What is another word for John Cage?

Pronunciation: [d͡ʒˈɒn kˈe͡ɪd͡ʒ] (IPA)

John Cage was an American composer, philosopher, poet, and visual artist. He is widely regarded as one of the most influential experimental composers of the 20th century. Some synonyms for the name John Cage include avant-garde composer, musical innovator, and experimental artist. He is also known for his use of chance operations in his compositions, which led some to label him a chance composer or indeterminate music composer. Additionally, Cage was heavily involved in the Fluxus movement, so he is often referred to as a Fluxus artist. His impact on contemporary music and art is significant, and his name remains synonymous with avant-garde composition.

Synonyms for John cage:

What are the hypernyms for John cage?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    artist, composer, educator, innovator, inventor, philosopher, poet, theorist, writer, American composer, Avant-Garde Musician, Composer of Avant-Garde Music, Experimental Musician, Interdisciplinary Artist, Modernist composer, Pioneer of Electronic Music, Revolutionary of Music.

Famous quotes with John cage

  • The thinking of John Cage derived from Duchamp and Dada. I was not interested in that.
    Sol LeWitt
  • I did a twenty foot print and John Cage is involved in that because he was the only person I knew in New York who had a car and who would be willing to do this.
    Robert Rauschenberg
  • Once, along with , he played a class Rachmaninoff’s . Most of the class had not seen the painting, so he went to the library and returned with a reproduction of it. Then he pointed, with a sober smile, to a painting which hung on the wall of the classroom (, one might have called it; yet this would have been unjust to it—it was non-representational) and played for the class, on the piano, a composition which he said was an interpretation of the painting: he played very slowly and very calmly, with his elbows, so that it sounded like blocks falling downstairs, but in slow motion. But half his class took this as seriously as they took everything else, and asked him for weeks afterward about prepared pianos, tone-clusters, and the compositions of John Cage and Henry Cowell; one girl finally brought him a lovely silk-screen reproduction of a painting by Jackson Pollock, and was just opening her mouth to— He interrupted, bewilderingly, by asking the Lord what land He had brought him into. The girl stared at him open-mouthed, and he at once said apologetically that he was only quoting Mahler, who had ; then he gave her such a winning smile that she said to her roommate that night, forgivingly: “He really is a nice old guy. You never would know famous.” “Is he really famous?” her roommate asked. “I never heard of him before I got here. ...”
    Randall Jarrell
  • While the others had got married and moved out to suburbia, I had stayed in London and got into the arts scene through friends like Robert Fraser and Barry Miles and papers like . We opened the Indica gallery with John Dunbar, Peter Asher and people like that. I heard about people like John Cage, and that he’d just performed a piece of music called (which is completely silent) during which if someone in the audience coughed he would say, ‘See?’ Or someone would boo and he’d say, ‘See? It’s not silence—it’s music.’ I was intrigued by all of that. So these things started to be part of my life. I was listening to Stockhausen; one piece was all little plink-plonks and interesting ideas. Perhaps our audience wouldn’t mind a bit of change, we thought, and anyway, tough if they do! We only ever followed our own noses—most of the time, anyway. ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ was one example of developing an idea.
    Paul McCartney

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