John Cage
99 products
Cage: Freeman Études, Books 1 & 2
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$20.99
Oct 16, 2012
Classical Music
Cage: Sonatas & Interludes for Prepared Piano
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$20.99
Apr 23, 1996
Classical Music
V36: JOHN CAGE
Mode Records
Available as
DVD
$32.99
Dec 05, 2006
I am quite old now, and so when I have the opportunity to do something, I take it immediately, rather than hesitating, as I don't have much time left. John Cage said this about his first and only film, produced the year he died.
Cage: Freeman Etudes, Books 1 & 2
Stradivarius
Available as
CD
$18.99
Jan 01, 2010
Classical Music
Cage: The Works for Piano, Vol. 7
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$20.99
Mar 21, 2006
Classical Music
V43: JOHN CAGE
Mode Records
Available as
DVD
$32.99
Apr 26, 2011
The First volume in a series of the complete percussion works of composer JOHN CAGE. This is the first recording of 'Imaginary Landscape No. 1' (from 1939) to use the actual vintage variable-speed turntables.
Cage & Feldman: In a Silent Way
Stradivarius
Available as
CD
$18.99
Jan 01, 2009
Classical Music
V40: JOHN CAGE
Mode Records
Available as
DVD
$32.99
Dec 09, 2008
Originally created as an invitation by Rolling Stone magazine in 1977, as part of a gala issue celebrating the magazine's move from San Francisco to New York, which featured literary and art contributors honoring it's new home. Cage constructed his waltzes as a series of 49 multi-colored triangles superimposed on the Hagstrom map of New York City, each point derived by the use of chance operations. Wanting to celebrate Cage's memory, Don Gillespie decided to collect the sights and sounds from the locations specified in "49 Waltzes." This ambitious project of filming Cage's 147 specific locations in New York's five boroughs took one year to complete.
La Parola Al Legno
Stradivarius
Available as
CD
$18.99
May 01, 2010
Classical Music
V45: JOHN CAGE
Mode Records
Available as
DVD
$32.99
Jun 05, 2012
This is the second volume in Mode's complete edition of Cage's percussion works, concentrating on early works. Features all three of Cage's infamous and classic works for percussion ensemble 'Constructions'. Other works are: 'Dance Music: For Elfrid Ide' (1940),'Trio' (1936),'Quartet' (1935), 'Living Room Music' (1940)
Cage: A Cage of Saxophones, Vol. 1
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$20.99
Feb 26, 2002
Classical Music
Cage: The Works for Saxophone, Vols. 3 & 4
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$28.99
Jun 15, 2010
Classical Music
Cage: Works for Percussion
Stradivarius
Available as
CD
$18.99
Dec 01, 2012
Classical Music
Cage: Music for Merce Cunningham
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$20.99
May 01, 1991
Classical Music
Cage: Freeman Etudes, Books 3 & 4
Stradivarius
Available as
CD
$18.99
Feb 01, 2012
Classical Music
V4: WORKS FOR PERCUSSION (BLUR
Mode Records
Available as
Blu-Ray
$37.99
Jun 16, 2017
John Cage allowed for some of his works to be combined and performed simultaneously. Percussionist Bonnie Whiting has created uniquely virtuosic solo-simultaneous realizations of some of these works for "speaking percussionist." 51'15.657" for a speaking percussionist is Whiting's solo-simultaneous realization of all of 45' for a speaker and 27'10.554" for a percussionist. Cage wrote 45' for a speaker to perform himself. He wrote on thirty-two subjects and added a series of gestures (gargling, lighting a match, etc.) to be performed during the delivery. Like the percussion piece, each page is one minute long. Between 1984 and 1987 Cage composed 17 pieces called Music for ____. Any of these pieces can be performed alone or together in any combination. Here Whiting combines one of the percussion versions with the version for voice. Her recital is completed by Cage's two beautiful, classic, early pieces for voice and piano: The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs and A Flower. Here the piano is used as a percussion instrument, never played on the keys but rather knocked and slapped on by th epianist. As in the larger works, Whiting gives a tour de force performance of both parts simultaneously. As a bonus, Whiting's mentor Allen Otte performs his work for speaking pianist/percussionist which is created around works of Cage and utlizing Cage's compositional "tools" for both the music and text.
Cage: Indeterminacy (in Deutsch)
Oehms Classics
Available as
CD
Susanne Kessel has dedicated this CD to the works of John Cage, the American Composer, Zen Buddhist and passionate mushroom eater. John Cage would be exactly 100 years old this year. Kessel is actively supported in this project by Joachim Krol, the speaker/narrator of these short stories. In 1993, Susanne Kessel was a prizewinner of the International Schubert Competition.
Cage: The Number Pieces 4
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$20.99
Oct 23, 2007
Classical Music
Extase
Berlin Classics
Available as
CD
Extase is the new concept album by pianist Mario Haring. It is an unusual piano program with special guests that captures the energetic format of a party weekend in Berlin. It draws parallels and reconciles romantic indulgence with the mechanics of the modern age. Virtuosity meets sensitivity and makes for a fantastic and diverse musical journey. This album inspires. It offers the opportunity to open up to complex compositions and to unleash new levels of consciousness, far removed from the mundane, through devotion to music.
NEW MUSIC IN CHURCH
Cantate
Available as
CD
$16.99
Jun 14, 1997
Classical Music
Cage: The Works for Organ
Mode Records
Available as
CD
$37.99
Feb 26, 2013
Classical Music
Cage: Sonatas & Interludes
Centaur Records
Available as
CD
$18.99
Jan 29, 2013
This disc comprises of some of the most important piano works of the 20th-Century, performed by Susan Svrcek.
Cage: Sonatas and Interludes
Wergo
Available as
CD
$20.99
Feb 28, 2014
Composed by John Cage between 1946 and 1948, "Sonatas and Interludes" for prepared piano is one of the most famous works of the composer and one of the works most admired by listeners and performers alike, holding a key position in his catalogue of works. Several years earlier, Cage had already developed the technique of piano preparation to explore the possibilities of sound manipulation: Preparation tables preceding each of his pieces indicate which materials (e.g. screws, bolts, rubber, felt or plastic elements) have to be used and where they have to be placed between the piano strings. Each object, it's size, strength, fixing method and position changes the pitch, volume, timbre and duration of the original piano sound. In comparison with Cage's earlier pieces, the preparation tables for the "Sonatas and Interludes" are comprehensive and accurate. The preparation, which takes the pianist from two and a half to three hours, encompasses more than half of all the strings of the piano. At first, Cage thus tried to achieve a specified sound image - an ideal which he later modified: "When I first placed objects between piano strings, it was with the desire to possess sounds (to be able to repeat them). But, as the music left my home and went from piano to piano and from pianist to pianist, it became clear that not only are two pianists essentially different from one another, but two pianos are not the same either all led me to the enjoyment of things as they come, as they happen, rather than as they are possessed or kept or forced to be."
Cage: Two3
Wergo
Available as
CD
$26.99
Apr 10, 2015
In 1990 John Cage met sho player Mayumi Miyata, who requested he write a piece for the ancient Japanese mouth organ. Cage was deeply impressed by the sound of this instrument and in 1991 he wrote Two3 for sho and five water-filled conch shells - one of the so-called "Number Pieces" Cage worked on during the last years of his life. Although the sound of the piece's structure remains a mystery to rational thinking, it is directly accessible to sensory awareness - especially in the interpretation here played by accordion player Stefan Hussong and sheng virtuoso Wu Wei. Two3 for sho (a Japanese free reed musical instrument) and five water-filled conch shells (1991)
SOLO FOR CELLO ...
Wergo
Available as
CD
$20.99
Mar 01, 2007
The works for violoncello solo recorded and compiled on this CD by Friedrich Gauwerky are reference works for John Cage's unusual way of composing. Apart from the tones, Cage also helped to put the varied forms of silence on the musical map: In John Cage's "Concert for Piano and Orchestra", the western art work, score, exploded: The work is composed in individual parts whose execution is freed of every constraint. Each part is even conceived as an autonomous work, e.g. like "Solo for Cello". "59 1/2 Seconds", one of his "time-length pieces", ranks among Cage's most radical "graphic" compositions. Stars become notes or noises in "Atlas Eclipticalis" - again without a score. With the "Variations I", written for any number of people using any sort and number of sound-producing means, Cage's composition reached the outmost limit on the way to absolute indetermination. But, if one hears "Etudes Bor�ales" for cello solo, however, one experiences that it is a piece whose status can only be compared with J.S. Bach's cello compositions. A critic wrote about Friedrich Gauwerky: "... a virtuoso with far-sightedness, good taste, amazing technique, and a captivating instrument." (Lutz Lesle: Neue Zeitschrift f�r Musik)
