more sympathetic article “Young S.A. Pioneers: Pair Deny Efforts to Abolish Music.”

“These young men talk a bewildering amount of good sense,” Ashford wrote about Krumm and Sheff. “[They] are not trying to destroy music but only try to extend its scope ... [to] expand the limits of what is to be considered music. And perhaps that is not such a bad idea, if you stop and think about it.”

Already composing challenging new works, Krumm graduated from Jefferson High School in 1960 and entered the St. Mary’s University music program on a full scholarship.

However, more resistance awaited.

“It was a very conservative time,” Krumm says. “There were well-meaning people, but St. Mary’s wasn’t that great in 1960. It’s much better now.”

During one performance on campus, heckling gave way to physical violence.

“I was doing a La Monte Young piano piece and I was under the piano — had to knock on the bottom of it — and some joker shoved a chair into my kneecap pretty hard. Can you imagine somebody caring that much about ... that? That’s just being an asshole. But that’s a lot of what I put up with back then, because it was all brand new!”

Despite the adversities, some understood what Krumm was doing.

His innovative score for a community theater production of The Taming of the Shrew drew admiration. At the urging of theater proprietor Bill Larsen, Krumm sent the score to Ross Lee Finney, then head of the music department at the University of Michigan.

Finney loved it.

Though Finney couldn’t guarantee Krumm a spot in Michigan’s graduate school program, he encouraged the young composer to make the journey. So, with only $39 to his name and a train ticket bought with borrowed money, Krumm arrived in Ann Arbor in late 1961. He was accepted into grad school and awarded a President’s Award grant. His leap into the unknown paid off.

“It was hard to make anything move much down here. But it was good people,” Krumm says. “Going from St. Mary’s to Ann Arbor was like being on a spaceship.”

Music for Clocks’

In Michigan, Krumm finally found a welcome environment for his radical musical approach.

“It was transcendental,” Krumm recalls. “I was in the right place at the right time, and that was the best thing that ever happened to me — being in Ann Arbor.”

Krumm immediately became involved with the ONCE Festival of New Music, a gathering of composers who performed their own works in defiance of unsupportive local institutions — an approach strikingly similar to his own McNay concerts.

ONCE allowed Krumm to work alongside John Cage, who directed a performance of Toshi Ichiyanagi’s “Sapporo.” Cage had Krumm “play” a bicycle, the Japanese avant-garde composer’s favorite means of transportation. Krumm used a bow to draw sounds from the spokes and the wheels.

Krumm premiered several of 23

Celebrate fitness with Fiesta FitFest presented by H-E-B, an official Fiesta event, April 14-16, 2023!

Created by San Antonio Sports, this weekend of fiesta, fitness, fun and friends features L’Étape San Antonio by Tour de France presented by H-E-B, a world-class amateur cycling event, SATX 5k/10k presented by Michelob Ultra, a Fitness Challenge, and the University Health Athletes’ Village & Expo. There will be something for everyone with free access to the festival grounds for spectators and non-stop music and entertainment. Plus, meet Fiesta FitFest Queen, JoJo Garza of Amor Cycle Studio!

Join us as we crown Fiesta’s fittest and burn off some of our Fiesta fun while enjoying the spirit of a traditional Fiesta event with food, libations, and entertainment.

Free class at Amor Cycle Studio with a donation!

21 his own compositions at ONCE, including the well-received “Music for Clocks,” a proto-minimalist composition with a Dada spirit. The stage was filled with clocks, which were the music’s intended audience.

“When the ONCE festival played ‘Music for Clocks,’ it got a good ovation,” Krumm says. “[Experimental composer] David Tudor grabbed me and hugged me and swung me around. David Tudor! He was one of my superheroes. To have one of your superheroes do that? Fuck yeah!”

New World Records released Music from the ONCE Festival, 1961-66 as a massive box set in 2003, and it included “Music for Clocks.” Krumm’s piece received particular attention fromVillage Voice critic Kyle Gann.

“The most fun piece and the only one to slightly foreshadow the minimalism that was soon to break, is Music for Clocks, by Texan Philip Krumm,” Gann wrote.

Sharing stages

By 1962, Krumm had entered the world of his heroes, among them Robert Ashley and John Cage.

“It helped that I was cute,” Krumm says with a chuckle.

These heroes also included La Monte Young, whom Brian Eno later called ‘the grandaddy of us all.’

“The time I met La Monte, he was in the bathtub,” Krumm says. “Very funny man. Wonderful and strange. He was just ... sitting in the bathtub.”

Young was a pioneer of Fluxus, which Dutch critic Harry Ruhé called “the most radical and experimental art movement of the ’60s.” Its interdisciplinary community spread internationally, and creators used it as an opportunity to create experimental works that placed the artistic process ahead of the finished product.

Young’s piece “921,” for example, consisted of the composer banging a kitchen pot 921 times.

“To me, that was one of the best things I ever sat through,” says Krumm, who witnessed a performance of “921” at ONCE Fest.

Krumm also made early contributions to the movement. Some of his works were showcased in the first Fluxus newsletter, and his composition “Patterns” was featured at the first public Fluxus festival in Wiesbaden, Germany. Eventually, Krumm’s piece “List” — a list consisting solely of the word “list” repeated over and over — was included in the Fluxus Codex, a definitive 1988 tome chronicling the movement.

Thanks to a connection with La Monte Young’s girlfriend, poet Diane Wakoski, Krumm performed at Carnegie Hall with Yoko Ono, one of Fluxus’ highest-profile provocateurs. Also on stage was George Brecht, a seminal Fluxus artist whose compositions Krumm had included in his early SA concerts.

“Yoko sat on a toilet in the front of the stage, reading her poetry,” says Krumm of the performance, now considered legendary in new music circles. “Her boyfriend Tony Cox had a microphone backstage by the toilet and, every now and then after Yoko said something, there’d be this monster toilet flush coming through these big speakers. And within that framework was George Brecht, me and Terry Jennings, a great sax player, doing vocables — mouth sounds — with cans tied around our ankles, walking in a circle. It was good avant garde for its time. Good and proper avant garde.”

That same weekend, Krumm made a pilgrimage to the Stony Point, New York home of John Cage, where they shared spiked dandelion tea and Cage’s favored Gauloises cigarettes. In the back of Cage’s station wagon sat an unopened box of his recently published book Silence, one of the seminal texts of experimental music. Cage gifted Krumm a copy.

“I got copy No. 1. Copy No. 1!” says Krumm, his disbelief persisting to this day.

When Krumm asked Cage to write a dedication in the book, Cage doubled over with laughter.

“‘Write in the book?’ he asked. ‘I just wrote the whole book!’” Krumm remembers. “He really was one of the funniest people in the world ... one of the great people of the time.”

At the 1963 Pataphysics Festival, organized by author Roger Shattuck, Krumm met Jerry Hunt, a lifelong friend and avant-garde luminary who later released Krumm’s hauntingly beautiful “Sound Machine” on his Texas Music compilation.

The pair also hosted The Music Hour, a 1964 program on Austin’s public TV station, performing John Cage scores with Ed Vizard, saxophonist for Asleep at the Wheel. Another TV performance from that time, “Sampler,” linked Krumm with Waco native Robert Wilson, who later became an art world superstar with Einstein on the Beach, his operatic collaboration with minimalist composer Philip Glass.

Back to Texas

In summer 1966, Krumm headed to the University of California at Davis to work with yet another giant of experimental music, Karlheinz Stockhausen, whose tape loop experiments were the primary inspiration for The Beatles’ “Tomorrow Never Knows.”

However, this time, Krumm’s great leap fell short: the school had no funding available for him. Krumm stayed in Davis for six months, auditing Stockhausen’s classes, recording his composition “Sound Machine” and performing a well-reviewed concert with future new-age great and Brian Eno collaborator Harold Budd.

“Stockhausen was a bright spot in a difficult time for me,” Krumm told Austin musician and writer Josh Ronsen in 2009. “He took a liking to me ... and invited me to have lunch with him ... . I saw him in concert a few years later ... . I went to talk to him after the concert, told him that I’d driven up from San Antonio to see him. He grasped my hand warmly and said, ‘You are an angel!’”

MBy the early ‘60s, Krumm had entered the world of his heroes. “It helped that I was cute,” he says now.

While at UC Davis, Krumm worked the school’s Buchla synthesizer, one of the first modular versions of the instrument, and made a little money composing music for Volkswagen commercials. Even so, he couldn’t sustain life in California. To save money and care for his parents, he permanently moved back to San Antonio.

After his return, Krumm took an unlikely musical detour by participating — for a paycheck — in Truth of Truths, a Christian rock cantata staged by then-Trinity Baptist Church Pastor Buckner Fanning. Krumm, no big fan of religion, played synthesizer.

“All I had to do was play a little electronic sound behind God’s voice 25

Psychedelic pioneer

By this time the psychedelic ’60s were in full blossom, and Krumm’s artistic wanderlust led him into that nascent scene. Before long, he’d founded San Antonio’s first light-show company, Light Sound Development — which boasted the apt acronym of LSD — with local visionary Charles Winans.

“He was one of SA’s native geniuses,” says Krumm of Winans. “One of the original avant-garde artists here in town.”

LSD provided visuals for the short-lived Mind’s Eye, billed as the first psychedelic nightclub in the Southern United States.

The company also designed the lighting for Hemisfair ’68’s Youth Pavilion, sometimes called Project Y. Beyond that, Krumm also had a hand in programming music for the pavilion, bringing in a range of bands and composers, from the ONCE group to William Russo, a trombonist who pushed the boundaries of jazz by combining it with classical music.

Eventually, Krumm also ended up managing two of San Antonio’s most promising psych bands, The Children and Rachel’s Children. Both bands played the opening of The Mind’s Eye, alongside Texas’ now-legendary and always mind-expanding 13th Floor Elevators.

“They were already named when I found them,” Krumm says of his time shepherding the two musical groups. “‘Manager’ in quotation marks. I didn’t know what I

was doing, but they tolerated me.”

Although Krumm didn’t fancy himself much of a rock-band manager, he fully embraced the mind-expanding side of the era’s music scene.

“I loved acid. Loved it,” he says. “I had a lot at the appropriate time, back in the ’60s, when it was the good stuff. I learned all my psychic lessons and had great respect for it. It never hurt me ... . It was never anything but nice to me. No matter the environment, a bunch of wonderful people or a bunch of monkeys — it always pulled me together. That was the initial effect I got from it — togetherness. It said ‘you’re very sane. Don’t worry about it.’”

Meanwhile, Krumm’s apartment — known as The Bug House due to its location above ABC Pest Control — emerged as a meeting place for the local counterculture. Cassell Webb, who sang for The Children, has

House,” she says. “Met Ginsberg and Bill Burroughs when they were coming through to have a good time in Mexico.”

Sailing on

In the late ’70s, violinist Jane Henry connected with Krumm, who invited her to join CAPASA, a composers group he led with the late San Antonio composer Sarmod Brody. Brody, who led Trinity University’s music department, was a tireless advocate for adventurous music.

“At that time, Phil and Sarmod were cheerleaders,” Henry says. “Connecting people. Very encouraging.”

After meeting Krumm, Henry began hanging out at Clipper Ship, Krumm’s nascent bookstore. It served as a connection point for the city’s boundary-pushing creatives.

“Phil has always had salons,” Henry says. “And Clipper Ship was the hottest bookstore in Texas — pun intended. No air conditioning. Probably never paid a utility bill. But it was wonderful.”

Launched as chain booksellers were consolidating the retail landscape, Clipper Ship stood apart by refusing to carry Harlequin romances, bestsellers or anything remotely mainstream. It emerged as a hub of the city’s literary scene, hosting readings from award-winning writer and filmmaker John Phillip Santos, 2000 Texas Poet Laureate James Hoggard, celebrated Chicana poet Lorna Dee Cervantes and Charles Behlen — one of Krumm’s favorite poets — among many others.

Clipper Ship finally earned Krumm positive local press.

“Philip Krumm’s bookstore is, for some, the last bastion of quality literature,” Express-News scribe Ed Conroy wrote in 1987. “The entire Clipper Ship operation is a continuation of Krumm’s campaign for contemporary arts in San Antonio.”

The effusive 1987 article was a stunning reversal of the snidely dismissive reviews Krumm received for his early concerts.

Patchy legacy

After an extended run, Clipper Ship closed its doors in the early ’90s. Krumm subsequently became a music critic at the San Antonio Light, which shut down in 1993, and a DJ at classical music station KPAC-FM, where his adventurous Musica Nova program won two awards from the Texas Music Association. Sadly, though, his original music has nearly faded into obscurity, with the only recent release being his exceptional composition Formations — a piece written using star charts and performed by longtime collaborator Tyranny. It was released by San Antonio-based Idea Records in 2003.

However, after years of frustrating setbacks, Krumm was finally reintroduced on a national level with the aforementioned ONCE box set. His inclusion in Blank Forms’ Jerry Hunt retrospective, its accompanying book released this year by the prestigious Blank Forms publishing house, may encourage further exploration.

Also, Krumm has finally released new music, Goofy Tunes and Minimalist Melodies, a delightfully bizarre home recording featuring extensive keyboard programming.

“I wasn’t trying to do what I did before,” Krumm says. “Just seeing what I could do with existing systems. I was happy with how it turned out, although it might be kind of amateur-ish.”

So, why does such a groundbreaking artist linger in near obscurity?

In part, it could come down to a lack of accessibility. Many of his early scores were one-offs with no copies made. But observers say Krumm’s confrontational approach also plays a part. His willingness to challenge conventional thinking wasn’t always popular in Texas — and still isn’t.

“As Texas is wont to do, it eradicates any history it deems unpleasant or unsightly,” critic Beta explains. “Growing up in Texas, you can’t help but fall victim to that cultural amnesia. Perhaps that’s why a figure like Phil gets erased.”

But Krumm isn’t dwelling on his lack of recognition.

“San Antonio has certainly had more art and music people in it,” he says with a grin. “But it’s a little quiet right now.”

This article is from: