Monday 16 April 2012

Opening our Ears; Silence and Pan-aurality




“Visuality overwhelms aurality in the cultural balance of the senses. The light that sparks the presence of objects and environments seems to be instantaneously everywhere and thus assumes a state of being that has proved to be particularly attractive to Western culture, whereas the actions that produce sounds appear scattered in space and time, tied to events that merely take place within a larger state of being. John Cage set out to tilt the balance in favor of the ear, and many people hear the world differently because of his efforts.”[1]

John Cage, the grandfather of the sonic-arts, and contemporary experimental music in general, spent his career attempting to open peoples ears to silence, as he termed it; “silence is all the sound we don’t intend. There is no such thing as absolute silence.” [2] His method’s ranged, from his early experiments with percussion and the use of noise in his compositions, to his famous silent work 4’ 33”, “which entailed rejecting the importance of whether a musical sound was present or absent within a composition and, in the process, extending the field or artistic materiality to all nonintentional sounds surrounding the performance – that is, by shifting the production of music from the site of utterance to the site of audition. This musicalization was then extended to all sounds, inside and outside the performance space, since the ability and willingness to listen were only requirements, and these abilities in turn were extended, with the aid of amplification and other technological devices, to small sounds and inaudible sounds.” [3]

With this piece Cage thrust open the doors of the concert hall, ushering in a whole world of sound. Opening the ears of those who were willing to listen, to sounds that had previously lay latent, ignored, as largely irrelevant or secondary to their visual correlates. Whilst 4’33” was performed within the context of the highly codified tradition of western classical music, and part of is significance is specific to that particular context (establishing the whole world of sound as material to be appropriated within a musical register) it also took on a broader conceptual significance, heralding a call to listen; “Silence is about listening, listening to small sounds, tiny sounds, quiet and loud sounds out of any context, music, visual, or otherwise.”[4]


[1] Kahn, Douglas, Noise Water Meat, MIT press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2001, pg 158
[2] Ibid, 163
[3] Ibid, 158
[4] Voegelin, Salome, Listening to Silence and Noise, Continuum, New York , 2010, pg 81

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