John Cage Flashcards

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1
Q

Context of John Cage

A
  • 1912-1992 was an American avant-garde composer
  • Pupil of Henry Cowell who experimented with extreme chromaticism, rhythmic complexity, graphic notion and extended piano techniques
  • Some of Cage’s most notable works stemmed from his work as an accompanist for the dancer and choreographer, Merce Cunningham
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2
Q

Cage’s interest in prepared piano

A
  • An interest if providing percussion music for dance led Cage to develop the ‘prepared piano’ in an attempt to save space and money
  • A prepared piano involved altering the sound through the insertion of various items between the strings
  • His most famous prepared piano work is Sonatas and Interludes (1948)
  • The prescribed work for 2 amplified prepared pianos was completed in 1945 and was eventually used for dance purposes by Cunningham in Dromenon (1947)
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3
Q

Cage’s influences

A
  • Eastern philosophy and religion (Sonatas and Interludes)
  • The role of silence (4’33’)
  • Aleatoric music, or ‘chance music’ (Music of Changes)
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4
Q

Notation

A
  • Full score with traditional staff notation
  • However, accidentals only apply to the note they precede and not the whole bar
  • Boxed numerals above the score act as reference points indicating the start of a new phrase in the underlying structure
  • In the Anthology, pedals are indicated with the directions ‘Una Corda’ (quiet pedal) and ‘tre corde’ (end quiet pedal)
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5
Q

Describe the sonority

A
  • Sonority and timbre depend on the preparations that Cage prescribed
  • Preparation involves the insertion of so called ‘mutes’ between strings of the piano keys used
  • Different materials are used such as: metal bolts and screws, weather strip, rubber, plastic and coins
  • Only the prepared notes appear in the course of the composition, and not all keys of the pianos have to be prepared
  • A range of timbres results, from dead to gong-like
  • Pitch, however, is distorted considerably, meaning that the score cannot be taken as a reliable guide to the resulting sound
  • Though preparation instructions are detailed, it would be impossible to create same effect from one performance to another
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6
Q

Describe the Dynamics

A
  • The dynamic level is mainly soft
  • For extended sections there is little dynamic change (e.g. the opening part)
  • There is an effective contrast between ppp just before phrase 36 and FF at phrase 38
  • Accents are frequently employed (e.g. right hand of piano 1, phrases 38-40)
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7
Q

Describe the Texture

A
  • The texture is mainly contrapuntal, with the two piano parts frequently working independently
  • A two-part texture is used for each piano

Other features include:

  • Monophony (phrase 4, from bar 14)
  • A sort of melody-dominated homophony (from phrase 38)
  • Homorhythm (from phrase 7)
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8
Q

Describe the tempo,metre and rhythm

A
  • Tempo is a fast duple time (2/2) throughout at 88bpm (not 88 crotchets per min as is written in the score)
  • Note values are mainly quavers and crotchets
  • Duple metre is disrupted through cross-rhythms, mainly groupings of three quavers at a time ( see piano 1 opening)
  • Piano 2 works against piano 1’s opening rhythm with a steady crotchet pattern in the left hand and off-beat quavers in the right hand
  • Notice however, that the left hand figure in piano 2 consists of a seven crotchet ostinato, also working against the written duple time
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9
Q

Describe the structure

A
  • Like many works of this period, Cage’s structure for this piece is based on a fractal mathematical approach, also known as mico-macrocosmic design

Here the proportions are used on a small scale also operate on the movement’s overall structure:

  • Dance No.1 consists of nine 30-bar parts
  • Each part is sub-divided into nine phrases, signalled by the boxed numerals in the score
  • The phrases in all parts have the following bar-lengths:

252-262-272

  • It is highly unlikely that the listener is aware of these proportions in performance
  • Traditional large-scale dance forms are avoided, but there are some repetitions, e.g. the final 30-bar section is a repeat of the one preceding
  • There are a number of other smaller-scale repetitions, including the reappearance of the number of motifs from the first two parts in the final parts, e.g. the three-quaver motif from bar 5 returns at phrases 64 and 73
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10
Q

Describe the Tonality

A
  • There can be no sense of tonality underpinning the movements structure, given the nature of a prepared piano. In other words, there are no exact pitches creating a hierarchy of sounds revolving of sounds revolving around a tonic
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11
Q

Describe the melody and harmony

A
  • For the same reason there is an unfixed pitch it is impossible to speak of melodic line or harmonic content.
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