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John Cage
The Cage-ian things people were saying led me to hunt down a sight with his
classic Indeterminacy stories:
http://www.pdos.lcs.mit.edu/~eddietwo/indeterminacy/ Two in particular
come to mind a la looping. The first relates to what someone said about
loops "changing" while staying the same: (wacky spacing not mine)
At the New School once I was substituting
for Henry Cowell, teaching a class
in Oriental music. I had told
him I didn't know anything about the subject.
He said, ``That's all
right. Just go where the records
are. Take one out.
Play it and then discuss it with the
class.'' Well, I took
out the first record. It was
an LP of a Buddhist service. It
began with a short microtonal chant with
sliding tones, then soon settled into
a single loud reiterated percussive beat.
This noise continued relentlessly
for about fifteen minutes with no
perceptible variation. A lady
got up and screamed, and then
yelled, ``Take it off.
I can't bear it any longer.''
I took it off. A man
in the class then said angrily,
``Why'd you take it off?
I was just getting interested.''
****
Then there's this one:
In Zen they say:
If something is boring after two
minutes,
try it
for four.
If
still boring,
try
it for eight,
sixteen,
thirty-two,
and so on.
Eventually one discovers that it's not
boring at all
but very interesting.
-Jesse