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Cage

Real Name:
John Milton Cage Jr.
Profile:
John Cage is born at Los Angeles (5 September 1912) and died at New York (12 August 1992).
He left Pomona College early to travel in Europe (1930-31), then studied with Cowell in New York (1933-4) and Schönberg in Los Angeles (1934): his first published compositions, in a rigorous atonal system of his own, date from this period.
In 1937 he moved to Seattle to work as a dance accompanist, and there in 1938 he founded a percussion orchestra; his music now concerned with filling units of time with ostinatos (First Construction in Metal, 1939).
He also began to use electronic devices (variable-speed turntables in lmaginary Landscape n.1, 1939) and invented the 'prepared piano', placing diverse objects between the strings of a grand piano in order to create an effective percussion orchestra under the control of two hands.
He moved to San Francisco in 1939, to Chicago in 1941 and back to New York in 1942, all the time writing music for dance companies (notably for Merce Cunningham), nearly always for prepared piano or percussion ensemble.
There were also major concert works for the new instrument: A Book of Music (1944) and Three Dances (1945) for two prepared pianos, and the Sonatas and Interludes (1948) for one.
During this period Cage became interested in Eastern philosophies, especially in Zen.
Working to remove creative choice from composition, he used coin tosses to determine events (Music of Changes for piano, 1951), wrote for 12 radios (Imaginary Landscape n.4, also 1951) and introduced other indeterminate techniques.
His 4'33" (1952) has no sound added to that of the environment in which it is performed; the Concert for Piano and Orchestra (1958) is an encyclopedia of indeterminate notations.
Yet other works show his growing interest in the theatre of musical performance (Water Music, 1952, for pianist with a variety of non-standard equipment) and in electronics (Imaginary Landscape n.5 for randomly mixed recordings, 1952; Cartridge Music for small sounds amplified in live performance, 1960), culminating in various large-scale events staged as jamborees of haphazardness (HPSCHD for harpsichords, tapes etc, 1969).
The later output is various, including indeterminate works, others fully notated within a very limited range of material, and pieces for natural resources (plants, shells).
Cage also appeared widely in Europe and the USA as a lecturer and performer, having an enormous influence on younger musicians and artists; he wrote several books.
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Discography

Releases:
The Perilous Night (LP)   Avant Records 1973
Variations For Orchestra / Spectra / Correspondences / Atlas Eclipticalis (CD)   Deutsche Grammophon 1994
Untitled (2xCD)   Edition Wandelweiser Records 1996
Music Of Our Time (4xCD, Box)   WERGO 2002
HPSCHD (CD, Album, Ltd)   Electronic Music Foundation 2003
Sonatas & Interludes For Prepared Piano (CD, RE)   Explore Records 2006
String Quartets (CD, Comp)   Deutsche Grammophon  
Appears On:
Alterstill (Album) (2 versions)   UtterPsalm 1995
(Voices) (CD, Album) Song Books Metatron Press 1998
Non-Stop Flight (CD, Album) 4:33, Variations II, 4:33 Music And Arts Programs Of America, Inc. 1998
M.O.O.T. (7")   Columbia  
Tracks Appear On:
Percussion And... (LP, Ltd) A Perilous Night 6th M... Reference Recordings 1977
Unofficial Releases:
Creelpolation 1 (3xCDr) M.O.O.T. - Music Of Ou... Creel Pone 2006
Percussion And... (CDr, Ltd) A Perilous Night 6th M... Nono 2008
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YouTube Videos

John Cage "In a Landscape"
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Reviews & Discussion

Review by slow_d Oct 25, 2005 (edited over 4 years ago)
It is worth noting that Cage's famously note-less 4'33" was not meant to deliver actual silence to the audience, but instead to draw attention to the additional sounds that invariably surround anyone listening to any music at any time. In a performance hall, this would include traffic outside, the building's ventilaiton system, coughing and stirring of audience members, etc.

As Cage himself commented, “There is no such thing as silence. Something is always happening that makes a sound.” To the extent that we use Brian Eno's original definition of "ambient" music as low-volume audio to enhance someone's perception of their surroundings, 4'33" could be seen as an ultimately 'ambient' composition.
Review by jaxxalude Nov 26, 2003
He may not be exclusively "electronic". But the daring and truly groundbreaking work John Cage started to develop in the 1930's set the stage for many things to come. Including his (in)famous piece "4:33", which consisted in 4 minutes and 33 seconds of... silence! Which goes to show that the silences are as important as the sound itself in music. A true visionary!