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Posts tagged with "John Cage"

Listen to the collage "Mureau" by John Cage / Part I

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John Cage: Mureau (An I-Ching determined Collage of Quotes on Music, Sounds & Silence from the Diaries of Henry David Thoreau), Part One


About Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau (July 12, 1817 – May 6, 1862; born David Henry Thoreau) was an American author, development critic, naturalist, transcendentalist, pacifist, tax resister and philosopher who is famous for Walden, on simple living amongst nature, and Civil Disobedience, on resistance to civil government and many other articles and essays.

He was a lifelong abolitionist, delivering lectures that attacked the Fugitive Slave Law while praising the writings of Wendell Phillips and defending the abolitionist John Brown.

Among his lasting contributions were his writings on natural history and philosophy, where he anticipated the methods and findings of ecology and environmental history, two sources of modern day environmentalism. | © Wikipedia



To listen to this recording from the year 1972 (John Cage, speaker) please click here: Mureau, Part One

Watch a performance of "Variations V" by John Cage

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Wikipedia about John Cage

John Milton Cage (1912 – 1992) was an American experimental music composer, writer and visual
artist.

He is most commonly known for his 1952 composition 4'33", whose three movements are performed without playing a single note.

Cage was an early composer of what he called
"chance music" (and what others have decided to
label aleatoric music) — music where some elements are left to be decided by chance; he is also well known for his non-standard use of musical instruments and his pioneering exploration of electronic music.

His works were sometimes controversial, but he
is generally regarded as one of the most important composers of his era, especially in his raising questions about the definition of music. John Cage
put Zen Buddhist beliefs into practice through music.

He described his music as "purposeless play", but "this play is an affirmation of life — not an attempt to bring order out of chaos, nor to suggest improvements in creation, but simply to wake up to the very life we are living, which is so excellent once one gets one’s mind and desires out the way and lets it act of its own accord."

Cage was also an avid amateur mycologist and mushroom collector: he co-founded the New York Mycological Society with three friends. He was a long-term collaborator and romantic partner of choreographer Merce Cunningham. Cage is also known as the inventor of the mesostic, a type of poem. | © Wikipedia


To watch the video please click here:
Variations V with J. Cage, D. Tudor, G. Mumma and C. Brown (choreography by Merce Cunningham)

Watch the orchestral version of 4′33″ by John Cage

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About 4′33″

The premiere of the three-movement 4′33″ was given by David Tudor
on 1952-08-29, at Woodstock, New York as part of a recital of contemporary piano music.

The audience saw him sit at the piano and lift the lid of the piano. Some time later, without having played any notes, he closed the lid. A while after that, again having played nothing, he lifted the lid. And after a period of time, he closed the lid again and rose from the piano.

The piece had passed without a note being played, in fact without Tudor or anyone else on stage having made any deliberate sound, although he timed the lengths on a stopwatch while turning the pages of the score.

Richard Kostelanetz suggests that the very fact that Tudor, a man known for championing experimental music, was the performer, and that Cage, a man known for introducing unexpected non-musical noise into his work, was the composer, would have led the audience to expect unexpected sounds.

Anybody listening intently would have heard them: while the performer produces no deliberately musical sound, there will nonetheless be sounds in the concert hall (just as there were sounds in the anechoic chamber at Harvard). It is these sounds, unpredictable and unintentional, that are to be regarded as constituting the music in this piece. The piece remains controversial to this day, and is seen as challenging the very definition of music.

The length of 4′33″ is in fact not designated by its score. The instructions for the work indicate that it consists of three movements, for each of which the only instruction is "tacet", indicating silence on the part of the performer or performers. The title of the piece in each performance is determined by the length of silence chosen.

Cage chose the length of the famous first premiere performance by chance methods using I Ching models, and later said that it just as easily could have been any other length. There is no evidence supporting the sometimes-made claim that Cage chose the length deliberately, four minutes and thirty-three seconds being 273 seconds, and absolute zero being temperature of −273 °C. | © Wikipedia


To watch the video please click here: 4′33″ given by the BBC Symphony Orchestra

J. Cage & M. Feldman in Conversation, Part 3

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John Cage & Morton Feldman in Conversation, Part 3


John Cage about Morton Feldman in his lecture "Indeterminacy" given in Brussels in 1959

Artists talk a lot about freedom.

So, recalling the expression "free as a bird," Morton Feldman went to a park one day
and spent some time watching our feathered friends.When he came back, he said, "You know? They're not free: they're fighting over bits of food."



To listen to the conversation from the year 1967 please click here: Conversation, Part 3 / Quick Time


To view part 1 and part 2 of this post please click here: Part 1 / Part 2.

Listen to "J. Cage & M. Feldman in Conversation", Part 2

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John Cage & Morton Feldman in Conversation, Part 2


About Morton Feldman

Morton Feldman (1926 - 1987) is best known for his instrumental pieces which are frequently written for unusual groups of instruments, feature isolated, carefully chosen, predominantly quiet sounds, and are often very long. Feldman was born in New York City. He studied piano with Madame Maurina-Press, a pupil of Ferruccio Busoni, and later composition with Wallingford Riegger and Stefan Wolpe. He did not agree with many of the views of these composition teachers, and he spent much of his time simply arguing with them. Feldman was composing at this time, but in a style very different from that with which he would later be associated.

In 1950, Feldman went to hear the New York Philharmonic give a performance of Anton Webern's Symphony. At the concert, he met John Cage, and the two became good friends. Under Cage's influence, Feldman began to write pieces which had no relation to compositional systems of the past, such as the constraints of traditional harmony or the serial technique. He experimented with non-standard systems of musical notation, often using grids in his scores, and specifying how many notes should be played at a certain time, but not which ones. Feldman's experiments with the use of chance in his composition in turn inspired John Cage to write pieces like the Music of Changes, where the notes to be played are determined by consulting the I Ching. See aleatoric music and indeterminate music.

Through Cage, Feldman met many other prominent figures in the New York arts scene, among them Jackson Pollock, Philip Guston, Frank O'Hara and Samuel Beckett. He found inspiration in the paintings of the abstract expressionists, and throughout the 1970s wrote a number of pieces around twenty-minutes in length, including Rothko Chapel (1971, written for the building of the same name which houses paintings by Mark Rothko) and For Frank O'Hara (1973). In 1977, he wrote the opera Neither with words by Samuel Beckett. In 1973, Feldman became the Edgard Varese Professor at the University at Buffalo.

Later, he began to produce his very long works, often in one continuous movement, rarely shorter than half an hour in length and often much longer. These works include Violin and String Quartet (1985, around 2 hours), For Philip Guston (1984, around four hours) and, most extreme, the String Quartet II (1983), which is over five hours long without a break. It was given its first complete performance at Cooper Union, New York City in 1999 by the FLUX Quartet, who issued a recording in 2003 (at 6 hours and 7 minutes). Typically, these pieces do not change in mood throughout and tend to be made up of mostly very quiet sounds. Feldman said himself that quiet sounds had begun to be the only ones that interested him. Feldman married the composer Barbara Monk shortly before his death in 1987 at his home in Buffalo, New York. | © Wikipedia


To listen to this conversation from the year 1967 please click here: Conversation, Part 2 / Quick Time


To view part 1 of this post please click here: Part 1.

Listen to "J. Cage & M. Feldman in Conversation", Part 1

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John Cage & Morton Feldman in Conversation, Part 1






















About John Cage

The most influential and controversial American experimental composer of the 20th century, John Cage was the father of indeterminism, a Zen-inspired aesthetic which expelled all notions of choice from the creative process. Rejecting the most deeply held compositional principles of the past -- logical consequence, vertical sensitivity, and tonality among them -- Cage created a groundbreaking alternative to the serialist method, deconstructing traditions established hundreds and even thousands of years earlier; the end result was a radical new artistic approach which impacted all of the music composed in its wake, forever altering not only the ways in which sounds are created but also how they're absorbed by audiences. Indeed, it's often been suggested that he did to music what Karl Marx did to government -- he leveled it. | © All Music Guide


To listen to this conversation from the year 1967 please click here: Conversation, Part 1 / Quick Time


To view part 2 of this post please click here: Part 2.