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Subject: Scholarly discussion of the music of John Cage.

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[silence] Re: Re: Reminder: 108, 110, Two3 Online Broadcast


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Glenn Freeman <>
  • To: Richard Friedman <>
  • Cc:
  • Subject: [silence] Re: Re: Reminder: 108, 110, Two3 Online Broadcast
  • Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2011 13:37:38 -0500

yes, and fantastic! i really think your listeners will enjoy this work. just email me privately when you figure out a date.
 
On Feb 21, 2011, at 1:30pm, Richard Friedman wrote:

Glenn:
Radio premiers are always exciting. However, the problem I'm having with committing is that I've got the upcoming weeks programs already figured out in general and I dont see how I can fit it in, unless you can wait til late April or May.
Unlike Paul, my weekly program is only an hour with a surfeit of material!.
So let me know if you can wait til then.<R>

On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 10:20 AM, Glenn Freeman <> wrote:
Yes Richard.

This is very true and perhaps the main reason not many Number Piece recordings ever get aired on any radio station. This is especially true for 108 (Paul Von Wichert is a very rare radio announcer who can get away with playing extended works, and long silences, on his program) because there is a section of 108 that has over 4 minutes of silence.

However, the longest silence in our recording of 109 [One8 and 108] is 47 seconds.

Knowing this fact, are you willing to air the premiere broadcast of 109 on your fantastic new music radio program (one of the best in my opinion)?

Richard Friedman wrote:

Long silences on radio do present a problem. Some stations have signal alarms that go off if a long segment with a very low output signal is detected.

Long silences also trigger a reaction from the audience to change stations, assuming something has gone wrong. This, more than any other reason, makes for bad radio (if you consider losing your audience as being counter productive). 

Unfortunately, pieces with especially long silences (lets say 1 minute or longer), or with extremely low levels, are not successful for most radio programs. E.g. 4'33" could be broadcast if the audience ambience was loud enough to keep interest and prevent the studio alarms from going off %-)  )

On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 4:48 AM, Glenn Freeman <> wrote:
> I'm curious about a practical aspect of the broadcast. According to
> the listing on Amazon, 108 appears to include stretches of silence
> lasting several minutes. Will you be broadcasting that much of what we
> used to call "dead air?" That would be quite unusual within a show,
> but not impossible.

Glenn Freeman
OgreOgress productions
http://ogreogress.com

--
Richard Friedman
Music From Other Minds on KALW 91.7 SF
Oakland, California
http://otherminds.org/mfom



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