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4′33″

4′33″[a] is a modernist composition[b] by American experimental composer John Cage. It was composed in 1952 for any instrument or combination of instruments; the score instructs performers not to play their instruments throughout the three movements. It is divided into three movements,[c] lasting 30 seconds, two minutes and 23 seconds, and one minute and 40 seconds, respectively,[d] although Cage later stated that the movements' durations can be determined by the musician. As indicated by the title, the composition lasts four minutes and 33 seconds and is marked by a period of silence, although ambient sounds contribute to the performance.

4'33"
Modernist composition by John Cage
Original Woodstock manuscript of the composition
Year1952
PeriodModernist music
Duration4 minutes and 33 seconds
MovementsThree
Premiere
DateAugust 29, 1952
PerformersDavid Tudor

4'33" was conceived around 1947–48, while Cage was working on the piano cycle Sonatas and Interludes. Many prior musical pieces were largely composed of silence, and silence played a notable role in his prior work, including Sonatas and Interludes. His studies on Zen Buddhism during the late 1940s about chance music led him to acknowledge the value of silence in providing an opportunity to reflect on one's surroundings and psyche. Recent developments in contemporary art also bolstered Cage's understanding on silence, which he increasingly began to perceive as impossible after Rauschenberg's White Painting was first displayed.

4'33" premiered in 1952 and was met with shock and widespread controversy; many musicologists revisited the very definition of music and questioned whether Cage's work qualified as such. In fact, Cage intended 4'33" to be experimental—to test the audience's attitude to silence and prove that any auditory experience may constitute music, seeing that absolute silence[e] cannot exist. Whilst frequently labelled as four minutes and thirty-three seconds of silence, Cage maintains that the ambient noises heard during the performance contribute to the composition. Since this counters the conventional involvement of harmony and melody in music, many musicologists consider 4'33" to be the birth of noise music, and some have likened it to Dadaist art. 4'33" also embodies the idea of musical indeterminacy, as the silence is subject to the individual's interpretation; thereby, one is encouraged to explore their surroundings and themselves, as stipulated by Lacanianism.

4'33" greatly influenced modernist music, furthering the genres of noise music and silent music, which—whilst still controversial to this day—reverberate among many contemporary musicians. Cage re-explored the idea of silent composition in two later renditions: 0'00" (1962) and One3 (1989). In a 1982 interview, and on numerous other occasions, he stated that 4′33″ was his most important work.[8] The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians describes 4′33″ as Cage's "most famous and controversial creation". In 2013, Dale Eisinger of Complex ranked the composition eighth in his list of the greatest performance art works.[9]

Background edit

The concept edit

 
John Cage in 1988

The first time Cage mentioned the idea of a piece composed entirely of silence was during a 1947 (or 1948) lecture at Vassar College, A Composer's Confessions. At this time, he was working on the cycle for piano Sonatas and Interludes.[10] Cage told the audience that he had "several new desires", one of which was:

to compose a piece of uninterrupted silence and sell it to Muzak Co. It will be three or four-and-a-half minutes long—those being the standard lengths of "canned" music and its title will be Silent Prayer. It will open with a single idea which I will attempt to make as seductive as the color and shape and fragrance of a flower. The ending will approach imperceptibility.[11]

Prior to this, silence had played a major role in several of Cage's works composed before 4′33″. The Duet for Two Flutes (1934), composed when Cage was 22, opens with silence, and silence was an important structural element in some of the Sonatas and Interludes (1946–48), Music of Changes (1951) and Two Pastorales (1951). The Concerto for prepared piano and orchestra (1951) closes with an extended silence, and Waiting (1952), a piano piece composed just a few months before 4′33″, consists of long silences framing a single, short ostinato pattern. Furthermore, in his songs The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs (1942) and A Flower (1950) Cage directs the pianist to play a closed instrument, which may be understood as a metaphor of silence.[12]

However, at the time of its conception, Cage felt that a fully silent piece would be incomprehensible, and was reluctant to write it down: "I didn't wish it to appear, even to me, as something easy to do or as a joke. I wanted to mean it utterly and be able to live with it."[13] Painter Alfred Leslie recalls Cage presenting a "one-minute-of-silence talk" in front of a window during the late 1940s, while visiting Studio 35 at New York University.[14]

Precursors edit

Although he was a pioneer of silent music, Cage was not the first to compose it. Others, especially in the first half of the twentieth century, had already published related work, which possibly influenced Cage. As early as 1907, Ferruccio Busoni delineated the importance of atonality and silence in music:

What comes closest to its original essence in our musical art today are the pause and fermata. Great performance artists and improvisers know how to use this expressive tool to a greater and more extensive extent. The exciting silence between two movements—in this environment, itself, music—is more suggestive than the more definite, but less flexible, sound.[15]

 
Sheet music for Allais' Funeral March, containing no musical notes

An example is the Funeral March for the Obsequies of a Deaf Man (in French: Marche funèbre composée pour les funérailles d'un grand homme sourd) (1897) by Alphonse Allais, consisting of 24 empty measures.[16] Allais was a companion of his fellow composer Erik Satie,[17] and, since Cage admired the latter, the Funeral March may have motivated him to compose 4'33", but he later wrote that he was not aware of Allais' work at the time.[18] Silent compositions of the twentieth century preceding Cage's include the 'In futurum' movement from the Fünf Pittoresken (1919) by Erwin Schulhoff—solely comprising rests—[19] and Yves Klein's Monotone–Silence Symphony (1949), in which the second and fourth movements are bare twenty minutes of silence.[17]

Similar ideas had been envisioned in literature. For instance, Harold Acton's prose fable Cornelian (1928) mentions a musician conducting "performances consisting largely of silence".[20][21] In 1947, jazz musician Dave Tough joked that he was writing a play in which "a string quartet is playing the most advanced music ever written. It's made up entirely of rests ... Suddenly, the viola man jumps up in a rage and shakes his bow at the first violin. 'Lout', he screams, 'you played that last measure wrong'".[22]

Direct influences edit

Zen Buddhism edit

 
Daisetz Suzuki, whose approach to Zen Buddhism influenced Cage

Since the late 1940s, Cage had been studying Zen Buddhism, especially through Japanese scholar Daisetz Suzuki, who introduced the field to the Western World. Thereon, he connected sounds in silence to the notions of "unimpededness and interpenetration".[23] In a 1951/1952 lecture, he defined unimpededness as "seeing that in all of space each thing and each human being is at the center", and interpenetration as the view "that each one of the [things and humans at the center] is moving out in all directions penetrating and being penetrated by every other one no matter what the time or what the space", concluding that "each and every thing in all of time and space is related to each and every other thing in all of time and space".[24]

Cage believed that sounds existed in a state of unimpededness, as each one is not hindered by the other due to them being isolated by silence, but also that they interpenetrate each other, since they work in tandem with each other and 'interact' with the silence. Hence, he thought that music is intrinsically an alternation between sound and silence, especially after his visit to Harvard University's anechoic chamber.[25] He increasingly began to see silence as an integral part of music since it allows for sounds to exist in the first place—to interpenetrate each other. The prevalence of silence in a composition also allowed the opportunity for contemplation on one's psyche and surroundings, reflecting the Zen emphasis on meditation music as means to soothe the mind.[26] As he began to realize the impossibility of absolute silence, Cage affirmed the psychological significance of 'lack of sound' in a musical composition:

I've thought of music as a means of changing the mind ... In being themselves, [sounds] open the minds of people who made them or listened to them to other possibilities that they had previously considered.[27]

In 1951, Cage composed the Concerto for Prepared Piano and Chamber Orchestra, which can be seen as an representation of the concept of interpenetration.[25][28][further explanation needed]

Chance music edit

Cage also explored the concept of chance music—a composition without melodic structure or regular notation.[26] The aforementioned Concerto for Prepared Piano employs the concepts posited in the Ancient Chinese text I Ching.[29][further explanation needed]

Visit to the anechoic chamber edit

 
Cage sitting in Harvard University's anechoic chamber, by which he discovered that absolute silence does not exist, inspiring him to compose 4'33"

In 1951, Cage visited the anechoic chamber at Harvard University. Cage entered the chamber expecting to hear silence, but he later wrote: "I heard two sounds, one high and one low. When I described them to the engineer in charge, he informed me that the high one was my nervous system in operation, the low one my blood in circulation".[30] Cage had gone to a place where he expected total silence, and yet heard sound. "Until I die there will be sounds. And they will continue following my death. One need not fear about the future of music".[31] The realization as he saw it of the impossibility of silence led to the composition of 4′33″.

White Painting edit

Another cited influence for this piece came from the field of the visual arts.[13] Cage's friend and sometimes colleague Robert Rauschenberg had produced, in 1951, a series of white paintings (collectively named White Painting), seemingly "blank" canvases (though painted with white house paint) that in fact change according to varying light conditions in the rooms in which they were hung, the shadows of people in the room and so on. This inspired Cage to use a similar idea, as he later stated, "Actually what pushed me into it was not guts but the example of Robert Rauschenberg. His white paintings ... when I saw those, I said, 'Oh yes, I must. Otherwise I'm lagging, otherwise music is lagging'."[32] In an introduction to an article "On Robert Rauschenberg, Artist, and His Works", John Cage writes: "To Whom It May Concern: The white paintings came first; my silent piece came later."[33]

The composition edit

Premiere and initial reception edit

They missed the point. There's no such thing as silence. What they thought was silence, because they didn't know how to listen, was full of accidental sounds. You could hear the wind stirring outside during the first movement. During the second, raindrops began pattering the roof, and during the third the people themselves made all kinds of interesting sounds as they talked or walked out.

John Cage, on the premiere of 4'33"[3]

The premiere of the three-movement 4′33″ was given by David Tudor on August 29, 1952, in Maverick Concert Hall, Woodstock, New York, as part of a recital of contemporary piano music. The audience saw him sit at the piano and, to mark the beginning of the piece, close the keyboard lid. Some time later he opened it briefly, to mark the end of the first movement. This process was repeated for the second and third movements.[f] Although the audience was enthusiastic about contemporary art, the premiere was met with widespread controversy and scandal,[34] such that Calvin Tomkins notes: "The Woodstock audience considered the piece either a joke or an affront, and this has been the general reaction of most people who have heard it, or heard of it, ever since. Some listeners have been unaware they were hearing it at all".[35]

General reception edit

Music critic Kyle Gann called the piece "one of the most misunderstood pieces of music ever written and yet, at times, one of the avant-garde’s best understood as well". He dismissed the idea that 4′33″ was a joke or a hoax, wrote that the theory of Dada and theater have some justification, and said that for him the composition is a "thought experiment". He concluded that the idea that 4′33″ is a "Zen practice" "may be the most directly fertile suggestion".[36]

Analysis edit

The composition is an indispensable contribution to the Modernist movement[37][38] and formalized noise music as a genre.[39][40] Noise music is seen as the anathema to the traditional view of harmony in music, exploiting random sound patterns 'noise' in the process of making music—the "detritus of the music process".[41] Paul Hegarty notes that: "The silence of the pianist in 4'33" can be understood as the traditional silence of the audience so that it can appreciate the music being played. Music itself is sacrificed, sacrificed to the musicality of the world".[42] For Hegarty, 4′33″, is made up of incidental sounds that represent perfectly the tension between "desirable" sound (properly played musical notes) and undesirable "noise" that make up all noise music.[42] It is made of three movements.[37][38][further explanation needed]

Intentions edit

4′33″ challenges, or rather exploits to a radical extent, the social regiments of the modern concert life etiquette, experimenting on unsuspecting concert-goers to prove an important point. First, the choice of a prestigious venue and the social status of the composer and the performers automatically heightens audience's expectations for the piece. As a result, the listener is more focused, giving Cage's 4′33″ the same amount of attention (or perhaps even more) as if it were Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.[43] Thus, even before the performance, the reception of the work is already predetermined by the social setup of the concert. Furthermore, the audience's behavior is limited by the rules and regulation of the concert hall; they will quietly sit and listen to 4′33″ of ambient noise. It is not easy to get a large group of people to listen to ambient noise for nearly five minutes, unless they are regulated by the concert hall etiquette.

The second point made by 4′33″ concerns duration. According to Cage, duration is the essential building block of all of music. This distinction is motivated by the fact that duration is the only element shared by both silence and sound. As a result, the underlying structure of any musical piece consists of an organized sequence of "time buckets".[44] They could be filled with either sounds, silence or noise; where neither of these elements is absolutely necessary for completeness. In the spirit of his teacher Schoenberg, Cage managed to emancipate the silence and the noise to make it an acceptable or, perhaps, even an integral part of his music composition. 4′33″ serves as a radical and extreme illustration of this concept, asking that if the time buckets are the only necessary parts of the musical composition, then what stops the composer from filling them with no intentional sounds?[45]

 
Marcel Duchamp's Fountain (1917): a hallmark of the Dadaist movement, with which Cage's composition is associated

The third point is that the work of music is defined not only by its content but also by the behavior it elicits from the audience.[43] In the case of Igor Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, this would consist of widespread dissatisfaction leading up to violent riots.[46] In Cage's 4′33″, the audience felt cheated by having to listen to no composed sounds from the performer. Nevertheless, in 4′33″ the audience contributed the bulk of the musical material of the piece. Since the piece consists of exclusively ambient noise, the audience's behavior, their whispers and movements, are essential elements that fill the above-mentioned time buckets.[47]

Above all, 4'33"—in fact, more of an experiment than a composition—is intended to question the very notion of music. Cage believed that "silence is a real note" and "will henceforth designate all the sounds not wanted by the composer".[48] He had the ambition to go beyond what is achievable on a piece of paper by leaving the musical process to chance, inviting the audience to closely monitor the ambient noises characterizing the piece.[48] French musicologist Daniel Charles proposes a related theory; 4′33″ is—resulting from the composer's lack of interference in the piece—a 'happening', since, during the performance, the musician is more of an actor than a 'musician', per se.[49][50] He also notes that it resembles a Duchamp-style found object, due to the fact that it creates art from objects that do not serve an artistic function, as silence is often associated with the opposite of music.[50][51] In fact, Cage's composition draws parallels to the Dadaist movement due to the involvement of 'anti-art' objects into art (music), its apparent nonsensical nature, and blatant defiance of the status quo.[52][53]

Silence edit

Indeed, the perceived silence characterizing Cage's composition is not actually 'silence', but the interference of the ambient sounds made by the audience and environment.[8] To him, any auditory experience containing some degree of sound, and hence can be considered music,[54] countering its frequent label as "four minutes thirty-three seconds of silence".[55][56]

Psychological impact edit

The Lacanian approach implies a profound psychological connection to 4'33", as the individual is invited to ponder their surroundings and psyche.[57] In a 2013 TED talk, psychologist Paul Bloom put forward 4′33″ as one example to show that knowing about the origin of something influences how one formulates an opinion on it. In this case, one can deem the five minutes of silence in Cage's composition as different than five minutes of ordinary silence, as in a library, as they know where this silence originates; hence, they can feel motivated to pay to listen to 4'33", even though it is inherently no different than five minutes of ordinary silence.[58][59]

Surrealist automatism edit

 
An example of an automatic painting

Some musicologists have argued that 4′33″ is an example of surrealist automatism. Since the Romantic Era composers have been striving to produce music that could be separated from any social connections, transcending the boundaries of time and space. In automatism, composers and artists strive to eliminate their role in the creation of work, motivated by the belief that self-expression always includes the infiltration of the social standards—that the individual (including the musician) is subjected to from birth—in artistic truth (the message the musician wishes to convey).[45][60]

Therefore, the only method by which the listener can realize artistic truth involves the separation of the musician from their work. In 4'33", the composer has no impact in his work, as Cage cannot control the ambient sounds detected by the audience. Hence, the composition is automatic since the musician has no involvement in how the listener interprets it.[45]

Indeterminacy edit

A pioneer of musical indeterminacy, Cage defined it as "the ability of a piece to be performed in substantially different ways".[61]

Versions edit

Of the score edit

Several versions of the score exist;[34] the four below are the main samples that could be identified. Their shared quality is the composition's duration of four minutes and thirty-three seconds—reflected in the title '4'33"'—[62] but there is some discrepancy between the lengths of individual movements, specified in different versions of the score.[g][h] The causes of this discrepancy are not currently understood.[34]

Woodstock manuscript and reproduction edit

The original Woodstock manuscript (August 1952) is written in conventional notation and dedicated to David Tudor – the first to perform the piece. It is currently lost, but Tudor did attempt to recreate the original score, reproduced in William Fetterman's book John Cage's Theatre Pieces: Notations and Performances.[66] The reproduction notes that 4'33" can be performed for any instrument or combination of instruments. Regarding tempo, it includes a treble clef staff with a 4/4 time signature, and the beginning of each sentence is identified with Roman numerals and a scale indication: '60 [quarter] = 1/2-inch'. At the end of each sentence, there is information about each movement's duration in minutes and seconds; these are: 'I = 30 seconds', 'II = 2 minutes 23 seconds' and 'III = 1 minute 40 seconds'.[67] Tudor commented: "It's important that you read the score as you're performing it, so there are these pages you use. So you wait, and then turn the page. I know it sounds very straight, but in the end it makes a difference".[68]

Kremen manuscript edit

The Kremen manuscript (1953) is written in graphic, space-time notation—which Cage dubbed "proportional notation"—and dedicated to the American artist Irwin Kremen. The movements of the piece are rendered as space between long vertical lines; a tempo indication is provided (60), and at the end of each movement the time is indicated in minutes and seconds. In page 4, the note '1 PAGE = 7 INCHES = 56″' is included. The same instructions, timing and indications to the reproduced Woodstock manuscript are implemented.[69][70]

First Tacet Edition edit

 
An excerpt from the First Tacet Edition (1960), including the organization of the composition's movements and a personal note typed by Cage describing their duration, dedicated to Irwin Kremen

The so-called First Tacet Edition (or Typed Tacet Edition) (1960) is a typewritten score, originally printed in Edition Peters as EP No. 6777.[62] It lists the three movements using Roman numbers, with the word 'tacet' underneath each. A note by Cage describes the first performance and mentions that "the work may be performed by any instrumentalist or combination of instrumentalists and last any length of time". In doing so, Cage not only regulates the reading of the score, but also determines the identity of the composition.[71][72] Conversely to the initial two manuscripts, Cage notes that the premiere organized the movements into the following durations: 33", 2'40" and 1'20", and adds that the their length "must be found by chance" performance.[73][71] The First Tacet Edition is described in Michael Nyman's book Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond, but is not reproduced.[74]

Second Tacet Edition edit

The so-called Second Tacet Edition (or Calligraphic Tacet Edition) (1986) is the same as the First, except that it is printed in Cage's calligraphy, and the explanatory note mentions the Kremen manuscript.[75] It is also classified as EP No. 6777 (i.e., it carries the same catalog number as the first Tacet Edition).[62] Additionally, a facsimile, reduced in size, of the Kremen manuscript, appeared in July 1967 in Source 1, no. 2:46–54.

Of the composition itself edit

4′33″ No. 2 edit

In 1962, Cage wrote 0′00″, which is also referred to as 4′33″ No. 2. The directions originally consisted of one sentence: "In a situation provided with maximum amplification, perform a disciplined action".[76] At the first performance Cage had to write that sentence. The second performance added four new qualifications to the directions: "the performer should allow any interruptions of the action, the action should fulfill an obligation to others, the same action should not be used in more than one performance, and should not be the performance of a musical composition".[77]

One3 edit

In late 1989, three years before his death, Cage revisited the idea of 4′33″ one last time. He composed One3, the full title of which is One3 = 4′33″ (0′00″) + [G Clef]. As in all of the Number Pieces, 'One' refers to the number of performers required. The score instructs the performer to build a sound system in the concert hall, so that "the whole hall is on the edge of feedback, without actually feeding back". The content of the piece is the electronically amplified sound of the hall and the audience.[78]

Legacy edit

Controversies edit

Plagiarism edit

In July 2002, Cage's heirs sued British singer-songwriter Mike Batt for plagiarism for the 'song' "A One Minute Silence": literally, a minute of silence. To support his crossover ensemble The Planets, he inserted a one-minute pause in their February 2002 album "Classical Graffiti" under the authorship 'Batt/Cage'—[79]supposedly to honor the composer. He was then sued by the Mechanical Copyright Protection Society for "plagiarizing Cage's silence [4'33"].[79]

Initially, Batt said he would defend himself against these accusations, stating that "A One Minute Silence" was "a much better silent piece" and that he was "able to say in one minute what Cage could only say in four minutes and 33 seconds".[80] He eventually reached an out-of-court settlement with the composer's heirs in September 2002 and paid an undisclosed six-figure compensation.[60][81] However, in December 2010, Batt admitted that the alleged legal dispute was a publicity stunt and that he had actually only made a donation of £1,000 to the John Cage Foundation.[81]

Christmas number one campaign edit

In the week leading up to Christmas 2010, a Facebook page was created to encourage residents of the United Kingdom to buy a new rendition of 4′33″,[82] in the hope that it would prevent the winner of the seventh series of The X Factor, Matt Cradle, from topping the UK Singles Chart and becoming the Christmas number one.[83] The page was inspired by a similar campaign the year prior, in which a Facebook page set up by English radio DJ Jon Morter and his then-wife Tracey, prompting people to buy Rage Against the Machine's "Killing in the Name" in the week before Christmas 2009 to make it the Christmas number one.[84] Hence, the 4'33" campaign was dubbed 'Cage Against the Machine'.[85][86] The creators of the Facebook page hoped that reaching number one would promote Cage's composition and "make December 25 'a silent night'."[87]

The campaign received support from several celebrities. It first came into prominence after science writer Ben Goldacre mentioned it on his Twitter profile.[88] Despite many similar campaigns occurring that year, The Guardian journalist Tom Ewing considered 'Cage Against the Machine' "the only effort this year with a hope of [reaching number one]".[89] XFM DJ Eddy Temple-Morris and The Guardian journalist Luke Bainbridge also voiced their support.[90][91] Ultimately, the rendition of 4'33" failed to reach number one, only peaking at number 21 on the charts; the winning song of X Factor instead became Christmas number one of 2010.[92][93]

Notable performances and recordings edit

Due to its unique avant-garde style, many musicians and groups have performed 4'33", featuring in several works such as albums.

  • Frank Zappa recorded a version of the composition as part of the collaborative album A Chance Operation: The John Cage Tribute, released by Koch Entertainment in 1993.[94]
  • Several performances of 4′33″ including a 'techno remix' of the New Waver project were broadcast on Australian radio station ABC Classic FM, as part of a program exploring "sonic responses" to Cage's work.[95] Another of these 'responses' was the rendition named 'You Can Make Your Own Music', recorded by the Swedish electronic band Covenant as part of their 2000 album United States of Mind.[96]
  • On January 16, 2004, at the Barbican Centre in London, the BBC Symphony Orchestra gave the United Kingdom's first orchestral performance of this work, conducted by Lawrence Foster. The performance was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3, and the station faced a unique problem; its emergency system—automatically switching on and playing separate music in a period of perceived silence 'dead air'—interrupted the broadcast, and had to be switched off.[97] On the same day, a tongue-in-cheek version was recorded by the staff of The Guardian.[98]
  • On December 5, 2010, an international simultaneous performance of 4′33″ took place among 200 performers, amateur and professional musicians, and artists. The global orchestra, conducted live by Bob Dickinson, via video link, performed the piece in support of the 'Cage Against The Machine' campaign to bring 4′33″ to 2010 Christmas Number 1 in the UK Singles Chart.[99]
  • On November 17, 2015, the television program The Late Show with Stephen Colbert uploaded a video of the piece being performed by a cat, showing that its musician is not required to be human.[100]
  • In May 2019, Mute Records released a compilation box set entitled STUMM433 featuring interpretations of 4′33″ by more than 50 artists which had collaborated with the record label, including Laibach, Depeche Mode, Cabaret Voltaire, Einstürzende Neubauten, Goldfrapp, Moby, Erasure.[101]
  • On October 31, 2020, the Berlin Philharmonic closed their last concert before a government-mandated COVID-19 related lockdown with a performance of the piece, conducted by Kirill Petrenko, "to draw attention to the plight of artists following the lockdown of cultural institutions".[102]

Notes and references edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Often pronounced simply as 'four thirty-three', but sometimes alternatively as 'four minutes, thirty-three seconds' or 'four minutes and thirty-three seconds'.[1]
  2. ^ The labelling of 4'33" as a 'composition' is controversial, as it is intrinsically silence—the very opposite of music, which is often defined as "sounds organized by humans", at the very least.[2] However, Cage maintains that his piece is not silence, but the combination of ambient noises heard by the audience, which can be deemed 'music'.[3] Therefore, for the sake of consistency, 4'33" can be considered a 'composition'.
  3. ^ Cage divided the composition into three distinct movements,[1] but this is often disregarded; the piece is silence, and a movement is defined as "sections of a work [which] may be distinguished in terms of style, key and tempo".[4] While there is no perceived distinguishment between the three sections, Cage insists that there is, as the variation in ambient sounds between each movement is, in itself, a distinction.[5]
  4. ^ According to a reproduction of the original Woodstock manuscript.[6]
  5. ^ This article distinguishes between 'silence' and 'absolute silence'. 'Silence' is defined as the lack of sounds within the composition itself, while 'absolute silence' is the complete lack of sounds, both within and outside the composition—so, silence in the hall in which 4'33" is performed. Cage insists that no absolute silence can exist; the perceived silence of his composition is, in fact, not absolute, since many ambient sounds can be heard while it is performed.[7]
  6. ^ The actions of Tudor in the first performance are often misdescribed so that the lid is explained as being open during the movements. Cage's handwritten score (produced after the first performance) states that the lid was closed during the movements, and opened to mark the spaces between.
  7. ^ The Woodstock printed program specifies the lengths 30″, 2′23″ and 1′40″, as does the Kremen manuscript, but the latter versions have a distinguished tempo. In the First Tacet Edition, Cage writes that at the premiere the timings were 33″, 2′40″ and 1′20″, and in the Second Tacet Edition, he adds that after the premiere, a copy had been made for Irwin Kremen, in which the lengths of the movements were 30″, 2′23″ and 1′40″.[63] Some later performances would not abide by this duration, as seen in Frank Zappa's 1993 recording on the 1993 double-CD A Chance Operation: The John Cage Tribute, amounting to five minutes and fifty-three seconds.[64]
  8. ^ While Cage specifies three movements incorporated in the piece,[65] some later performances included a different number of movements. An example is the recording by the Hungarian Amadinda Percussion Group, consisting of a recording of ambient outdoor bird song in one movement;[64] Frank Zappa's recording also includes wildly different time bands: '35", 1'05", 2'21", 1'02", and 50"', but the number of movements cannot be identified.[64]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Solomon 2002.
  2. ^ Arnold & Kramer 2023, p. 5.
  3. ^ a b Kostelanetz 2003, p. 70.
  4. ^ Thomsett 2012, p. 135.
  5. ^ Kostelanetz 2003, p. 69–70.
  6. ^ Bormann 2005, p. 194.
  7. ^ Fetterman 1996, p. 71.
  8. ^ a b Kostelanetz 2003, p. 69–70
  9. ^ Eisinger, Dale (April 9, 2013). "The 25 Best Performance Art Pieces of All Time". Complex. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  10. ^ Pritchett, Kuhn & Garrett 2012
  11. ^ Pritchett 1993, pp. 59, 138
  12. ^ Revill 1993, p. 162
  13. ^ a b Revill 1993, p. 164
  14. ^ Stein, Judith (January 1, 2009). "Interview: Alfred Leslie". Art in America. p. 92. Archived from on December 4, 2010. Retrieved October 8, 2010.
  15. ^ Busoni 1916
  16. ^ Allais 1897, pp. 23–26
  17. ^ a b Liu 2017, p. 54
  18. ^ Dickinson 1991, p. 406
  19. ^ Bek 2001
  20. ^ Carpenter 2009, p. 60
  21. ^ "JOHN CAGE; Similar Silence". The New York Times. September 13, 1992. Retrieved February 11, 2024.
  22. ^ "New Jazz: 'All or Nothing at All'". The Washington Post. March 16, 1947. pp. S7.
  23. ^ Pritchett 1993, p. 74
  24. ^ Pritchett 1993, pp. 74–75
  25. ^ a b Pritchett 1993, p. 75
  26. ^ a b Burgan 2003, p. 52
  27. ^ Kostelanetz 2003, p. 42
  28. ^ Nicholls 2002, p. 220
  29. ^ Nicholls 2002, pp. 201–202
  30. ^ . CBC. November 24, 2004. Archived from the original on February 12, 2006.
  31. ^ Cage 1961, p. 8.
  32. ^ Kostelanetz 2003, p. 71.
  33. ^ Cage 1961.
  34. ^ a b c Solomon 2002
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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Arns, Inke and Daniels, Dieter. 2012. Sounds Like Silence. Hartware MedienKunstVerein. Leipzig: Spector Books. ISBN 978-3-940064-41-7
  • Davies, Stephen. 1997. "John Cage's 4′33″: Is it music?" Australasian Journal of Philosophy, vol. 75, no. 4, pp. 448–462. doi:10.1080/00048402.2017.1408664
  • Dodd, Julian. 2017. "What 4′33″ Is". Australasian Journal of Philosophy. doi:10.1080/00048409712348031
  • Garten, Joel. February 20, 2014. Interview With MoMA Curator David Platzker About the New Exhibition on John Cage. The Huffington Post.
  • Katschthaler, Karl. 2016. "Absence, Presence and Potentiality: John Cage's 4′33″ Revisited", pp. 166–179. doi:10.1163/9789004314863_011, in Wolf, Werner and Bernhart, Walter (eds.). Silence and Absence in Literature and Music. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-31485-6
  • Lipov, Anatoly. 2015. "4'33" as the Play of Silent Presence. Stillness, or Anarchy of Silence?" Culture and Art, numbers 4, pp. 436–454, doi:10.7256/2222-1956.2015.4.15062 and 6, pp. 669–686, doi:10.7256/2222-1956.2015.6.16411.

See also edit

External links edit

  • What John Cage's silent symphony really means", BBC News
  • "Radio 3 plays 'silent symphony'", BBC Online. (includes RealAudio sound file)
  • A quiet night out with Cage from the UK Observer
  • The Music of Chance from the UK Guardian newspaper
  • The Sounds of Silence further commentary by Peter Gutmann
  • Video of a 2004 orchestral performance

Audio

  • John Cage's 4′33″ in MIDI, OGG, Au, and WAV formats.
  • John Cage's 4′33″ from National Public Radio's "The 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century" (RealAudio file format)
  • Interview with Kyle Gann about 4'33" on The Next Track podcast

App

  • John Cage's 4′33″ as an iPhone app, published by the John Cage Trust (2014)

modernist, composition, american, experimental, composer, john, cage, composed, 1952, instrument, combination, instruments, score, instructs, performers, play, their, instruments, throughout, three, movements, divided, into, three, movements, lasting, seconds,. 4 33 a is a modernist composition b by American experimental composer John Cage It was composed in 1952 for any instrument or combination of instruments the score instructs performers not to play their instruments throughout the three movements It is divided into three movements c lasting 30 seconds two minutes and 23 seconds and one minute and 40 seconds respectively d although Cage later stated that the movements durations can be determined by the musician As indicated by the title the composition lasts four minutes and 33 seconds and is marked by a period of silence although ambient sounds contribute to the performance 4 33 Modernist composition by John CageOriginal Woodstock manuscript of the compositionYear1952PeriodModernist musicDuration4 minutes and 33 secondsMovementsThreePremiereDateAugust 29 1952PerformersDavid Tudor 4 33 was conceived around 1947 48 while Cage was working on the piano cycle Sonatas and Interludes Many prior musical pieces were largely composed of silence and silence played a notable role in his prior work including Sonatas and Interludes His studies on Zen Buddhism during the late 1940s about chance music led him to acknowledge the value of silence in providing an opportunity to reflect on one s surroundings and psyche Recent developments in contemporary art also bolstered Cage s understanding on silence which he increasingly began to perceive as impossible after Rauschenberg s White Painting was first displayed 4 33 premiered in 1952 and was met with shock and widespread controversy many musicologists revisited the very definition of music and questioned whether Cage s work qualified as such In fact Cage intended 4 33 to be experimental to test the audience s attitude to silence and prove that any auditory experience may constitute music seeing that absolute silence e cannot exist Whilst frequently labelled as four minutes and thirty three seconds of silence Cage maintains that the ambient noises heard during the performance contribute to the composition Since this counters the conventional involvement of harmony and melody in music many musicologists consider 4 33 to be the birth of noise music and some have likened it to Dadaist art 4 33 also embodies the idea of musical indeterminacy as the silence is subject to the individual s interpretation thereby one is encouraged to explore their surroundings and themselves as stipulated by Lacanianism 4 33 greatly influenced modernist music furthering the genres of noise music and silent music which whilst still controversial to this day reverberate among many contemporary musicians Cage re explored the idea of silent composition in two later renditions 0 00 1962 and One3 1989 In a 1982 interview and on numerous other occasions he stated that 4 33 was his most important work 8 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians describes 4 33 as Cage s most famous and controversial creation In 2013 Dale Eisinger of Complex ranked the composition eighth in his list of the greatest performance art works 9 Contents 1 Background 1 1 The concept 1 2 Precursors 1 3 Direct influences 1 3 1 Zen Buddhism 1 3 2 Chance music 1 3 3 Visit to the anechoic chamber 1 3 4 White Painting 2 The composition 2 1 Premiere and initial reception 2 2 General reception 3 Analysis 3 1 Intentions 3 2 Silence 3 3 Psychological impact 3 4 Surrealist automatism 3 5 Indeterminacy 4 Versions 4 1 Of the score 4 1 1 Woodstock manuscript and reproduction 4 1 2 Kremen manuscript 4 1 3 First Tacet Edition 4 1 4 Second Tacet Edition 4 2 Of the composition itself 4 2 1 4 33 No 2 4 2 2 One3 5 Legacy 5 1 Controversies 6 Plagiarism 7 Christmas number one campaign 8 Notable performances and recordings 9 Notes and references 9 1 Explanatory notes 9 2 Citations 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 See also 13 External linksBackground editThe concept edit nbsp John Cage in 1988 The first time Cage mentioned the idea of a piece composed entirely of silence was during a 1947 or 1948 lecture at Vassar College A Composer s Confessions At this time he was working on the cycle for piano Sonatas and Interludes 10 Cage told the audience that he had several new desires one of which was to compose a piece of uninterrupted silence and sell it to Muzak Co It will be three or four and a half minutes long those being the standard lengths of canned music and its title will be Silent Prayer It will open with a single idea which I will attempt to make as seductive as the color and shape and fragrance of a flower The ending will approach imperceptibility 11 Prior to this silence had played a major role in several of Cage s works composed before 4 33 The Duet for Two Flutes 1934 composed when Cage was 22 opens with silence and silence was an important structural element in some of the Sonatas and Interludes 1946 48 Music of Changes 1951 and Two Pastorales 1951 The Concerto for prepared piano and orchestra 1951 closes with an extended silence and Waiting 1952 a piano piece composed just a few months before 4 33 consists of long silences framing a single short ostinato pattern Furthermore in his songs The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs 1942 and A Flower 1950 Cage directs the pianist to play a closed instrument which may be understood as a metaphor of silence 12 However at the time of its conception Cage felt that a fully silent piece would be incomprehensible and was reluctant to write it down I didn t wish it to appear even to me as something easy to do or as a joke I wanted to mean it utterly and be able to live with it 13 Painter Alfred Leslie recalls Cage presenting a one minute of silence talk in front of a window during the late 1940s while visiting Studio 35 at New York University 14 Precursors edit Further information List of silent musical compositions Although he was a pioneer of silent music Cage was not the first to compose it Others especially in the first half of the twentieth century had already published related work which possibly influenced Cage As early as 1907 Ferruccio Busoni delineated the importance of atonality and silence in music What comes closest to its original essence in our musical art today are the pause and fermata Great performance artists and improvisers know how to use this expressive tool to a greater and more extensive extent The exciting silence between two movements in this environment itself music is more suggestive than the more definite but less flexible sound 15 nbsp Sheet music for Allais Funeral March containing no musical notes An example is the Funeral March for the Obsequies of a Deaf Man in French Marche funebre composee pour les funerailles d un grand homme sourd 1897 by Alphonse Allais consisting of 24 empty measures 16 Allais was a companion of his fellow composer Erik Satie 17 and since Cage admired the latter the Funeral March may have motivated him to compose 4 33 but he later wrote that he was not aware of Allais work at the time 18 Silent compositions of the twentieth century preceding Cage s include the In futurum movement from the Funf Pittoresken 1919 by Erwin Schulhoff solely comprising rests 19 and Yves Klein s Monotone Silence Symphony 1949 in which the second and fourth movements are bare twenty minutes of silence 17 Similar ideas had been envisioned in literature For instance Harold Acton s prose fable Cornelian 1928 mentions a musician conducting performances consisting largely of silence 20 21 In 1947 jazz musician Dave Tough joked that he was writing a play in which a string quartet is playing the most advanced music ever written It s made up entirely of rests Suddenly the viola man jumps up in a rage and shakes his bow at the first violin Lout he screams you played that last measure wrong 22 Direct influences edit Zen Buddhism edit nbsp Daisetz Suzuki whose approach to Zen Buddhism influenced Cage Since the late 1940s Cage had been studying Zen Buddhism especially through Japanese scholar Daisetz Suzuki who introduced the field to the Western World Thereon he connected sounds in silence to the notions of unimpededness and interpenetration 23 In a 1951 1952 lecture he defined unimpededness as seeing that in all of space each thing and each human being is at the center and interpenetration as the view that each one of the things and humans at the center is moving out in all directions penetrating and being penetrated by every other one no matter what the time or what the space concluding that each and every thing in all of time and space is related to each and every other thing in all of time and space 24 Cage believed that sounds existed in a state of unimpededness as each one is not hindered by the other due to them being isolated by silence but also that they interpenetrate each other since they work in tandem with each other and interact with the silence Hence he thought that music is intrinsically an alternation between sound and silence especially after his visit to Harvard University s anechoic chamber 25 He increasingly began to see silence as an integral part of music since it allows for sounds to exist in the first place to interpenetrate each other The prevalence of silence in a composition also allowed the opportunity for contemplation on one s psyche and surroundings reflecting the Zen emphasis on meditation music as means to soothe the mind 26 As he began to realize the impossibility of absolute silence Cage affirmed the psychological significance of lack of sound in a musical composition I ve thought of music as a means of changing the mind In being themselves sounds open the minds of people who made them or listened to them to other possibilities that they had previously considered 27 In 1951 Cage composed the Concerto for Prepared Piano and Chamber Orchestra which can be seen as an representation of the concept of interpenetration 25 28 further explanation needed Chance music edit Cage also explored the concept of chance music a composition without melodic structure or regular notation 26 The aforementioned Concerto for Prepared Piano employs the concepts posited in the Ancient Chinese text I Ching 29 further explanation needed Visit to the anechoic chamber edit nbsp Cage sitting in Harvard University s anechoic chamber by which he discovered that absolute silence does not exist inspiring him to compose 4 33 In 1951 Cage visited the anechoic chamber at Harvard University Cage entered the chamber expecting to hear silence but he later wrote I heard two sounds one high and one low When I described them to the engineer in charge he informed me that the high one was my nervous system in operation the low one my blood in circulation 30 Cage had gone to a place where he expected total silence and yet heard sound Until I die there will be sounds And they will continue following my death One need not fear about the future of music 31 The realization as he saw it of the impossibility of silence led to the composition of 4 33 White Painting edit Another cited influence for this piece came from the field of the visual arts 13 Cage s friend and sometimes colleague Robert Rauschenberg had produced in 1951 a series of white paintings collectively named White Painting seemingly blank canvases though painted with white house paint that in fact change according to varying light conditions in the rooms in which they were hung the shadows of people in the room and so on This inspired Cage to use a similar idea as he later stated Actually what pushed me into it was not guts but the example of Robert Rauschenberg His white paintings when I saw those I said Oh yes I must Otherwise I m lagging otherwise music is lagging 32 In an introduction to an article On Robert Rauschenberg Artist and His Works John Cage writes To Whom It May Concern The white paintings came first my silent piece came later 33 The composition editPremiere and initial reception edit They missed the point There s no such thing as silence What they thought was silence because they didn t know how to listen was full of accidental sounds You could hear the wind stirring outside during the first movement During the second raindrops began pattering the roof and during the third the people themselves made all kinds of interesting sounds as they talked or walked out John Cage on the premiere of 4 33 3 The premiere of the three movement 4 33 was given by David Tudor on August 29 1952 in Maverick Concert Hall Woodstock New York as part of a recital of contemporary piano music The audience saw him sit at the piano and to mark the beginning of the piece close the keyboard lid Some time later he opened it briefly to mark the end of the first movement This process was repeated for the second and third movements f Although the audience was enthusiastic about contemporary art the premiere was met with widespread controversy and scandal 34 such that Calvin Tomkins notes The Woodstock audience considered the piece either a joke or an affront and this has been the general reaction of most people who have heard it or heard of it ever since Some listeners have been unaware they were hearing it at all 35 General reception edit Music critic Kyle Gann called the piece one of the most misunderstood pieces of music ever written and yet at times one of the avant garde s best understood as well He dismissed the idea that 4 33 was a joke or a hoax wrote that the theory of Dada and theater have some justification and said that for him the composition is a thought experiment He concluded that the idea that 4 33 is a Zen practice may be the most directly fertile suggestion 36 Analysis editThe composition is an indispensable contribution to the Modernist movement 37 38 and formalized noise music as a genre 39 40 Noise music is seen as the anathema to the traditional view of harmony in music exploiting random sound patterns noise in the process of making music the detritus of the music process 41 Paul Hegarty notes that The silence of the pianist in 4 33 can be understood as the traditional silence of the audience so that it can appreciate the music being played Music itself is sacrificed sacrificed to the musicality of the world 42 For Hegarty 4 33 is made up of incidental sounds that represent perfectly the tension between desirable sound properly played musical notes and undesirable noise that make up all noise music 42 It is made of three movements 37 38 further explanation needed Intentions edit 4 33 challenges or rather exploits to a radical extent the social regiments of the modern concert life etiquette experimenting on unsuspecting concert goers to prove an important point First the choice of a prestigious venue and the social status of the composer and the performers automatically heightens audience s expectations for the piece As a result the listener is more focused giving Cage s 4 33 the same amount of attention or perhaps even more as if it were Beethoven s Ninth Symphony 43 Thus even before the performance the reception of the work is already predetermined by the social setup of the concert Furthermore the audience s behavior is limited by the rules and regulation of the concert hall they will quietly sit and listen to 4 33 of ambient noise It is not easy to get a large group of people to listen to ambient noise for nearly five minutes unless they are regulated by the concert hall etiquette The second point made by 4 33 concerns duration According to Cage duration is the essential building block of all of music This distinction is motivated by the fact that duration is the only element shared by both silence and sound As a result the underlying structure of any musical piece consists of an organized sequence of time buckets 44 They could be filled with either sounds silence or noise where neither of these elements is absolutely necessary for completeness In the spirit of his teacher Schoenberg Cage managed to emancipate the silence and the noise to make it an acceptable or perhaps even an integral part of his music composition 4 33 serves as a radical and extreme illustration of this concept asking that if the time buckets are the only necessary parts of the musical composition then what stops the composer from filling them with no intentional sounds 45 nbsp Marcel Duchamp s Fountain 1917 a hallmark of the Dadaist movement with which Cage s composition is associated The third point is that the work of music is defined not only by its content but also by the behavior it elicits from the audience 43 In the case of Igor Stravinsky s Rite of Spring this would consist of widespread dissatisfaction leading up to violent riots 46 In Cage s 4 33 the audience felt cheated by having to listen to no composed sounds from the performer Nevertheless in 4 33 the audience contributed the bulk of the musical material of the piece Since the piece consists of exclusively ambient noise the audience s behavior their whispers and movements are essential elements that fill the above mentioned time buckets 47 Above all 4 33 in fact more of an experiment than a composition is intended to question the very notion of music Cage believed that silence is a real note and will henceforth designate all the sounds not wanted by the composer 48 He had the ambition to go beyond what is achievable on a piece of paper by leaving the musical process to chance inviting the audience to closely monitor the ambient noises characterizing the piece 48 French musicologist Daniel Charles proposes a related theory 4 33 is resulting from the composer s lack of interference in the piece a happening since during the performance the musician is more of an actor than a musician per se 49 50 He also notes that it resembles a Duchamp style found object due to the fact that it creates art from objects that do not serve an artistic function as silence is often associated with the opposite of music 50 51 In fact Cage s composition draws parallels to the Dadaist movement due to the involvement of anti art objects into art music its apparent nonsensical nature and blatant defiance of the status quo 52 53 Silence edit Indeed the perceived silence characterizing Cage s composition is not actually silence but the interference of the ambient sounds made by the audience and environment 8 To him any auditory experience containing some degree of sound and hence can be considered music 54 countering its frequent label as four minutes thirty three seconds of silence 55 56 Psychological impact edit The Lacanian approach implies a profound psychological connection to 4 33 as the individual is invited to ponder their surroundings and psyche 57 In a 2013 TED talk psychologist Paul Bloom put forward 4 33 as one example to show that knowing about the origin of something influences how one formulates an opinion on it In this case one can deem the five minutes of silence in Cage s composition as different than five minutes of ordinary silence as in a library as they know where this silence originates hence they can feel motivated to pay to listen to 4 33 even though it is inherently no different than five minutes of ordinary silence 58 59 Surrealist automatism edit Further information Surrealist automatism nbsp An example of an automatic painting Some musicologists have argued that 4 33 is an example of surrealist automatism Since the Romantic Era composers have been striving to produce music that could be separated from any social connections transcending the boundaries of time and space In automatism composers and artists strive to eliminate their role in the creation of work motivated by the belief that self expression always includes the infiltration of the social standards that the individual including the musician is subjected to from birth in artistic truth the message the musician wishes to convey 45 60 Therefore the only method by which the listener can realize artistic truth involves the separation of the musician from their work In 4 33 the composer has no impact in his work as Cage cannot control the ambient sounds detected by the audience Hence the composition is automatic since the musician has no involvement in how the listener interprets it 45 Indeterminacy edit Further information Indeterminacy music This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2024 A pioneer of musical indeterminacy Cage defined it as the ability of a piece to be performed in substantially different ways 61 Versions editOf the score edit Several versions of the score exist 34 the four below are the main samples that could be identified Their shared quality is the composition s duration of four minutes and thirty three seconds reflected in the title 4 33 62 but there is some discrepancy between the lengths of individual movements specified in different versions of the score g h The causes of this discrepancy are not currently understood 34 Woodstock manuscript and reproduction edit The original Woodstock manuscript August 1952 is written in conventional notation and dedicated to David Tudor the first to perform the piece It is currently lost but Tudor did attempt to recreate the original score reproduced in William Fetterman s book John Cage s Theatre Pieces Notations and Performances 66 The reproduction notes that 4 33 can be performed for any instrument or combination of instruments Regarding tempo it includes a treble clef staff with a 4 4 time signature and the beginning of each sentence is identified with Roman numerals and a scale indication 60 quarter 1 2 inch At the end of each sentence there is information about each movement s duration in minutes and seconds these are I 30 seconds II 2 minutes 23 seconds and III 1 minute 40 seconds 67 Tudor commented It s important that you read the score as you re performing it so there are these pages you use So you wait and then turn the page I know it sounds very straight but in the end it makes a difference 68 Kremen manuscript edit The Kremen manuscript 1953 is written in graphic space time notation which Cage dubbed proportional notation and dedicated to the American artist Irwin Kremen The movements of the piece are rendered as space between long vertical lines a tempo indication is provided 60 and at the end of each movement the time is indicated in minutes and seconds In page 4 the note 1 PAGE 7 INCHES 56 is included The same instructions timing and indications to the reproduced Woodstock manuscript are implemented 69 70 First Tacet Edition edit nbsp An excerpt from the First Tacet Edition 1960 including the organization of the composition s movements and a personal note typed by Cage describing their duration dedicated to Irwin Kremen The so called First Tacet Edition or Typed Tacet Edition 1960 is a typewritten score originally printed in Edition Peters as EP No 6777 62 It lists the three movements using Roman numbers with the word tacet underneath each A note by Cage describes the first performance and mentions that the work may be performed by any instrumentalist or combination of instrumentalists and last any length of time In doing so Cage not only regulates the reading of the score but also determines the identity of the composition 71 72 Conversely to the initial two manuscripts Cage notes that the premiere organized the movements into the following durations 33 2 40 and 1 20 and adds that the their length must be found by chance performance 73 71 The First Tacet Edition is described in Michael Nyman s book Experimental Music Cage and Beyond but is not reproduced 74 Second Tacet Edition edit The so called Second Tacet Edition or Calligraphic Tacet Edition 1986 is the same as the First except that it is printed in Cage s calligraphy and the explanatory note mentions the Kremen manuscript 75 It is also classified as EP No 6777 i e it carries the same catalog number as the first Tacet Edition 62 Additionally a facsimile reduced in size of the Kremen manuscript appeared in July 1967 in Source 1 no 2 46 54 Of the composition itself edit 4 33 No 2 edit In 1962 Cage wrote 0 00 which is also referred to as 4 33 No 2 The directions originally consisted of one sentence In a situation provided with maximum amplification perform a disciplined action 76 At the first performance Cage had to write that sentence The second performance added four new qualifications to the directions the performer should allow any interruptions of the action the action should fulfill an obligation to others the same action should not be used in more than one performance and should not be the performance of a musical composition 77 One3 edit In late 1989 three years before his death Cage revisited the idea of 4 33 one last time He composed One3 the full title of which is One3 4 33 0 00 G Clef As in all of the Number Pieces One refers to the number of performers required The score instructs the performer to build a sound system in the concert hall so that the whole hall is on the edge of feedback without actually feeding back The content of the piece is the electronically amplified sound of the hall and the audience 78 Legacy editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2024 Controversies edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2024 Plagiarism editIn July 2002 Cage s heirs sued British singer songwriter Mike Batt for plagiarism for the song A One Minute Silence literally a minute of silence To support his crossover ensemble The Planets he inserted a one minute pause in their February 2002 album Classical Graffiti under the authorship Batt Cage 79 supposedly to honor the composer He was then sued by the Mechanical Copyright Protection Society for plagiarizing Cage s silence 4 33 79 Initially Batt said he would defend himself against these accusations stating that A One Minute Silence was a much better silent piece and that he was able to say in one minute what Cage could only say in four minutes and 33 seconds 80 He eventually reached an out of court settlement with the composer s heirs in September 2002 and paid an undisclosed six figure compensation 60 81 However in December 2010 Batt admitted that the alleged legal dispute was a publicity stunt and that he had actually only made a donation of 1 000 to the John Cage Foundation 81 Christmas number one campaign editIn the week leading up to Christmas 2010 a Facebook page was created to encourage residents of the United Kingdom to buy a new rendition of 4 33 82 in the hope that it would prevent the winner of the seventh series of The X Factor Matt Cradle from topping the UK Singles Chart and becoming the Christmas number one 83 The page was inspired by a similar campaign the year prior in which a Facebook page set up by English radio DJ Jon Morter and his then wife Tracey prompting people to buy Rage Against the Machine s Killing in the Name in the week before Christmas 2009 to make it the Christmas number one 84 Hence the 4 33 campaign was dubbed Cage Against the Machine 85 86 The creators of the Facebook page hoped that reaching number one would promote Cage s composition and make December 25 a silent night 87 The campaign received support from several celebrities It first came into prominence after science writer Ben Goldacre mentioned it on his Twitter profile 88 Despite many similar campaigns occurring that year The Guardian journalist Tom Ewing considered Cage Against the Machine the only effort this year with a hope of reaching number one 89 XFM DJ Eddy Temple Morris and The Guardian journalist Luke Bainbridge also voiced their support 90 91 Ultimately the rendition of 4 33 failed to reach number one only peaking at number 21 on the charts the winning song of X Factor instead became Christmas number one of 2010 92 93 Notable performances and recordings edit nbsp John Cage s 4 33 1952 source source track A performance of 4 33 four minutes and thirty three seconds of silence Problems playing this file See media help Due to its unique avant garde style many musicians and groups have performed 4 33 featuring in several works such as albums Frank Zappa recorded a version of the composition as part of the collaborative album A Chance Operation The John Cage Tribute released by Koch Entertainment in 1993 94 Several performances of 4 33 including a techno remix of the New Waver project were broadcast on Australian radio station ABC Classic FM as part of a program exploring sonic responses to Cage s work 95 Another of these responses was the rendition named You Can Make Your Own Music recorded by the Swedish electronic band Covenant as part of their 2000 album United States of Mind 96 On January 16 2004 at the Barbican Centre in London the BBC Symphony Orchestra gave the United Kingdom s first orchestral performance of this work conducted by Lawrence Foster The performance was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 and the station faced a unique problem its emergency system automatically switching on and playing separate music in a period of perceived silence dead air interrupted the broadcast and had to be switched off 97 On the same day a tongue in cheek version was recorded by the staff of The Guardian 98 On December 5 2010 an international simultaneous performance of 4 33 took place among 200 performers amateur and professional musicians and artists The global orchestra conducted live by Bob Dickinson via video link performed the piece in support of the Cage Against The Machine campaign to bring 4 33 to 2010 Christmas Number 1 in the UK Singles Chart 99 On November 17 2015 the television program The Late Show with Stephen Colbert uploaded a video of the piece being performed by a cat showing that its musician is not required to be human 100 In May 2019 Mute Records released a compilation box set entitled STUMM433 featuring interpretations of 4 33 by more than 50 artists which had collaborated with the record label including Laibach Depeche Mode Cabaret Voltaire Einsturzende Neubauten Goldfrapp Moby Erasure 101 On October 31 2020 the Berlin Philharmonic closed their last concert before a government mandated COVID 19 related lockdown with a performance of the piece conducted by Kirill Petrenko to draw attention to the plight of artists following the lockdown of cultural institutions 102 Notes and references editExplanatory notes edit Often pronounced simply as four thirty three but sometimes alternatively as four minutes thirty three seconds or four minutes and thirty three seconds 1 The labelling of 4 33 as a composition is controversial as it is intrinsically silence the very opposite of music which is often defined as sounds organized by humans at the very least 2 However Cage maintains that his piece is not silence but the combination of ambient noises heard by the audience which can be deemed music 3 Therefore for the sake of consistency 4 33 can be considered a composition Cage divided the composition into three distinct movements 1 but this is often disregarded the piece is silence and a movement is defined as sections of a work which may be distinguished in terms of style key and tempo 4 While there is no perceived distinguishment between the three sections Cage insists that there is as the variation in ambient sounds between each movement is in itself a distinction 5 According to a reproduction of the original Woodstock manuscript 6 This article distinguishes between silence and absolute silence Silence is defined as the lack of sounds within the composition itself while absolute silence is the complete lack of sounds both within and outside the composition so silence in the hall in which 4 33 is performed Cage insists that no absolute silence can exist the perceived silence of his composition is in fact not absolute since many ambient sounds can be heard while it is performed 7 The actions of Tudor in the first performance are often misdescribed so that the lid is explained as being open during the movements Cage s handwritten score produced after the first performance states that the lid was closed during the movements and opened to mark the spaces between The Woodstock printed program specifies the lengths 30 2 23 and 1 40 as does the Kremen manuscript but the latter versions have a distinguished tempo In the First Tacet Edition Cage writes that at the premiere the timings were 33 2 40 and 1 20 and in the Second Tacet Edition he adds that after the premiere a copy had been made for Irwin Kremen in which the lengths of the movements were 30 2 23 and 1 40 63 Some later performances would not abide by this duration as seen in Frank Zappa s 1993 recording on the 1993 double CD A Chance Operation The John Cage Tribute amounting to five minutes and fifty three seconds 64 While Cage specifies three movements incorporated in the piece 65 some later performances included a different number of movements An example is the recording by the Hungarian Amadinda Percussion Group consisting of a recording of ambient outdoor bird song in one movement 64 Frank Zappa s recording also includes wildly different time bands 35 1 05 2 21 1 02 and 50 but the number of movements cannot be identified 64 Citations edit a b Solomon 2002 Arnold amp Kramer 2023 p 5 a b Kostelanetz 2003 p 70 Thomsett 2012 p 135 Kostelanetz 2003 p 69 70 Bormann 2005 p 194 Fetterman 1996 p 71 a b Kostelanetz 2003 p 69 70 Eisinger Dale April 9 2013 The 25 Best Performance Art Pieces of All Time Complex Retrieved February 28 2021 Pritchett Kuhn amp Garrett 2012 Pritchett 1993 pp 59 138 Revill 1993 p 162 a b Revill 1993 p 164 Stein Judith January 1 2009 Interview Alfred Leslie Art in America p 92 Archived from the original on December 4 2010 Retrieved October 8 2010 Busoni 1916 Allais 1897 pp 23 26 a b Liu 2017 p 54 Dickinson 1991 p 406 Bek 2001 Carpenter 2009 p 60 JOHN CAGE Similar Silence The New York Times September 13 1992 Retrieved February 11 2024 New Jazz All or Nothing at All The Washington Post March 16 1947 pp S7 Pritchett 1993 p 74 Pritchett 1993 pp 74 75 a b Pritchett 1993 p 75 a b Burgan 2003 p 52 Kostelanetz 2003 p 42 Nicholls 2002 p 220 Nicholls 2002 pp 201 202 A few notes about silence and John Cage CBC November 24 2004 Archived from the original on February 12 2006 Cage 1961 p 8 Kostelanetz 2003 p 71 Cage 1961 a b c Solomon 2002 Bormann 2005 p 200 Gann Kyle April 1 2010 From No Such Thing as Silence John Cage s 4 33 New Music USA newmusicusa org Retrieved April 3 2024 a b Pritchett Kuhn amp Garrett 2012 a b Kostelanetz 2003 p 69 71 86 105 198 218 231 Hegarty 2007 pp 11 12 Priest 2008 p 59 Priest 2008 pp 57 58 a b Hegarty 2007 p 17 a b Taruskin 2009 p 71 Taruskin 2009 p 56 a b c Fiero 1995 pp 97 99 This is what REALLY happened at The Rite of Spring riot in 1913 Classic FM October 15 2018 Retrieved February 9 2024 Harding 2013 pp 78 79 a b Charles 1978 p 261 Charles 1978 p 69 a b Charles 1978 p 262 Gann 2010 p 17 Gann 2010 pp 16 17 74 Skinner Gillis amp Lifson 2012 p 4 Gutmann Peter 1999 John Cage and the Avant Garde The Sounds of Silence Classical Notes Retrieved April 4 2007 Fetterman 1996 p 69 Lienhard 2003 p 254 Pluth amp Zeiher 2019 pp 75 78 Pluth amp Zeiher 2019 pp 75 76 Paul Bloom July 27 2011 The origins of pleasure ted com a b Harris 2005 pp 66 67 Pritchett 1993 p 108 a b c Published score Edition Peters 6777 Fetterman 1996 p 69 80 a b c Fetterman 1996 p 83 Fetterman 1996 p 80 Fetterman 1996 p 74 Bormann 2005 p 194 Fetterman 1996 p 75 Fetterman 1996 p 76 78 Bormann 2005 p 210 a b Bormann 2005 pp 222 223 Fetterman 1996 p 79 Fetterman 1996 p 80 Nyman 1974 p 3 Bormann 2005 pp 225 227 Craenen 2014 p 58 Fetterman 1996 pp 84 89 Fetterman 1996 pp 94 95 a b McCormick Neil December 9 2010 Revealed what really happened when a Womble took on John Cage The Telegraph Archived from the original on December 10 2010 Retrieved February 14 2024 Composer pays for piece of silence CNN September 23 2002 Retrieved February 12 2024 a b Wombles composer Mike Batt s silence legal row a scam BBC December 9 2010 Retrieved February 12 2024 John Cage s 4 33 for Christmas Number One 2010 Facebook December 2009 Retrieved March 1 2021 Gilbert Ben October 4 2010 Cowell s second festive humiliation Yahoo Music Archived from the original on October 18 2010 Retrieved October 28 2010 Sound of silence vies to be Christmas number one The Daily Telegraph London October 16 2010 Archived from the original on October 19 2010 Retrieved October 28 2010 Silence bids for Christmas number one The Irish Times October 15 2010 Archived from the original on October 27 2010 Retrieved October 28 2010 Eaton Andrew October 5 2010 At time of writing Cage Against The Machine has almost 16 000 followers on Facebook JP Scotland on Sunday Retrieved October 28 2010 Campaigners launch bid to make silent track Christmas No1 ahead of X Factor winner Daily Record October 15 2010 Retrieved November 7 2019 Goldacre Ben July 19 2010 John Cage s 4 33 for Xmas Twitter Retrieved October 28 2010 Ewing Tom September 30 2010 John Cage s 4 33 the festive sound of a defeated Simon Cowell The Guardian London Archived from the original on October 7 2010 Retrieved October 28 2010 Temple Morris Eddy October 27 2010 Once more unto the breach dear friends Archived from the original on November 12 2010 Retrieved October 28 2010 Luke Bainbridge December 13 2010 Why I m backing Cage Against the Machine for Christmas No 1 The Guardian London Archived from the original on January 10 2011 Retrieved December 13 2010 Top 40 UK Official Singles Chart Official Charts December 25 2010 Retrieved December 19 2010 Symonds amp Karantonis 2013 p 227 Various A Chance Operation The John Cage Tribute Discogs Retrieved February 10 2024 Kouvaras 2013 Reed 2013 p 43 BBC orchestra silenced at the Barbican and on Radio 3 John Cage Uncaged A weekend of musical mayhem BBC January 12 2004 Retrieved February 12 2024 The sound of silence The Guardian January 16 2004 Retrieved February 12 2004 Lebrecht Norman December 11 2010 We re pitching the silence of John Cage against the noise of Simon Cowell The Daily Telegraph Retrieved December 17 2010 NOLA The Cat Performs John Cage s 4 33 YouTube The Late Show with Stephen Colbert November 17 2015 STUMM433 Mute Records Retrieved February 12 2024 Video Kirill Petrenko conducts 4 33 by John Cage Berliner Philharmoniker November 2 2020 Archived from the original on November 2 2020 Retrieved February 10 2021 Bibliography editAllais Alphonse 1897 Album primo avrilesque Paris France P Ollendorff Arnold Allison E Kramer Jonathan C 2023 What in the World is Music 2nd ed United States Routledge ISBN 9781032341491 Bek Joseph 2001 Erwin Schulhoff In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Bernstein David W Hatch Christopher 2001 Writings through John Cage s Music Poetry and Art Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 04408 4 Bormann Hans Friedrich 2005 Verschwiegene Stille John Cages performative Asthetik Secretive Silence John Cage s Performative Aesthetics in German Paderborn Germany Fink Wilhelm GmbH Co KG ISBN 978 3 7705 4147 8 Burgan Michael 2003 Buddhist Faith in America New York City Facts on File Inc ISBN 0 8160 4988 2 Busoni Ferruccio 1916 Entwurf einer neuen Asthetik der Tonkunst Sketch of a New Aesthetic of Music in German Leipzig Germany Insel Verlag Cage John 1961 Silence Lectures and Writings Middletown Connecticut Wesleyan University Press Carpenter Humphrey 2009 The Brideshead Generation Evelyn Waugh and His Friends United States Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0571248339 Craenen Paul 2014 Composing under the Skin The Music making Body at the Composer s Desk Leuven Belgium Leuven University Press ISBN 978 9058679741 Charles Daniel 1978 Gloses sur John Cage in French Paris France Union generale d editions ISBN 2264008555 Dickinson Peter 1991 Reviews of Three Books on Satie The Musical Quarterly 75 3 404 409 doi 10 1093 mq 75 3 404 Fetterman William 1996 John Cage s Theatre Pieces Notations and Performances Amsterdam the Netherlands Harwood Academic Publishers ISBN 3 7186 5642 6 Fiero Gloria Konig 1995 The Humanistic Tradition Book 6 The Global Village of the Twentieth Century 2nd ed Brown amp Benchmark Pub ISBN 0 6972 4222 6 Gann Kyle 2010 No Such Thing as Silence John Cage s 4 33 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 13699 9 Harding James Martin 2013 The Ghosts of the Avant Garde s Exercising Experimental Theater and Performance Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 4720 3610 3 Harris Jonathan 2005 Art Money Parties New Institutions in the Political Economy of Contemporary Art Liverpool United Kingdom Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 0853237198 Hegarty Paul 2007 Noise Music A History New York City Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0826417275 Skinner David Gillis Anna Maria Lifson Amy November December 2012 Humanities Volume 33 Issue 6 Humanities Washington D C United States National Endowment for the Humanities Kostelanetz Richard 2003 Conversing with John Cage New York City Routledge ISBN 0 415 93792 2 Kouvaras Linda Ioanna 2013 Loading the Silence Australian Sound Art in the Post Digital Age Melbourne Ashgate Publishing ISBN 9781315592831 Lienhard John H 2003 Inventing Modern Growing Up with X Rays Skyscrapers and Tailfins New York City Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 516032 0 Liu Gerard C 2017 Music and the Generosity of God Princeton New Jersey Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 3 319 69492 4 Nicholls David 2002 The Cambridge Companion to John Cage Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521789684 Nyman Michael 1974 Experimental Music Cage and Beyond London England Studio Vista ISBN 0 289 70182 1 Pluth Ed Zeiher Cindy 2019 On Silence Holding the Voice Hostage Palgrave Pivot ISBN 978 3030281465 Priest Gail 2008 Experimental Music Audio Explorations in Australia Sydney University of New South Wales Press ISBN 978 1921410079 Pritchett James 1993 The Music of John Cage Cambridge United Kingdom and New York City Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56544 8 Pritchett James Kuhn Laura amp Garrett Charles Hiroshi 2012 John Cage Grove Music Online 8th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article A2223954 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 Reed S Alexander 2013 Assimilate A Critical History of Industrial Music New York City Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199832606 Revill David 1993 The Roaring Silence John Cage A Life New York City Arcade Publishing ISBN 978 1 55970 220 1 Solomon Larry J 2002 1998 The Sounds of Silence John Cage and 4 33 revised ed Archived from the original on January 9 2018 Symonds Dominica Karantonis Pamela 2013 The Legacy of Opera Reading Music Theatre as Experience and Performance The Netherlands Brill Academic Pub ISBN 978 9042036918 Taruskin Richard 2009 Oxford History of Western Music Volume 5 New York City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 538630 1 Thomsett Michael C 2012 Musical Terms Symbols and Theory An Illustrated Dictionary Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 7864 6757 0 Further reading editArns Inke and Daniels Dieter 2012 Sounds Like Silence Hartware MedienKunstVerein Leipzig Spector Books ISBN 978 3 940064 41 7 Davies Stephen 1997 John Cage s 4 33 Is it music Australasian Journal of Philosophy vol 75 no 4 pp 448 462 doi 10 1080 00048402 2017 1408664 Dodd Julian 2017 What 4 33 Is Australasian Journal of Philosophy doi 10 1080 00048409712348031 Garten Joel February 20 2014 Interview With MoMA Curator David Platzker About the New Exhibition on John Cage The Huffington Post Katschthaler Karl 2016 Absence Presence and Potentiality John Cage s 4 33 Revisited pp 166 179 doi 10 1163 9789004314863 011 in Wolf Werner and Bernhart Walter eds Silence and Absence in Literature and Music Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 31485 6 Lipov Anatoly 2015 4 33 as the Play of Silent Presence Stillness or Anarchy of Silence Culture and Art numbers 4 pp 436 454 doi 10 7256 2222 1956 2015 4 15062 and 6 pp 669 686 doi 10 7256 2222 1956 2015 6 16411 See also editMonotone Silence Symphony a composition by Yves Klein featuring both sound and extended silenceExternal links editWhat John Cage s silent symphony really means BBC News Radio 3 plays silent symphony BBC Online includes RealAudio sound file A quiet night out with Cage from the UK Observer The Music of Chance from the UK Guardian newspaper The Sounds of Silence further commentary by Peter Gutmann Video of a 2004 orchestral performance Audio John Cage s 4 33 in MIDI OGG Au and WAV formats John Cage s 4 33 from National Public Radio s The 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century RealAudio file format Interview with Kyle Gann about 4 33 on The Next Track podcast App John Cage s 4 33 as an iPhone app published by the John Cage Trust 2014 Portal nbsp Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 4 33 amp oldid 1217037912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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