This article surveys the reception of concert performances in Manhattan of music by John Cage, from his arrival in 1942 until his gala retrospective held in Town Hall in 1958, in particular comparing responses from composer-critics such as Virgil Thomson, stabled at theNew YorkHeraldTribune, with that of music journalists based at theNew York Timesand other local dailies. Close reading of reviews and of an array of archival sources suggests that Cage's personal and professional relationships with composer-critics ensured that the reception of his music was uniquely well informed, and that his prepared piano works and early experiments with chance were treated with a remarkable degree of affirmation. Much of Cage's critical identity can be a...
John Cage’s Concert for Piano and Orchestra is one of the seminal pieces of twentieth century compos...
This thesis has traced the development of the various style trends in the music of john Cage through...
John Cage’s music was little known in the Soviet Union until the late 1960s, as official communist ...
The premiere of John Cage’s Concert for Piano and Orchestra (1957–58) is notorious for being disrupt...
John Cage was a giant of American experimental music--composer, writer, and artist. He is most widel...
My research places reactions to John Cage into the historical context of the Sixties. Cage was a com...
The complexities of contemporary American music have forced critics to act as educators and mediator...
© 2014 Lydia Alice DobbinIn 1947 the Australian-born composer Peggy Glanville-Hicks began writing fo...
John Cage’s compositions, representative of second generation avant-garde music, are an integral par...
John Cage (1912–1992) was without doubt one of the most important and influential figures in twentie...
In 2005 Toop was commissioned to curate a group exhibition related to composer John Cage as an adjun...
International audienceThis article explores the limits between music and poetry. It has often been a...
Philip Thomas curates and performs in this extended concert at the 2008 Huddersfield Contemporary Mu...
The present article examines the connection between Cage’s politics and aesthetics, demonstrating ho...
In commemoration of the 2012 centenary of John Cage\u27s birth, this article explores the state of r...
John Cage’s Concert for Piano and Orchestra is one of the seminal pieces of twentieth century compos...
This thesis has traced the development of the various style trends in the music of john Cage through...
John Cage’s music was little known in the Soviet Union until the late 1960s, as official communist ...
The premiere of John Cage’s Concert for Piano and Orchestra (1957–58) is notorious for being disrupt...
John Cage was a giant of American experimental music--composer, writer, and artist. He is most widel...
My research places reactions to John Cage into the historical context of the Sixties. Cage was a com...
The complexities of contemporary American music have forced critics to act as educators and mediator...
© 2014 Lydia Alice DobbinIn 1947 the Australian-born composer Peggy Glanville-Hicks began writing fo...
John Cage’s compositions, representative of second generation avant-garde music, are an integral par...
John Cage (1912–1992) was without doubt one of the most important and influential figures in twentie...
In 2005 Toop was commissioned to curate a group exhibition related to composer John Cage as an adjun...
International audienceThis article explores the limits between music and poetry. It has often been a...
Philip Thomas curates and performs in this extended concert at the 2008 Huddersfield Contemporary Mu...
The present article examines the connection between Cage’s politics and aesthetics, demonstrating ho...
In commemoration of the 2012 centenary of John Cage\u27s birth, this article explores the state of r...
John Cage’s Concert for Piano and Orchestra is one of the seminal pieces of twentieth century compos...
This thesis has traced the development of the various style trends in the music of john Cage through...
John Cage’s music was little known in the Soviet Union until the late 1960s, as official communist ...