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Subject: Scholarly discussion of the music of John Cage.

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[silence] Fwd: Finnegans Wake


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  • From: Jared Steward <>
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  • Subject: [silence] Fwd: Finnegans Wake
  • Date: Sat, 14 Apr 2012 14:53:21 -0400

Hi everyone,

I just read this from Richard Kostelanetz's John Cage. In the first interview of the book "Conversation with John Cage", Kostelanetz said, "He [Norman Brown] seemed to be entering the world of Finnegans Wake, where everything is a symbol for something else." This statement intrigues me. I've not (yet!) read Finnegans Wake, but it seems funny to me that Cage so much liked this book when he was not interested in having his compositions be symbolic of anything else. As he said often, he wanted sounds be heard simply as sounds, and not having any other meaning. Since Cage cataloged over 2000 different sounds mentioned in FW, I suppose that was part of what he liked about the book along with the writing technique that Joyce used. Do any of you have any thoughts on this?

Jared Steward

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