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  • In 1960, American composer John Cage went on national television

  • to share his latest work.

  • But rather than employing traditional instruments,

  • Cage appeared surrounded by household clutter,

  • including a bathtub, ice cubes, a toy fish, a pressure cooker,

  • a rubber duck, and several radios.

  • Armed with these tools and a stopwatch, he performedWater Walk,”

  • setting off a series of sounds with a serious expression

  • and incredible precision.

  • Some viewers found the performance hysterical,

  • while others thought it was completely absurd.

  • But most people watching likely shared the same question:

  • is this even music?

  • This question is harder to answer than you might think.

  • What we determine as music often depends on our expectations.

  • For example, imagine you're in a jazz club listening

  • to the rhythmic honking of horns.

  • Most people would agree that this is music.

  • But if you were on the highway hearing the same thing, many would call it noise.

  • After all, car horns aren't instruments

  • and these drivers aren't musicians... right?

  • Expectations like these influence how we categorize everything we hear.

  • We typically think something sounds more musical

  • if it uses a recognizable structure or popular sounds

  • arranged in well-known patterns.

  • And even within the realm of music,

  • we expect certain genres to use specific instruments and harmonies.

  • These expectations are based on existing musical traditions,

  • but those traditions aren't set in stone.

  • They vary across different cultures and time periods.

  • And in the early 20th century,

  • when many artists were pushing the boundaries of their fields,

  • John Cage wanted to discover what new kinds of music might exist

  • beyond those constraints.

  • He began pioneering new instruments that blurred the lines

  • between art and everyday life,

  • and used surprising objects to reinvent existing instruments.

  • He also explored new ways for music to mingle with other art forms.

  • He and his creative and romantic partner, Merce Cunningham,

  • held recitals where Cage's music and Cunningham's choreography

  • would be created independently before being performed together.

  • But whatever his approach,

  • Cage gleefully dared listeners to question the boundaries between music and noise,

  • as well as sound and silence.

  • Perhaps the best example is one of Cage's most famous compositions

  • a solo piano piece consisting of nothing but musical rests

  • for four minutes and 33 seconds.

  • This wasn't intended as a prank, but rather, as a question.

  • Could the opening and closing of a piano lid be music?

  • What about the click of a stopwatch?

  • The rustling, and perhaps even the complaining, of a crowd?

  • Like the white canvases of his painting peers,

  • Cage asked the audience to question their expectations about what music was.

  • And while the piece didn't evoke the drama of some traditional compositions,

  • it certainly elicited a strong emotional response.

  • Cage's work frequently prioritized these spontaneous, ephemeral experiences

  • over precise, predictable performances.

  • He even developed processes that left some compositional decisions up to chance.

  • One of his favorite such systems was the I Ching,

  • an ancient Chinese divination text.

  • Using just a handful of coins,

  • the I Ching allows readers to produce a pattern of lines

  • which can be interpreted to answer questions and offer fortunes.

  • But Cage adapted these patterns into a series of tables

  • that generated different musical durations, tempos, and dynamics.

  • Eventually, he even used early computers to help produce these random parameters.

  • For some pieces, Cage went even further,

  • offering musicians incomplete compositions notated with broad instructions,

  • allowing them to compose on the fly with the help of his guidelines.

  • Some composers rejected Cage's seemingly careless approach.

  • They believed it was the composer's job to organize sound and time

  • for a specific, intentional purpose.

  • After all, if these strange compositions were music,

  • then where do we draw the line?

  • But like a bold explorer, Cage didn't want to be bound by restrictions,

  • and he certainly didn't want to follow old rules.

  • He dedicated himself to shattering our expectations,

  • creating a series of once in a lifetime experiences

  • that continue encouraging musicians and audiences

  • to embrace the unexpected.

In 1960, American composer John Cage went on national television

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Test yourself: Can you tell the difference between music and noise? - Hanako Sawada

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    shuting1215 に公開 2023 年 06 月 04 日
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