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One author whose work held special interest for John Cage was Henry David

Thoreau. As Hans Otte recounts in his beautiful liner notes that accompany the

New World Records CD 80540 that captured the collaborative production of

Cage’s Mureau and David Tudor’s Rainforest II as performed simultaneously

under the auspices of the Pro Musica Nova Festival for Radio Bremen on May 5,

1972,


“Cage was introduced to Thoreau's journals in 1966, was reading his work

intensively by 1967, and enrolled as a life member in the Thoreau Society in

1968. It is not difficult to see why he would have been so attracted to this author.

Cage may have been drawn to Thoreau's idealism, his dedication to a life of

simplicity, his distrust of institutions (including governments), and his reflections

on the virtue of “Civil Disobedience”—all told, an anarchic life-view rather similar

to Cage's own. In addition, there was Thoreau's way of perceiving, and

responding to, music and sound in general. (Cage quotes Thoreau has having

described music as “bubbles on the surface of silence”—an aphorism that Cage

himself might have coined, and closer to the sensibility of Japanese haiku than

New England.) In 1970 Cage composed the piece called Mureau, in which

phrases from Thoreau's journals (in particular, passages which touch on the

subject of music) are used as the springboard for an elaborate collage. The

resultant fabric combines elements of sense and nonsense, as it veers between

contextual meaning and a sort of abstract, linguistic vocalise. In discussing

Mureau, the composer noted that the work “. . . departs from conventional

syntax. It is a mix of letters, syllables, words, phrases, and sentences. I wrote it

by subjecting all the remarks of Henry David Thoreau about music, silence and

sounds . . . to a series of I Ching chance operations. The personal pronoun was

varied according to such operations and the typing was likewise determined.” In

fact, the printed text (or score!) of Mureau presents a dazzling, bewildering array

of typefaces, with individual letters or letter-groups offset in italics and/or

boldface. It offers a uniquely Cageian middle-ground between music and poetry.

Significantly, despite the work's striking visual character, it is meant to be read

aloud— performed—rather than perceived only as a visual pattern. A further level

of ambiguity can be found in the work's title, which links the first syllable of Music

to the last of Thoreau.









  Performance 



From the February 17, 2025 
New York Times 



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