An American Original
C. Gardner | Washington D.C., D.C. United States | 04/23/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"John Cage was an optimist par excellence. He recorded these diaries for CD at the age of eighty, and it covers his thought from 1964-1984. Using "chance operations," he devised differing type-faces for their publication, but that method is reproduced here in the channel placement and volume of his voice. His wry voice is oddly soothing as he reads his anecdotes, stories and ideas about Buckminster Fuller, Marshall McLuhan, Edwin Schlossberg, Marcel Duchamp, Erik Satie, Mao Tse Tung, H.D. Thoreau, Norman O. Brown, and assortment of his friends. Sometimes his pacific social anarchist views are naive, but when set in the context of the 1960s and surrounded by these wonderful, hilarious stories they give us a glimpse of this truly original American artist and philosopher. I listen to at least one of these CDs a week, for inspiration's sake...Here are some choice Cageisms:Two musicians who produce the same kind of music is one music too many.Changed, a mind includes even itself; unchanged, nothing gets in or out.Ready or not, we are being readied...Ultimately it's not a question of taste; it's the other way around: Each thing in the world asks us: "what makes you think I'm not something you like"?Looking for something irrelevant, I found I couldn't find it."