Cage-Radio Music(P) - Product Information
Radio Music is a work composed using chance operations. The 8 parts indicate between 26 (part E) and 64 (parts C and G) different frequencies between 55 and 156 kHz, notated using numbers (and not using conventional staves, like in Imaginary Landscape No.4). Lines indicate silences, "expressed by maximum amplitude". The number of silences varies between parts: from 9 in part D to 27 in part G.
Cage mentions that every part is in 4 sections, with or without silences between them, to be programmed by the player(s).The published score consists of a title page and 10 typed leaves containing 8 parts (parts C and G 2 pages each).
Number of Players: 1-8
Difficulty: Grade 3
Instrumentation: Radios
John Cage was born on September 5, 1912 in Los Angeles, California and died in New York City on August 12, 1992. He studied liberal arts at Pomona College. Among his composition teachers were Henry Cowell and Arnold Schoenberg. Cage was elected to the American National Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters and received innumerable awards and honors both in the United States and in Europe.
Cage mentions that every part is in 4 sections, with or without silences between them, to be programmed by the player(s).The published score consists of a title page and 10 typed leaves containing 8 parts (parts C and G 2 pages each).
Number of Players: 1-8
Difficulty: Grade 3
Instrumentation: Radios
John Cage was born on September 5, 1912 in Los Angeles, California and died in New York City on August 12, 1992. He studied liberal arts at Pomona College. Among his composition teachers were Henry Cowell and Arnold Schoenberg. Cage was elected to the American National Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters and received innumerable awards and honors both in the United States and in Europe.