You can still browse on Amazon. Try another country above.
No reviews yet.
When Cage studied with Schoenberg, the redoubtable founder of the Second Viennese School told Cage that he was more of an inventor than a composer. Cage took the comment as a compliment, and his experiments with unusual methods of producing (or not producing) sound support Schoenberg's opinion. Cage is on record as claiming that "everything is music." Though he treats Cage sympathetically, Rich acknowledges that certain aspects of Cage's music and philosophical pronouncements leave him open to a charge of charlatanism. For a reader trying to understand the intellectual undercurrents of later 20th century music (and indeed the whole world of art), the detailed discussion of Cage's thought and methods is invaluable.