@not looking for New England you make your accompanying videos yourself, correct? I really love this one. Adds an interesting dimension to the music and is really creatively done. Very nice work.
Yes, all videos on my channel are made by me. Thanks for the compliment. I really appreciate it. The picture i used is my father and me, a long, long time ago on a beach when everybody was happy, and alive.
From the John Cage Complete Works website: "As Cage himself instructs: “The players sit in the conventional relation to each other. There are three five-minute sections, A-C, each having flexible time brackets and one which is fixed; these are notated from 0’00” to 5’00”. There are four parts (1-4), each of which can be played by any of the players. If the performance is to last ten minutes, all players play section B (parts 1-4). The two violinists then exchange their parts with the other two players either as 1 with 3 and 2 with 4 or 1 with 4 and 2 with 3. After resetting their chronometers, they play section B again. If the performance is to last twenty minutes, all players play sections A and C without pause between. Players 1 and 2 then exchange their parts with players 3 and 4 in either way and play A and C again. If the performance is complete, ABC, with the repetition it will last thirty minutes.”
Now this is how you do it!! Awesome :)))
@not looking for New England you make your accompanying videos yourself, correct? I really love this one. Adds an interesting dimension to the music and is really creatively done. Very nice work.
Yes, all videos on my channel are made by me. Thanks for the compliment. I really appreciate it. The picture i used is my father and me, a long, long time ago on a beach when everybody was happy, and alive.
What is this low background rumble? Was this piece recorded when an ocean was flooding the land?
Can musical 'experiments' fail?
If not, why do we call it an 'experiment'? And not just a thing?
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that's the same piece twice
From the John Cage Complete Works website: "As Cage himself instructs: “The players sit in the conventional relation to each other. There are three five-minute sections, A-C, each having flexible time brackets and one which is fixed; these are notated from 0’00” to 5’00”. There are four parts (1-4), each of which can be played by any of the players. If the performance is to last ten minutes, all players play section B (parts 1-4). The two violinists then exchange their parts with the other two players either as 1 with 3 and 2 with 4 or 1 with 4 and 2 with 3. After resetting their chronometers, they play section B again. If the performance is to last twenty minutes, all players play sections A and C without pause between. Players 1 and 2 then exchange their parts with players 3 and 4 in either way and play A and C again. If the performance is complete, ABC, with the repetition it will last thirty minutes.”
@@notlookingfornewengland ah that makes sense thank you
Boring.
So what are you doing here ?....
@@Laurenzatto54 Good point. I really shouldn't have said anything, I was just being stupid and trying to be edgy. Sorry about that.