Musica Orbis
Musica Orbis was an American electric chamber music quintet based in Philadelphia, performing between 1972 and 1979. Instrumentation included voices, harp, flute, cello, acoustic and electric bass, drums, marimba, vibes, synthesizer, organ, pump organ, knee harp, wooden recorder, bells, hand percussion, Fender Rhodes, and piano.
Formation and debut
Musica Orbis was founded in late spring 1972 by singer/songwriter Kitty Brazelton and Tom Stephenson on the Swarthmore College campus. Susan Gelletly and Caroline "Caille" Colburn then joined, followed by David Clark, James J. Kelly and William Pastuszek Jr.. The group debuted as a septet on April 15, 1973, in Bond Hall on the Swarthmore College campus.Before their official debut, they opened for jazz-rock Good God and Blue Öyster Cult in Clothier Hall, Swarthmore College in March 1973.
In fall 1973 Musica Orbis reduced from septet to quintet with Brazelton, Clark, Colburn, Gelletly and Stephenson remaining.
In the winter of 1974–1975, the quintet accompanied the Group Motion Multimedia Dance Theater and later performed at Wilma Project, the Painted Bride, The Bijou, Annenberg Center on the Penn campus. The Irvin R. Glazer Theater Collection, Philadelphia Athenaeum, shows a photo of the old Bandbox Theatre with a marquee: "CONCERT BY MUSICA ORBIS/NEW YEARS DAY FIVE PM". The song "William" was composed in 1975 for Musica Orbis by Kitty Brazelton.
1976–1977, New York and Boston
Musica Orbis organized a dawn concert on the Delaware River on June 13, 1976. The band then began to play in New York and Boston, drawing reviews in Billboard, The New York Times, Boston Phoenix and elsewhere.Cambridge's The Real Paper featured Musica Orbis as "Band of the Month" in April 1976.
Writer Mike Baron, Mather House Music Society, Harvard University, hosted the band's sold out May 1 appearance at Sanders Theater in Harvard Square, Cambridge.
Musica Orbis played in the Chapel at St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, off-off-Broadway Cubiculo Theatre and the downtown club CBGB.