Tag: cheap imitation
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I look more closely at Satie’s “Socrate” and Cunningham’s “Second Hand” to see how they relate to the compositional decisions that Cage made in “Cheap imitation.”
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With John Cage’s music and its carefully planned systems, it is easy to get fixated on the mechanics of chance. But with Cage’s Cheap imitation, it’s quite apparent that chance only goes so far. Everything else in the piece was Cage’s musical choice.
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With “Cheap Imitation,” Cage gave a very general description of the system used to compose it. A close reading of the piece itself—the actual results of that system—confirms the accuracy of the rules and also uncovers considerations and choices that Cage didn’t mention.
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I’ve written about John Cage’s Cheap imitation for piano several times. But it was only recently that I sat down and did a careful analysis of the piece. I looked at how Cage said he composed it; I looked at the score and compared it to Satie’s Socrate; I examined the choices that Cage made…
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How did John Cage compose Cheap imitation? We are fortunate to have his own explanation of the system right in the front of the score, and I will go through this description in detail and explain my own understanding of it.
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I’ve spent time investigating John Cage’s Cheap imitation. In a new series of posts, I’ll document how he composed it, and also demonstrate how I go about engaging deeply with a piece like this.
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(This text was written to accompany Mode Records CD 327 John Cage: The works for piano 11) In June of 1980, Aki Takahashi was preparing to leave Buffalo, New York. Morton Feldman, knowing her reputation as a pianist specializing in new music, had invited her to be an artist in residence at the university where…
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I spent a recent Saturday morning chatting with Laura Kuhn of the John Cage Trust, a conversation now available online in the latest episode of her program “All Things Cage” for WGXC.
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After my previous post on Cage’s Cheap imitation, I have been thinking more about the piece and doing some poking around. Here are some random thoughts about it.
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This Sunday morning’s playlist was a single piece: Cage’s Cheap imitation.





