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Pop / Rock 17 January, 2018

John Cage's 'Electronic Music For Piano' From Tania Chen With Thurston Moore, David Toop And Jon Leidecker Coming From Omnivore On March 9, 2018

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John Cage's 'Electronic Music For Piano' From Tania Chen With Thurston Moore, David Toop And Jon Leidecker Coming From Omnivore On March 9, 2018
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Composer John Cage (1912-1992) is one of the classical world's best known experimental composers and theorists. Electronic Music for Piano is one of Cage's least known pieces because the score is among his most enigmatic and, consequently, there are few commercial recordings of it. Written in Stockholm in 1964 on hotel letterhead, the notes ask the performer to select parts from Cage's Music for Piano 4-84 and use electronic equipment. Everything else is up to the artist's discretion.
Enter Tania Chen, the U.K.-based pianist who has become a revered and leading interpreter of Cage's work. Recording in both London and Berkeley, California, Chen joined forces with Thurston Moore (Sonic Youth), David Toop (former member of the Flying Lizards, and recording artist on Brian Eno's Obscure label) and Jon Leidecker (a.k.a. Wobbly, who has also worked with Negativland) to create a new version of this piece helmed by composer/musician/scholar Gino Robair.
Using state-of-the-art technology, Chen and her collaborators have taken a modern approach in generating the types of sounds Cage envisioned, giving this nearly 70-minute realization of the work a vitality that is current, revealing and astounding. The piece will be released as John Cage: Electronic Music for Piano, on March 9, 2018 in CD and Digital formats via Omnivore Recordings.
The package contains notes from Robair, who states this "realization of Electronic Music for Piano has sudden (sometimes drastic) transitions as well as silences lasting up to three minutes. You'll also hear artifacts of the performance — for example, the creak of the piano bench and the physical movement of the musicians — which addresses a statement in the score that reads 'Consideration of imperfections in the silence in which the music is played.'"
While it is astounding to think this piece was written over a half-century ago, it's even more impressive to know it's never been this timeless.






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