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All Things Cage: Laura Kuhn and John Cage (Audio)

Aug 07, 2021
Hosted by Laura Kuhn, Executive Director of the John Cage Trust.

John Cage was a singularly inventive American composer whose principal contribution to the history of music was his systematic establishment of the principle of indeterminacy: by adapting Zen Buddhist practices to composition and performance, Cage succeeded in bringing both authentic spiritual ideas and a liberating attitude of play to the enterprise of Western art. He developed methods of selecting the components of his pieces by chance, early on through the tossing of coins and later through the use of random number generators on the computer to simulate the coin oracle of the I Ching. Thus, Cage's mature works did not originate in psychology, motive, drama, or literature, but, rather, were just sounds, free of judgments about whether they are musical or not, free of fixed relations, free of memory and taste. His most enduring composition is 4'33" (1952), a work in three movements during which no sounds are intentionally produced. Cage is with us in spirit throughout all of the programs created for “All Things Cage,” but tonight we’ll be listening to an archival recording of his own reading of one of his most noteworthy text works, Lecture on Nothing (1950).