home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!uvaarpa!darwin.sura.net!paladin.american.edu!auvm!AUDUCADM.DUC.AUBURN.EDU!ROLLIDE
- Message-ID: <TEST%92081914375426@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.test
- Date: Wed, 19 Aug 1992 13:32:00 -05
- Sender: TESTing list for NETNEWS <TEST@PSUVM.BITNET>
- Comments: Warning -- original Sender: tag was SBRHYM-L@SBCCVM
- From: Dana Rollins <ROLLIDE@AUDUCADM.DUC.AUBURN.EDU>
- Subject: JOHN CAGE SAGA
- Comments: To: Multiple recipients of list SBRHYM-L <SBRHYM-L@SBCCVM.BITNET>
- Lines: 61
-
- This was originally posted to another list several months before Cage's
- death. As if anyone were interested, I'm trotting it back out now in a
- boorish attempt to capitalize on even the slightest hint of interest in
- something/anything that I may be so foolish as to venture.
-
- *******************ORIGINAL MESSAGE************************************
- For those who may not be familiar with John Cage, let me give you the
- thumbnail synopsis and say he's a famous avant-garde artist, in his
- Seventies now, I should think, and best known for his performance art.
- His work has included shows where (stay with me now) the spontaneity
- of the moment has been carefully considered and "allowed for" in the
- piece- such as the time he had a row of babies in high chairs with
- different colored helium balloons tied to their wrists, extending above
- them to a giant sheet of music paper. Each colored balloon had a
- correspondent orchestra member. When the baby's movements caused the
- balloon to move on the scale, the musician had to play the notes -
- follow the bouncing ball, more or less.
- I am overjoyed to report that I missed this performance because I
- understand that it just never really left the ground.
- Cage's classical work is in much the same vein as Charles Ives'
- (my back is twitching with the flames I could get for that humble
- opinion, but that's my story and I'm sticking to it). He also leaves
- measures blank for the performer to "play anything you want here".
- Anyway... I hope you get the picture.
- Also, he's a mushroom freak - psychedelic and otherwise. And a super
- nice guy.
- Okay, cut to the chase fer Chrissakes!
- Back in 19 what? 74? 75? I was working with the phenomenal Zany
- Murphy Band. One of our two excellent guitarists, Sid Woolfolk, was
- teaching classical guitar at Columbus (Georgia) College and received an
- invitation to attend a party for Cage, who was giving a performance at
- the College that night. Sid turned me on to a lot of the avant garde
- artists and composers, including John Cage, of whom he was a big fan.
- He was overjoyed to get the invitation and was told he could bring
- friends to the party, which was being given by a student/artist of some
- caliber or configuration.
- We went to the performance, which consisted of Stage Left - a table and
- chair, with a desk lamp, a glass of water and the Tibetan Book of the
- Dead. Oh yeah, and a single piece of blank paper on which had been cut
- a hexagram from the I Ching, thrown (presumably) prior to Cage's going
- out to do the performance. Stage Right - a prepared piano (prepared in
- the time-honored tradition of objects affixed to the strikers and
- strings - silver dollars, Barbie doll heads, I Like Ike buttons - you
- get the idea). What Cage did was to sit down at the table, turn on the
- desk lamp and nod to the audience. He then took the aforementioned
- sheet of hexagram and, placing it over a page of the Tibetan Book Of
- The Dead, proceeded to chant only the words and parts-of-words that
- showed through the stencil. And he did this - in a monotone - for
- about thirty minutes, pausing to select a new page now and then. It
- was relentless in its manifest gusto. Then came the historic
- intermission where I overheard a Skeptic threaten to "fuck up his face"
- if he didn't "hurry up and play that damn piano!"
- After intermission, he did indeed play the damned piano, but I
- seriously doubt if the thirsty audient found it worth the wait.
- It was interesting - I'll give it that - but it wasn't jazz.
- Now my story gets up-close and personal - the party!
- Bear with me, I must attend to pressing business, then I will
- continue...
-
- Stop Me If You've Heard This One,
- Felonious
-