home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0454>
- <title>
- Nov. 01, 1993: The Arts & Media:Music
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 87
- MUSIC
- Sounds Of Silence
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>John Cage may be the first important artist whose work one wants
- neither to hear nor see
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL WALSH/LOS ANGELES
- </p>
- <p> There was always the whiff of the charlatan about John Cage.
- The puckish composer, audacious theoretician, stylish writer,
- subtle graphic artist, macrobiotic guru and fearless mushroom
- hunter was the impish personification of the 20th century avant-garde.
- Arch, soft-spoken and witty, Cage was passionately adored by
- his acolytes right up to his death at age 79 in 1992, and continues
- to be regarded by some as a kind of contemporary Beethoven,
- his influence ranging as far afield as Germany and Japan (where
- he is a demigod). And yet: Was there ever a composer of whom
- it can be said that his most representative and perhaps best
- work is one that consists of four minutes and 33 seconds of
- silence?
- </p>
- <p> Not exactly silence. During the course of 4'33", which Cage
- composed (conceived?) in 1952, the pianist sits quietly at the
- keyboard, but nature--in the form of coughs, whispers, rustles,
- the 60-cycle hum of electric lights and the rush of traffic
- outside the concert hall--provides the sonic material. "When
- I was setting out to devote my life to music," Cage wrote in
- 1974, "people distinguished between musical sounds and noises.
- I...fought for noises." So defined, Cage found "music" everywhere:
- in the kitchen, in technology (HPSCHD, a seminal electronic
- collaboration with composer Lejaren Hiller), in numerology and,
- most important, in the 3,000-year-old Chinese Book of Changes
- called the I Ching, whose random, coin-tossed hexagrams formed
- the basis of the aleatoric, or chance, music he so loved.
- </p>
- <p> In writings that spanned the most important creative years of
- his life--his books include Silence, M, Empty Words and X--Cage extended his compositional processes to include other
- media. To satisfy his love of words, he invented "mesostics,"
- in which a given piece of writing (Finnegans Wake was a favorite)
- serves as the raw material for a poem derived by finding and
- capitalizing the letters of the subject's name (James Joyce)
- according to strict rules, arranging the results and reading
- down. Thus:
- </p>
- <p> he Just slumped to throne
- </p>
- <p> so sAiled the stout ship nansy hans.
- </p>
- <p> FroM liff away.
- </p>
- <p> For nattEnlaender.
- </p>
- <p> aS who has come returns.
- </p>
- <p> But are arbitrary randomness, programmed chance operations and
- a nearly value-free definition of what constitutes music a satisfactory
- basis for an aesthetic? Was Cage the great artist his admirers
- proclaim, or was he merely an ersatz Dadaist, proudly parading
- around in his emperor's new clothes as he pursued a whole-grain,
- crackpot anarchism? "Rolywholyover A Circus," on display at
- the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles through Nov. 28
- and due to travel to Houston, New York City, Japan and Philadelphia
- over the next two years, provides some answers.
- </p>
- <p> Planned by Cage before his death, this "circus for museum" consists
- of three galleries. Two of them are devoted to Cage and his
- milieu: his writings, scores (Cage was a calligrapher of almost
- Japanese delicacy) and etchings, as well as the works of authors
- and artists (William S. Burroughs, Marcel Duchamp) whom Cage
- especially prized. The third gallery is Cagian theory in action:
- Cage and show curator Julie Lazar wrote letters to 130 L.A.-area
- museums and private collectors, inviting them to contribute
- works. Twenty-two responded, and the pool of works was then
- processed through chance operations to determine not only the
- contents of the gallery at any given moment, but also the selection
- and positioning of the artworks on the walls. The result is
- a kind of perpetual-motion installation as workers scurry about,
- consulting the computer printouts and relocating Ellsworth Kelly
- or William Anastasi accordingly.
- </p>
- <p> Daringly conceptual? Yes. Worth the trouble? Only in theory.
- And therein lies the conundrum of John Cage.
- </p>
- <p> There is little doubt that Cage was a bold, original thinker
- and a gifted writer. Indeed, the show's biggest revelation may
- be Cage's graceful command of the language; his essay "Where
- Are We Eating? and What Are We Eating?", a gastronomic account
- from 1975 of his barnstorming days with the Merce Cunningham
- dance troupe (this was in Cage's pre-tofu days), is a minor
- classic. His etchings and watercolors too reveal a similarly
- refined craftsmanship. Even his doodles aspire to art: "Plant
- Watering Instructions," salvaged by his longtime friend Cunningham
- from the back of an orchestral manuscript, evokes Miro (another
- Cage favorite) in its use of shapes even as it sensibly provides
- a bird's-eye layout of Cunningham's flat.
- </p>
- <p> Still, there is in all of Cage's work a monochromaticism that
- eventually dulls its intellectual edge. Whether by chance or
- design, the rotating art works in "Rolywholyover"--the title,
- naturally, comes from Finnegans Wake--are largely done up
- in shades of gray, and against the gallery's white walls they
- are as camouflaged as white rabbits in the snow. The mesostics
- too become increasingly gnomic and impenetrable, until they
- turn into downright psychobabble: "rufthandlingconsummation
- tinyRuddyNewpermienting hi himself then pass ahs..." begins
- Muoyce (Music-Joyce), Cage's fifth "write-through" of Wake.
- Joyce did this sort of non-sense first, and better.
- </p>
- <p> Which, in essence, is the problem. Almost everybody did or does
- what Cage did better than Cage did it himself. In Cage's principal
- field of music, Henry Cowell, one of his mentors, was tougher
- and more original; Harry Partch created a wider world of nontraditional
- sound with his microtonal compositions and homemade instruments;
- Toru Takemitsu, Japan's leading contemporary composer, has more
- successfully synthesized Joyce, Japanese traditional music and
- Western forms. Virgil Thomson was a better memoirist, and Arnold
- Schoenberg a better painter.
- </p>
- <p> Finally there is the not at all negligible matter of how the
- music sounds. A common, philistine criticism of avant-garde
- art used to be that small children banging on pots and pans
- or flinging paint at a canvas could have produced exactly the
- same effect. In Cage's case, at least, this is very probably
- true (and he probably would have delighted in it). A concert
- of Cage's noises is, by and large, as much of a room emptier
- as it was when the work was new; Cage may be the first important
- artist whose work one wants neither to hear nor see.
- </p>
- <p> Popular acceptance, or the lack thereof, does not prove or disprove
- an artist's worth. Surely, though, the irony has not escaped
- his vocal band of adherents that for all its devotion to "chance,"
- to musique trouve, to the music of the streets and the spheres,
- Cage's compositions sound as tightly scripted and totalitarian
- as anything by Pierre Boulez or Luigi Nono. It is chance music
- in which nothing is left to chance--as Cage eventually realized.
- In Peter Greenaway's 1983 television documentary on him, Cage
- complains that he has had trouble getting performers to take
- him seriously. "I must find a way to let people be free without
- their being foolish," Cage says, "so that their freedom will
- make them noble." Lenin might have felt the same way.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, Cage's failure was occasioned by his own audacity
- and the intractability of human nature. Confucius, who analyzed
- and annotated the I Ching more than two millenniums ago, summed
- it up in the book's appendix: "Change has an absolute limit."
- Cage's fate was that, by chance, he found it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-