FURTHER
NOTES ON JOHN CAGE
Beginning
around 1950, and throughout the passing years, he departed from
the pragmatism of precise musical notation and circumscribed ways
of performance. His principal contribution
to the history of music is his systematic establishment of the
principle of indeterminacy: by adapting
Zen Buddhist practices to
composition and performance,
Cage succeeded in bringing both authentic
spiritual ideas and a liberating attitude
of play to the enterprise of Western
art. His aesthetic of chance produced
a unique body of what might
be called "once-only" works, any two performances of which can
never be quite the same. In an effort to reduce the subjective
element in composition, he developed methods of selecting the
components of his pieces by chance, early on through the tossing
of coins or dice and later through the use of random number generators
on the computer, and especially IC(1984)