Originally posted by NatBalance
View Post
Cage, John (1912 - 92)
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View Post. . . As before, I think this is an idea in empirical psychology -- the idea that there is a distinct way of listening to something as music.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostI think the performer -- with props of instrument and score, and the ritual of performance, opening the piano lid etc -- are important because they let the audience know that a special sort of listening is now required. They must listen to the ambient sounds as music.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostRichard B has already answered these questions with the point that not everything falls into neat linguistic categories.
Comment
-
-
One of the problems with discussions like this is that many people seem to view 4'33" as a one-off idea through which they can air their own prejudices, rather than seeing it in the context of Cage's work more generally, the rest of which doesn't appear to interest them at all, including his own extensive writings about music and ideas.
Comment
-
-
I do see 4.33 as a one off idea actually. It is such an extreme example of the composer relinquishing control of the sounds, that I see it as a one off idea.
Some things which I’ve heard said about it, including some of the things Cage may have said, seem to me to be hard to sustain. For example, my own experience with meditation makes me seriously doubt the idea that it can be a form of meditation.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostI do see 4.33 as a one off idea actually. It is such an extreme example of the composer relinquishing control of the sounds, that I see it as a one off idea.
Some things which I’ve heard said about it, including some of the things Cage may have said, seem to me to be hard to sustain. For example, my own experience with meditation makes me seriously doubt the idea that it can be a form of meditation.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostSome things which I’ve heard said about it, including some of the things Cage may have said, seem to me to be hard to sustain. For example, my own experience with meditation makes me seriously doubt the idea that it can be a form of meditation.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by RichardB View PostNote though that Cage did not refer to it as a form of meditation. He uses that word very seldom in his writings and not at all in Silence. As for being a one-off, 4'33" can also easily be seen as a logical extension of the increasing use of silence in preceding works - the second movement of the Concerto for prepared piano and orchestra and the Two Pastorales for prepared piano solo in particular; "relinquishing control of the sounds" is likewise presaged by the Imaginary Landscape pieces that use radios as sound sources. However that might be, I would have thought that anyone really trying to understand what Cage was up to in this composition might start by acquainting themselves with what he himself had to say on the matter, and how it might relate to his other compositions.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View Post
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostThere are rests! Long rests in the second part obvs.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostThere are rests! Long rests in the second part obvs.
Comment
-
-
Here's what Cage said about 4.33
What we hear is determined by our own emptiness, our own receptivity; we receive to the extent we are empty to do so. If one is full or in the course of its performance becomes full of an idea, for example, that this piece is a trick for shock and bewilderment, then it is just that. However, nothing is single or uni-dimensional. This is an action among the ten thousand: it moves in all directions and will be received in unpredictable ways. These will vary from shock and bewilderment to quietness of mind and enlightenment.
If one imagines that I have intended any one of these responses he will have to imagine that I have intended all of them. Something like faith must take over in order that we live affirmatively in the totality we do live in.
With or without my intention, my art is cheapened and made expensive. That is not my concern. A death to myself takes place in composing and in the event of the movement of this composition in the world, a second death to it as mine must take place. Otherwise I shall be in “fear and trembling”, in a perilous situation of my own imagination.
P. S. Incidentally, it was not I but David [Tudor] who decided upon the program. I do not say this to ‘shift the responsibility.’ But that you may be informed of how things actually take place. I composed the piece nearly two years ago. It was performed by David with mixed reactions at Woodstock, N.Y. The piece exists in the repertoire and he chose to program it at the present time. I myself am detached. I am busy with other things, a new composition, concert details of management, this letter, and this springtime.
Comment
-
Comment