From what I gather, the intent of a lot of Cage's work was that the listener take a few minutes to observe and contemplate the sounds, natural or man-made, being created spontaneously in their surroundings at that particular moment and place, rather than just consuming a series of precomposed, pre-programmed notes.
Given the increase in the average pace of life since Cage's time, and the increase in the number and variety of distractions and intertainment accessible to modern humans in the developed world, it would seem that opportunities to "detach" in a socially acceptable way are becoming more and more scarce, and thus more and more valuable.
Cage was influenced by Zen teachings and other post-modern notions such as the obliteration of the dualist subject. Reading his famous debut book Silence, one gets the impression that his provocations were done almost in a state of exigency, as a means of speeding up a necessary progression. And, as the article makes a point of, music in his case is perhaps best seen as a metonym for the creative process, and perhaps life, at large.
I think it's interesting to engage in Cage's work with the view of Cage as a technologist. Today, our means of synthesizing sound, imagery and even intelligble content I think dwarf those to which Cage was ever exposed. Cage's urgency, however, is as relevant as ever.
Cage was playing around with numerous ideas. In a way, he was a scientist, asking questions of the seemingly obvious, so we realized it wasn't at all obvious.
For example, most traditionally notated music is timed by meter and tempo. Music is divided into bars of a certain number of beats, and played at a certain number of beats per minute. I saw a Cage piece performed that used a timer rather than meter/tempo. Music was performed as written during intervals specified by the timer. Some sections offered barely enough time to play what was written. Other sections might have three notes in thirty seconds, giving the performer a lot of say in the feel just by when the notes were played. So using Frank Zappa's formula that "Music is a way of decorating time", Cage was playing with the necessary relationship of time and music.
His prepared piano pieces questioned the nature of the instrument. First, question how it is played. Why do you have to play the keys? Can't you reach in and touch the strings directly? What does that sound like? Next, it questioned tone. Pianos are designed to be tonally consistent across the range - in a well-tuned piano, all the notes sound similar except for pitch. By placing objects on the strings, he could make different sections of the piano sound different, opening up new realms for composition.
Cage found many ways to inject randomness (as opposed to improvisation) into his compositions. The works for radios, mentioned in the article, are a good example. The composition is precise, but the results of performance are wildly unpredictable, and not reproducible.
So despite the fame of 4'33", and its intent of making the audience listen to their surroundings, Cage explored the nature of music a great deal more than just that one thing.
In case anyone is turned off by the more experimental and non-musical aspects of Cage I'd like to point out he wrote some very pretty proto-minimalism also:
The Github Audio [0] posting from a few days ago immediately made me think of John Cage. I think he'd have a ball knowing that so much of today's music is algorithmically generated, either based on "user taste" as in smart playlists, or "aleatoric" sources (which Cage called "chance operations") like github events.
[+] [-] ThinkingGuy|9 years ago|reply
Given the increase in the average pace of life since Cage's time, and the increase in the number and variety of distractions and intertainment accessible to modern humans in the developed world, it would seem that opportunities to "detach" in a socially acceptable way are becoming more and more scarce, and thus more and more valuable.
Was John Cage just ahead of his time?
[+] [-] arketyp|9 years ago|reply
I think it's interesting to engage in Cage's work with the view of Cage as a technologist. Today, our means of synthesizing sound, imagery and even intelligble content I think dwarf those to which Cage was ever exposed. Cage's urgency, however, is as relevant as ever.
[+] [-] beat|9 years ago|reply
For example, most traditionally notated music is timed by meter and tempo. Music is divided into bars of a certain number of beats, and played at a certain number of beats per minute. I saw a Cage piece performed that used a timer rather than meter/tempo. Music was performed as written during intervals specified by the timer. Some sections offered barely enough time to play what was written. Other sections might have three notes in thirty seconds, giving the performer a lot of say in the feel just by when the notes were played. So using Frank Zappa's formula that "Music is a way of decorating time", Cage was playing with the necessary relationship of time and music.
His prepared piano pieces questioned the nature of the instrument. First, question how it is played. Why do you have to play the keys? Can't you reach in and touch the strings directly? What does that sound like? Next, it questioned tone. Pianos are designed to be tonally consistent across the range - in a well-tuned piano, all the notes sound similar except for pitch. By placing objects on the strings, he could make different sections of the piano sound different, opening up new realms for composition.
Cage found many ways to inject randomness (as opposed to improvisation) into his compositions. The works for radios, mentioned in the article, are a good example. The composition is precise, but the results of performance are wildly unpredictable, and not reproducible.
So despite the fame of 4'33", and its intent of making the audience listen to their surroundings, Cage explored the nature of music a great deal more than just that one thing.
[+] [-] witty_username|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] andybak|9 years ago|reply
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2wtmQkvX7A
[+] [-] ciconia|9 years ago|reply
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12635247
[+] [-] zer0defex|9 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gnarbarian|9 years ago|reply
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnBFblnKUvc