The Clarinet BBoard  
     | 
 
    
    
Author: Chris P  
Date:   2006-01-07 04:13 
 Like most experimental, modernist or minimalist pieces I suppose - too long and tedious by half, and lost interest after hearing the second chord in the sequence. Shame there's no performer - so why not have John Cage's skeleton performing the piece (could even be an entry for this year's Turner prize as well - let's see if tracy emin's reading this)?  
 
It'll be the last work he does in any form, and at least he won't complain if it goes on for too long. 
 
And while I'm still weilding the axe, how many Philip Glasses does it take to make a melody? And does each one have a different pitch when filled with different amounts of water?
  
  | 
 
 
 | 
 
    
    Reply To Message
     
 | 
 
 
     | 
 
    
    
Author: EEBaum  
Date:   2006-01-07 07:53 
 Allow me to rephrase the question properly: 
 
How many how 
how many how many how many 
Phil many Phil how many Phil how how many 
Philip ilip ilip ilip  
How many Philip Glass Philip Glass Philip Glass many Philip Glasses Philip Glasses Philip Glasses  
Philip How many Philip many Philip Glasses does it Glasses many How How many How Philip Glasses 
many does it does it does it does it  
many does it does it does it does it 
How Philip Glasses how many How many Philip  
Glasses does it does it does it does it does it does it does it does it does it 
take take take does it take How many Philip Glasses does it take to does it take to take to take does it  
take to it take it take to make to take to make to take to make to  
take to make a make a make a make a make a make a  
How many how many how many how many 
Philip Glasses Philip Glasses Philip Glass Glass Philip Philip Glasses 
How many Philip Glasses Philip Glasses does it take 
to make a melo make a melo make a melo make a melo 
Philip Glasses does it take to How Philip Glasses take it many 
does to many How a make a how to make a does it take a make a take a make a make to 
make a melody? 
 
(had Symphony #2 in my head as I wrote that) 
 
-Alex 
www.mostlydifferent.com 
 
Post Edited (2006-01-07 07:54)
  
  | 
 
 
 | 
 
    
    Reply To Message
     
 | 
 
 
     | 
 
    
    
Author: Tony Pay ★2017 
Date:   2006-01-07 11:03 
 We discussed this piece (and other works by Cage including 4'33" and the Clarinet Sonata) fairly extensively when it began in 2001, beginning with: 
 
http://test.woodwind.org/Databases/Klarinet/2001/09/000697.txt 
 
My own view is that the piece is an (admittedly extreme) part of what all art is: namely an attempt to communicate that what we normally think of as 'ourselves' can be experienced as a part of something else that is larger.  (People like or dislike that according to their opinion of the 'larger' something else, of course.) 
 
So in this case, I celebrate it -- again. 
 
Tony
  
  | 
 
 
 | 
 
    
    Reply To Message
     
 | 
 
 
  
 | 
  The Clarinet Pages 
  | 
  |