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Remembering Susan Alcorn: Bucking The Trends

Courtesy David Lobato
A musical instrument is a sentient being—allow the instrument to tell its own story…
Susan Alcorn
Perhaps more than any other pedal steel guitarist before her, Alcorn took her instrument into musical terrain not usually associated with it. She played country music for twenty years, but she also brought her instrument to bear on contemporary classical music, folk music, jazz and more experimental music.
Born in Allentown, PA in 1953, Alcorn studied piano, viola, trumpet and guitar as a child. Immersed in the blues, country and folk, it was her love of

Muddy Waters
guitar1915 - 1983
At 22 she bought her first pedal steel guitar, having been captivated by a performance in a club the night before. She did not look back for the next fifty years.
For twenty years Alcorn played country music, making her mark in SE Texas, Central Texas and East Texas. It was a genre she had a deep respect for, as she told All About Jazz's Dom Minasi in a 2021 interview: "Country music is deceptively simple, and it's not as easy as a lot of jazz musicians think it is. It's also direct and to the point. There is improvisation, but unlike jazz where a solo may be 96 bars or more, in the country music I played, you had to fit it into maybe 4, 8, or 12 bars."
But Alcorn had always been drawn to more experimental, avant-garde music. Listening to

Frank Zappa
guitar, electric1940 - 1993

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Henry Threadgill
woodwindsb.1944

Steve Lacy
saxophone, soprano1934 - 2004
Much later, in 1990, a meeting with composer and experimentalist

Pauline Oliveros
accordion1932 - 2016
Alcorn was nothing if not open to new musical experiences. In 2019 she recorded Invitation to a Dream (Astral Spirits) with

Joe McPhee
woodwindsb.1939

Ken Vandermark
saxophoneb.1964

Ingrid Laubrock
saxophoneb.1970
Leila Bordreuil
celloThe music of nuevo tango legend

Astor Piazzolla
bandoneon1921 - 1992

Mark Feldman
violin
Mary Halvorson
guitar
Michael Formanek
bass, acousticb.1958

Ryan Sawyer
drumsLatterly, Alcorn worked in a free-improvising trio with clarinetist
Patrick Holmes
clarinet
Catherine Sikora
saxophone, tenor
Michael McNeill
pianob.1982
Other collaborators included

Nate Wooley
trumpetb.1974

Evan Parker
saxophone, sopranob.1944
It was all a far cry from the days when Alcorn would play at rodeos, providing the soundtrack to the cowboys until the bucking horses and bulls would throw them off.
When asked by Dom Minasi if she had any advice for young musicians, Alcorn urged them to respect their instrument: "Treat it like a partner, a loved one, and not like an object to be mastered. A musical instrument is a sentient beingallow the instrument to tell its own story... Nameless and formless, that is the place to be. Ready yourself for the fleeting moments where it descends on you, goes through your instrument, and out to hearts, the audience, the world, and the universe. Now and forever."
Alcorn's own soundtrack to a life well lived came to an end on January 31st, 2025. She was married to photographer David Lobato. Her music, entrancing and bold, still resonates.
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