Sospeso presents music (sort of) by the great American avant-gardist
at the Sospeso Xponential
concert on Tuesday, November 11, 2003.
The son of an inventor, Cage briefly attended college and then
traveled in Europe for a time. Returning to the United States in
1931, he studied music with Richard Buhlig, Arnold Schoenberg, Adolph
Weiss, and Henry Cowell. While teaching in Seattle (1936-38), he
began organizing percussion ensembles to perform his compositions,
and he began experimenting with works for dance in collaboration
with his longtime friend, the choreographer and dancer Merce Cunningham.
Cage's early compositions were written in the 12-tone method of
his teacher Schoenberg, but by 1939 he had begun to experiment with
increasingly unorthodox instruments such as the "prepared piano"
(a piano modified by objects placed between its strings in order
to produce percussive and otherworldly sound effects). Cage also
experimented with tape recorders, record players, and radios in
his effort to step outside the bounds of conventional Western music
and its concepts of meaningful sound. The concert he gave with his
percussion ensemble at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City
in 1943 marked the first step in his emergence as a leader of the
American musical avant-garde.
In the following years, Cage turned to Zen Buddhism and other
Eastern philosophies and concluded that all the activities that
make up music must be seen as part of a single natural process.
He came to regard all kinds of sounds (and mere noises) as potentially
musical, and he encouraged audiences to take note of all sonic phenomena,
rather than only those elements selected by a composer. To this
end he cultivated the principle of indeterminism in his music. He
used a number of devices to ensure randomness and thus eliminate
any element of personal taste on the part of the performer: unspecified
instruments and numbers of performers, freedom of duration of sounds
and entire pieces, inexact notation, and sequences of events determined
by random means such as by consultation with the Chinese I Ching.
In his later works he extended these freedoms over other media,
so that a performance of HPSCHD (completed 1969) might
include a light show, slide projections, and costumed performers,
as well as the 7 harpsichord soloists and 51 tape machines for which
it was scored.
Among Cage's best-known works are 4'33 (Four Minutes
and Thirty-three Seconds, 1952), a piece in which the performer
or performers remain utterly silent onstage for that amount of time;
Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951), for 12 randomly tuned
radios, 24 performers, and conductor; the Sonatas and Interludes
(1946-48) for prepared piano; Fontana Mix (1958),
a piece based on a series of programmed transparent cards that,
when superimposed, give a graph for the random selection of electronic
sounds; Cheap Imitation (1969), an "impression" of the
music of Erik Satie; and Roaratorio (1979), an electronic
composition utilizing thousands of words found in James Joyce's
novel Finnegans Wake.
From Britannica.