Джон Кейдж (1912–1992) в своей жизни перепробовал много разных ролей: композитор, писатель, популяризатор искусства авангарда, обозреватель общественной жизни, повар-гурман, специалист по грибам. Помимо огромного количества музыкальных сочинений он создал множество оригинальных работ в области визуального искусства и литературы, по большей части с помощью случайных действий. Парадоксально, но каждая его работа обладала неподражаемым характером и безошибочно выдавала своего создателя. Его инновационные пьесы, такие как 4'33'' и Sonatas and Interludes for Prepared Piano, не только помогли Кейджу занять место лидера послевоенного авангардистского движения, но и консолидировали бесконечные противоречивые дискуссии вокруг его творчества.
Тщательно разбирая биографию Кейджа, Роб Хаскинс объясняет идеи, которые стояли за принципами работы композитора, в том числе принципы дзен-буддизма, воплощенные в его творчестве, — любовь без привязанности, способность и чувствовать, и отказываться от эмоций — которые остаются актуальными и сегодня.
I think this is a great introduction to the life and work of John Cage. I had read a couple of other biographies, but this book covers a lot of what he did and how meaningful his work and his art are, not just for contemporary music. I have always been interested in his form of anarchism, and how his work was something he wanted to make to be useful, for whoever should listen, and also to whoever performed it. His influences like Thoreau, and Duchamp, and D.T. Suzuki are all mentioned, and all his important works are touched here. Wonderful.
This is a marvelous, albeit brief, overview of the artistic career of a performance artist that never ceases to amaze: John Cage. It confronts the reader with themes and questions that arise in the works of Cage, such as the autonomy of the composer, the liberation of sounds, the role of the audience and the dynamics of musical modernism. Haskins has a very lucid style and doesn't pretend that this mini-biography is a definitive account of Cage's works. What this volume offers is a thought-provoking call for further enquiry. With the many connections and contexts this book sketches, without using unnecessarily technical prose, it stimulates the reader to look further into the subject. Especially the interconnections between Cage and several other composers, such as Feldman, Schönberg and Feldman are well-presented. Interesting piece of writing for both the 'layman' and the specialist. Modest and precise: an exercise in nuanced academic simplicity. Loved it.
A satisfying sketch in the form of six biographical essays on the work, with very little reference to Cunningham, so if you've come through Brown's book, it may bother you to have a text that doesn't properly conceptualize Cage-the-Impressario (Cage was Cunningham's tour manager for many years. Brown is quite adequate on this score.)
The recognition of Cage's work with Cunningham is the unstated assumption of Haskins' most critical chapter here, "Doyen," about the work of the 1960s and 1970s. Cage the Impressario had managed Cunningham's dance troupe through lean years of few performances, but by the late '50s, the work was beginning to be received by the European avant garde with some trepidation and grudging respect. By the late Fifties, Robert Rauschenberg had joined the company as set and costume designer, giving Cage himself space with which to imagine the performances' quite structurally extrinsic music. The ideas in the performances themselves of the Cunningham company began to be clearer; Cage published his book Silence: Lectures and Writing in November 1961; the company went on world tour in early 1963; ultimately the company could not withstand that tour that, like the performance of Rite of Spring many years earlier, was met with catcalls and walkouts. Rauschenberg gone, only the stoutest of Cunningham's dancers remaining, Cage met Wendell Berry in Kentucky in 1967, and the music begins to shift, under Cage's opening to anarchism, particularly Berry's introducing Cage to Thoreau's Journals. This is just when Cage's main mentor, Marcel Duchamp, dies. With Musicircus (1968), Cage gives up his role as the Cunningham musical director. The musicians for the performance of the Cunningham company were invited to play anything at any volume -- an inspiration that may well have come from Ornette Coleman, though I doubt Cage would cop to this. The dancers and audience bolted because of the volume levels. In any case the work was leading to the invention of mesostics, a form of "reading through" literary texts for the associated sense perceptions performance could center and de-center. We might consider mesostics as Cage's tweaking of that aphoristic tradition Silence had renewed.
Just long enough and just in-depth enough. My trusty starting source; provides thorough biography, timeline, etc, in a well-researched and readable way. Not overly exciting researched writing per se, but if you are looking for a solid but not too heady intro to John Cage and his complex career, this would be a comfortable starting point.
Generally a little stolid - but with occasional flashes of insight beyond the more prosaic cataloging of pieces, time and place. Such a contrast between this and the wonderful world painted by Kay Larson - though this one does, it is true, perhaps not over-blow the Zen.
Идеальная биография. Предметное введение в творчество, биографические факты в правильном количестве, без редукции и упрощения. Отличная отправная точка для дальнейшего изучения.
This is a catastrophically boring book. The reason for this is that Cage very early abandoned creative logic and constantly invented various (often - mystical) means to avoid it. Most of the dialogues with him, which are the main part of the book, are devoted to his strategies for achieving chaos in music. He could be praised for this if the strategies were not so monotonous. Unfortunately, for some reason, Cage hardly tells interesting stories from his life, and this is very strange, because there should be a lot of them, as he does not have a clearly defined sexual orientation and was acquainted with a huge number of prominent people of his time. It is these stories that could be interesting in this book, rather than endless repetitions of how he used various random generators to create another chaotic piece of work.
I spent a good amount of time performing and studying Cage's music in college, but this is the first book solely about him that I've read. It's a relatively brief overview of his life and art, and it does its job well in that regard, but it is a Polaroid of the rich canvas that was Cage's work. I'm starting in on "Silence" by the man himself, which is a collection of writings and lectures, so this biography was a good jumping-off point. I'll find something more biographically detailed somewhere down the line.
I commence this review with a full disclosure. I am a fan of John Cage. He shattered the barriers between composition and philosophy. His compositions provide a soundtrack for thinking and thoughtfulness.
Rob Haskins' book is an outstanding and short overview. It is not simple, but it is well structured and organized. It is a guide through his life, compositions, performance and writing. For those wanting to start engaging with John Cage's work, or mature scholars who wish to dip back into the discourse, Haskins has given us a great service. We can hear the sounds in silence.