
John Cage
American composer, poet, painter, and mycologist born 5 September 1912 in Los Angeles, CA; died 12 August 1992 in New York City.
Born in Los Angeles (USA) on 5 September 1912, John Cage was a musician, writer, painter, mycologist, and thinker, who crafted his life as an ongoing process and lived outside all categorization.
His first contact with music was through the piano lessons he took as a child. Later, in 1930, bored with an education based on repetition and uniformity, he set sail for Europe looking for new experiences. Returning to California the following year, he began studying composition with Richard Buhlig and Henry Cowell, and then undertook private lessons with Adolph Weiss. In 1935 he married Xenia Andreyevna Kashevaroff, from whom he separated ten years later. From 1934 to 1936 he studied analysis, composition, harmony, and counterpoint with Arnold Schoenberg, which gave him occasion to understand how little inclined to harmonic thinking he was. From 1938 to 1940, he worked at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, where he met Merce Cunningham, who would become his companion and collaborator. It was during this period that he wrote his manifesto on music, “The Future of Music: Credo” invented the water gong and the prepared piano, and composed Imaginary Landscape No.1 (1939), one of the first works of music to use electronics.
The 1940s marked a turning point for Cage after these early, formative years in which voice and percussion were his instruments of choice. In New York, he participated in a concert at the MoMA during which his composition Amores (1943) was premiered; he met Indian musician Gita Sarabhai and began reading the work of Ananda K. Coomaraswamy and Meister Eckhart. In 1948, he completed Sonatas and interludes, the fruit of several years’ worth of experimentation with prepared piano. In 1949, he returned to Paris, where he worked on the music of Erik Satie and encountered such composers as Olivier Messiaen, Pierre Schaeffer, and Pierre Boulez. He and Boulez maintained an extensive correspondence that lasted until 1954.
Returning to New York in 1950, Cage became involved in what would come to be known as the New York School, which included Morton Feldman and Christian Wolff, joined by Earle Brown in 1952. His friendships with painters in this circle, particularly Robert Rauschenberg, were also significant during this time, as may be observed in his silent piece 4’33’’ (1952). His Music of Changes (1951) and Untitled Event(1952) marked the birth of the musical happening. Water music (1952) explores unconventional notation. The Merce Cunningham Dance Company was founded in 1953, with Cage as its musical director, a position he would hold until his death. His collaboration with Cunningham was one in which music and dance coexisted equally, without relationships of dominance and subordination between them. During this time, Cage also attended lectures on Zen Buddhism by Daisetz T. Suzuki and began working chance operations and free choice into his music: he first used the I Ching in the third movement of Concerto for Prepared Piano and Chamber Orchestra (1957-1958).
His lecture “Composition as Process” at the Darmstadt Summer Course in 1958, and his indeterminate music, including Variations I, sparked widespread debate among the European avant-garde. In 1961, he published Silence: Lectures and Writings, and by 1962 his understanding of music as theatre was beginning to take shape, with the premiere of 0’00’’ (4’33’’ nº 2). Variations V andVII, Musicircus (1967), HPSCHD with Lejaren Hiller, the electronic music/chess performance Reunion (1968) with Marcel Duchamp and Teeny Duchamp, were all major events in the evolution of multimedia and environmental sound art. Song Books, published in 1970, was a collection of a wide variety of compositional processes and types of notation with texts by Cage and authors he admired such as Buckminster Fuller, Marshall McLuhan, and, most prominently, Henry David Thoreau. The social aspect of his work began to emerge in the project Freeman Etudes for violin (1980; 1990).
John Cage’s career as a visual artist began with an exhibit of his scores in 1958 at the Stable Gallery; despite regular appearances in the visual arts world, it was only with the etchings created at Crown Point Press on invitation from Kathan Brown that this practice became a central one for Cage. At the time of his death, he had produced some 900 etchings, watercolors, and drawings. In these works – as in the mesostics he began writing after composing Empty Words in 1976 – Cage worked along the same principles as he did in his music, as may be observed in Where R=Ryoanji(1983-1992), for example. Between 1987 and 1991, he composedEuroperas**I-V, and between 1987 and 1992, the cycleNumber**Pieces, where he made use of what he called “time-bracket notation.” In this period, Cage explored forms of automatic or computer-assisted writing based on programs created by his assistant Andrew Culver. He received many major awards and honors in the last years of his life, including the Kyoto Prize (1989) – a life devoted to experimentation and freedom.
John Cage died in New York City on 12 August 1992.
© Ircam-Centre Pompidou, 2010
Sources
- Pierre BOULEZ/John CAGE*, Correspondance*, Paris, Christian Bourgois Éditeur, 1991.
- John CAGE, « An Autobiographical Statement » (1989), dans John Cage Writer (selected and introduced by Richard Kostelanetz), New York, Limelight Editions, 1993.
- John CAGE, Silence, Middletown, Connecticut, Wesleyan University Press, 1961.
- Richard KOSTELANETZ, Conversing with Cage. New York, Limelight, 1987.
- David NICHOLLS, John Cage, University of Illinois Press, 2007.
- David REVILL, The Roaring Silence. John Cage a life, London, Bloomsbury, 1992.
Cage – Pour une poétique de l’oubli
By Carmen Pardo
In a 1982 interview, John Cage stated:
My name has become well known, but the experience of my music is as unknown, I would say, as ever. That’s partly due to the fact that I’ve written a great deal of music and it’s not all the same, and I’m always making new music, so no one knows what they’re going to hear when they hear some of it.1
Cage’s statement reveals two crucial notions: he does not compose in one style, and as a result, the audience’s perception of his music cannot rely on a prior basis. His music is, as the musicologist Daniel Charles suggested in 1976, a music of forgetting. In this case, forgetting is not a failure, but rather a demonstration that Cage refuses to do what he is supposed to do. His forgetfulness is built on opposition to rules and to all that perpetuates convention. Forgetting, in Cage’s music, is a deliberate act.
I. The First Act of Actively Forgetting
Arnold Schoenberg, with whom Cage studied in 1934 and 1935, declared to him that in order to write music, he would have to have a feeling for harmony; otherwise, his lack of mastery of this aspect of music would bar his path. It would be “as though he came to a wall through which he could not pass.” Cage decided to dedicate his life to “beating his head against that wall.”2
Cage first experimented with his own approach to dodecaphonic music in pieces like Sonata for Two Voices (1933) and Composition for Three Voices (1934), after which he turned to percussion — a sound domain with little or no pitch determination. It was during this time that he started to dig a hole in Schoenberg’s aforementioned “wall” of harmony and discovered that there were sounds on the other side. He realized that the world of music was wider than acknowledged in current systems. Between 1935 and 1943, Cage composed fifteen pieces for percussion, including Quartet (1935), First Construction in Metal (1939), and Double Music (1941) in collaboration with Lou Harrison.
In these years, Cage explored what he would later call the rhythmic micro-macrocosmic structure. He built his pieces on proportional relationships: by applying square roots to the number of measures, long lengths would have the same relationship within a set as short lengths within a smaller unit. This rhythmic structure could be manifested with sounds — including noise — and movement, as it was the case with dance. This discovery was his answer to Schoenberg’s structural harmony.3 Cage used this type of structure starting with First Construction in Metal, a piece made of sixteen units that last sixteen measures each.
His breach in the harmonic wall began to broaden in 1938 when Cage used a water gong for an underwater ballet, as well as in 1940 with his invention of the prepared piano. Both developments were influenced by his work at the Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, where he found he had more affinities with the dancers than with the musicians. The prepared piano appeared in his Second Construction, but he related its invention to his collaboration on Bacchanale, a ballet by Syvilla Fort (1940). Inspired by his teacher Henry Cowell, who would pluck the strings of the piano or strike them with sewing needles, Cage turned to a pie tin, a book, wood screws, bearings, and bolts. He would distribute these objects throughout the piano strings, consequently affecting four fundamental dimensions of sound: duration, intensity, pitch, and timbre. He essentially attacked the emblematic instrument of Romantic music. For prepared piano, Cage composed works including Amores (1943), A Book of Music (1944), Three Dances (1945), and his masterpiece of the time, Sonatas and Interludes (1946-1948), a piece inspired by The Dance of Shiva by Ananda K. Coomaraswamy.
Cage’s breach in the wall of harmony further expanded with Imaginary Landscape No. 1 (1939), a piece for piano, cymbal, and two turntables playing at changing speeds, which was one of the first pieces in the history of music to use electric sound-reproduction instruments. Technology, for Cage, was a tool without a history and without associated memories. It could thus evoke imaginary future landscapes. Cage would call his pieces that use a technological component Imaginary Landscape No. 1, II, III (1939–1942), IV (1951), and V (1952).
In all his pieces from this period, however exploratory and creative, Cage still worked with notions of method, structure, form, and material. In a 1949 text, he defined these notions:
Structure in music is its divisibility into successive parts from phrases to long sections. Form is content, the continuity. Method is the means of controlling the continuity from note to note. The material of music is sound and silence. Integrating these is composing.4
Such unrestrictive definitions reveal how Cage had started to reach beyond dualities, including the one opposing structural harmony and rhythmic harmony. His ideological position was strengthened by his encounter with Daisetz T. Suzuki, who was the main voice of Zen Buddhism in the West and with whom Cage studied for three years. Cage was also influenced by The Transformation of Nature in Art by Coomaraswamy (Harvard University Press, 1934), where he read that the function of art was to imitate the processes of nature. Cage also had several other important encounters in the 1940s: with Marcel Duchamp, for whom he nurtured a profound admiration; with Merce Cunningham, with whom he shared his life after his divorce in 1945; and with the architect Buckminster Fuller.
II. The Second Act of Actively Forgetting
As early as the 1940s, Cage began experimenting with two concepts that he put into action during the following two decades. These concepts were chance and indeterminacy.
His method of composition (here understood as a means to create a continuity between notes) opened itself to improvisation, as is portrayed in Imaginary Landscape IV (1951) for twelve radios, twenty-four instrumentalists, and a conductor. The same year, Cage composed Music of Changes for the pianist David Tudor. This time he introduced chance into his method. The timings of the sounds, and thus the duration of the piece, are determined by operations described in the I Ching (The Book of Changes), an ancient Chinese divination treatise to which Cage referred numerous times. With Music of Changes, the structure became indeterminate.
This does not mean that structure disappeared. Rather, structure rules the density of sounds and silences in even the smallest sections of the piece. One of Cage’s hobbies was taking walks to look for mushrooms. He noticed that when one observes the different species up close, one readily recognizes their organizational structure; but when one looks at the totality of the species and their interrelations during a whole day, it becomes difficult to locate any organization whatsoever: the structure fades out. Likewise, in Cage’s works from the 1950s, the structures progressively become like the ones found in nature.
He also worked with empty structures, as was the case with his Lecture on Nothing (1949) — where any word can emerge — as well as his famous 4’33” (1952), where he makes listeners pay attention to sounds of the environment and to the unintentional. Ten years later, 0’00” (4’33” nº 2) proved that the mere idea of structure is contingent.
By pursuing chance, Cage sought to detach his personal taste from music. His responsibility lay not in the choices made but in the questions asked. The I Ching became his preferred tool for composing. Other inspirations were his interpretations of imperfections in a piece of paper, geometrical juxtapositions, and magic squares. These affected both the organization of the music and its performance, and liberated Cage from the burden of memory. Cage defined chance as providing a “leap out of reach of one’s own grasp of oneself.”5
Cage also gave up traditionally notated scores in favor of graphic notation, which, because of its subjective interpretation made each performance unique for the composer, the performers, and the audience. The Concerto for Prepared Piano and Chamber Orchestra (1957-1958) is an example. Everything in this work depends on chance operations. The material can encompass anything: every sound, every silence is accepted as central. The work is based on a philosophy of non-obstruction and the mixing and merging of sounds, a notion Cage borrowed from Zen Buddhism.
In this period, Cage turned to indeterminacy, as exemplified by his Variations I-VII (1958-1966). In Variations III and Variations IV (1963), time is not measured (as is also the case in 0’00”). In Variations V (1965), the score was written after the performance, and it contains only comments for future performances, without giving an exact description of what the performers are supposed to play.
Cage made a clear distinction between chance and indeterminacy: in chance operations, the performers know to a certain extent the elements with which they will work, whereas in indeterminate works they do not. Cage’s process was authentically experimental, both in his way of considering music as inseparable from life, and by the fact that, like audience members, he was also facing the unknown.
His conception of music was broadened by this attitude, as well as by his involvement with artists and scenes outside music — such as the painters of the New York School and the Artists Club, of which he was a member from the late 1940s on. Around 1950, after having read Le Théâtre et son double by Antonin Artaud, Cage proposed a theater piece without text where the audience attended many simultaneous and disassociated events. His piece Untitled Event, premiered at Black Mountain College in 1952, used such a format and was considered to be the first happening. In 1960, Cage composed Theatre Piece, a work involving unspecified superposed elements that the performer chooses, and to which is added a “lecture […] involving combing the hair and kiss sounds and gestures that made the lecture theatrical.”6
III. The Third Act of Actively Forgetting
The period between the end of the 1960s and Cage’s death in 1992 was marked by a radicalization of all that he had previously proposed. He conceived the musicircus (a word taken from a poem by E. E. Cummings, “Here of This Earth. Musicircus”), which is a situation in which two or more pieces are performed simultaneously. Results of this process include Musicircus (1967), a non-notated piece called HPSCHD (1967-1969, in collaboration with Lejaren Hiller), and Song Books (1970). The musicircus involves the acceptance of a process devoid of directionality and intention. It is the fruit of Cage’s longstanding interest in the coexistence of events and, consequently, in not focusing attention on a single action. Like nature, musicircus involves non-duality and merging: if observed in its totality, it appears disorganized even though everything is organized from within.
Cage’s writings follow a similar pattern. For example, he planned his Diary as a mosaic that inhibits linear reading.
The integration of sounds from the environment, which had already appeared in 4’33”, for example, continues in Etcetera (1973) and Etcetera 2/4 Orchestras (1985). These works tend to what Cage would later call a sound ecology — music that enables one to inhabit the world in its totality, as opposed to mere parcels of the world. This thought implies that humanity’s role is no longer to dominate nature but rather to listen to the world. This social concern became more acute in the 1970s when Cage encountered Henry David Thoreau’s work. For Cage, Thoreau supplemented the inspiration he found in the writings of Coomaraswamy.
Furthermore, Cage’s concerns for society were rooted in his conception of technology. He considered, with Fuller, that one should think at the scale of a worldwide monetary economic system and, with the philosopher Marshall McLuhan, that in the era of electronic communications, technology had become an extension of the individual’s central nervous system. Consequently, technology held the potential to modify intelligence and even to lead to social equity. For Cage, the abundance of information that technology offered would bring what he called techno-anarchism: the dismantling of the state and all forms of government. A piece like Etcetera, where the performers can choose to be conducted or not, is an example of this techno-anarchism.
Cage’s non-dual mindset and his acceptance of all sounds led him, during this same period, to repurpose preexisting music: music that he had once considered worn out and filled with memory. Emblematic of this process are his Europeras I-V (1985-1991), a series of operas on the topic of the opera as a genre which create “a collage […] of a pulverized sort, of European opera.”7 In the first two Europeras, seventy excerpts from preexisting operas were subjected to chance operations — through a computer that would simulate the I Ching — to determine the number of notes. The fragmentation in the resulting collage defies the coherence of traditional opera. With the Europeras, Cage caused audience members to experience coexisting autonomous means of expression — music, text, and lighting — as Cunningham in the 1940s had done with the relationship between dance and music.
Between 1987 and 1992, Cage composed the cycle Number Pieces, in which the performer would decide when the sound emission started and ended by looking at a stopwatch. The limits were established by “time brackets”:
With time brackets we can write one line of music and have a whole orchestra with eighty to one hundred musicians play that single line. There is nothing difficult about this, and it is rather quite simple. Because of the time brackets, the diversity of the sounds that can be obtained is immense: musicians can decide to lengthen or shorten a sound, they can produce any type of timbre they wish to, etc. Musicians are also free to move forward with the sounds, or not. In brief, stemming from one line of written music, the same event is open to all types of differences.8
It is thus a question of erasing all objectives that could form in one’s mind before a performance. To use the composer’s expression, one is to write on water.
Toward the end of life, Cage wrote on water, left his music on the beach, and waited for waves.
1. Richard KOSTELANETZ, Conversing with Cage, New York, Routledge, 2003, p. 32.↩
2. Quoted in John CAGE, Silence: Lectures and Writings [1961], Middletown, Conn., Wesleyan University Press, 2012, p. 261.↩
3. John CAGE, “An Autobiographical Statement,” in John Cage Writer (selected and introduced by Richard Kostelanetz), New York, Limelight Editions, 1993, p. 239.↩
4. John CAGE, “Forerunners of Modern Music” [1949], Silence, p. 62.↩
5. John CAGE, “45’ for a speaker,” Silence, p. 162.↩
6. Richard KOSTELANETZ, Conversing with Cage, p. 114.↩
7. Ibid., p. 136.↩
8. Translated to English from John CAGE, Je n’ai jamais écouté aucun son sans l’aimer: le seul problème avec les sons, c’est la musique, La Souterraine: La main courante, 1994, p. 24-26. ↩
© Ircam-Centre Pompidou, 2012
- Solo (excluding voice)
- Untitled Composition for any instrument with specific ranges (1931), 12 mn, Inédit
- First Chapter of Ecclesiastes, The Preacher for piano, and voice ad libitum (1932), 10 mn about , Inédit
- Piano Etudes for piano (1932), partition perdue
- Three Easy Pieces for piano (1933), 3 mn, Peters
- Allemande for clarinet in B flat (1934), Inédit
- Music for Xenia for piano (1934), Inédit
- elec Quest for fifty toys amplified with microphone and speaker (first movement) and piano (second movement) (1935), 10 mn, Peters
- Two Pieces for Piano for piano (1935, 1974), 4 mn, Peters
- Metamorphosis for piano (1938), 15 mn, Peters
- Bacchanale for prepared piano (1940), 6 mn, Peters
- Four Songs of the Moment for piano (1940), 12 mn, pas d'éditeur
- Spiritual for piano (1940), pas d'éditeur
- And The Earth Shall Bear Again for prepared piano (1942), 3 mn, Peters
- Dance to the West for piano (1942), 4 mn, Inédit
- In the Name of the Holocaust for prepared piano (1942), 6 mn, Peters
- Jazz Study for piano (1942), 3 mn, Peters
- Opening Dance for piano (1942)
- Opening Dance for Sue [Laub] for piano (1942), 2 mn, Peters
- Primitive for prepared piano (1942), 4 mn 30 s, Peters
- Shimmera for prepared piano (1942), pas d'éditeur
- Totem Ancestor for prepared piano (1942), 2 mn, Peters
- A Room for piano or prepared piano (1943), 2 mn, Peters
- Ad Lib for piano (1943), 4 mn, Peters
- Chess Pieces for piano (1943), 8 mn, Inédit
- Lidice for prepared piano (1943), 15 mn, partition perdue
- Our Spring Will Come for prepared piano (1943), 4 mn, Peters
- Tossed As It Is Untrouble for prepared piano (1943), 2 mn 30 s, Peters
- Triple-Paced No. 1 for piano (1943), 2 mn, Peters
- A Valentine out of season for prepared piano (1944), 4 mn, Peters
- Prelude for Meditation for prepared piano (1944), 60 s, Peters
- Root of an Unfocus for prepared piano (1944), 4 mn, Peters
- Spontaneous Earth for prepared piano (1944), 3 mn, Peters
- The Perilous Night for piano (1943-1944), 12 mn, Peters
- The Unavailable Memory of for prepared piano (1944), 2 mn, Peters
- Triple-Paced No. 2 for prepared piano (1943-1944), 2 mn, Peters
- Crete for piano (1944-1945), 60 s, Inédit
- Dad for piano (1944-1945), 30 s, Inédit
- Daughters of the Lonesome Isle for prepared piano (1945), 10 mn about , Peters
- Mysterious Adventure for prepared piano (1945), 8 mn, Peters
- Party Pieces Sonorous and Exquisite Corpses for any melodic or keyboard instrument (1945), 12 mn, Peters
- Soliloquy for piano (1945), 3 mn, Peters
- The Feast for piano (1945), partition perdue
- Thin Cry for piano (1945), partition perdue
- Encounter for piano (1946), 5 mn, Inédit
- Foreboding for piano (1946), partition perdue
- Ophelia for piano (1946), 5 mn, Peters
- Two Pieces pour Piano for piano (1946), 9 mn, Peters
- Music for Marcel Duchamp for prepared piano (1947), 5 mn, Peters
- Dream for solo piano (1948), 6 mn 30 s, Peters
- In a landscape for solo piano or harp (1948), 8 mn, Peters
- Orestes for solo piano (1948), 5 mn, Inédit
- Sonatas and interludes for prepared piano (1946-1948), 1 h 10 mn, Peters
- Suite for toy piano for toy piano (1948), 8 mn, Peters
- elec Music for ‘Works of Calder’ for prepared piano and magnetic tape (1950), 20 mn about , Inédit
- Haiku for piano (1950-1951), 5 mn, Peters
- Music of Changes for piano (1951), 43 mn, Peters [program note]
- elec stage Black Mountain Piece for three speakers, piano, dancer, gramophone, radio, film, slide projectors and paintings (1952), 44 mn 25 s, Inédit
- For M.C. and D.T for piano (1952), between 60 s and 2 mn, Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 1 (1952), 4 mn, Peters
- Music for Piano I for piano (1952), 3 mn 30 s, Peters
- Seven Haiku for piano (1951-1952), 3 mn, Peters
- Two Pastorales for prepared piano (1952), 14 mn, Peters
- Waiting for piano (1952), 3 mn 30 s, Peters
- elec Water music for a pianist with objects (1952), 6 mn 40 s, Peters
- 1' 5½" for a String Player for any four-string instrument (1953), 1 mn 5 s, Inédit
- 1' ½’’ for a String Player for any four-string instrument (1953), 1 mn 30 s, Inédit
- 1'14’’ for a String Player for any four-string instrument (1953), 1 mn 14 s, Inédit
- 1'18’’ for a String Player for any four-string instrument (1953), 1 mn 14 s, Inédit
- 57½" for a String Player for any four-string instrument (1953), 57 s, Inédit
- 59½" for a String Player for any four-string instrument (1953), 59 s, Peters
- Music for Piano 20 for piano (1953), Peters
- Music for Piano 4-19 for an unspecified number of pianos (1953), Peters
- Music for Piano II for piano (1953), 4 mn, Peters
- Music for Piano III for piano (1953), Peters
- 31'57.9864” for prepared piano (1954), variable, Peters
- 34'46.776" for prepared piano (1954), variable, Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 2 (1954), variable, Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 3 (1954), variable, Peters
- 26'1.1499" for four-string instruments or a combination of two or more instruments (1955), 12 mn, Peters
- Music for Piano 21-36; 37-52 for solo piano or ensemble (1955), variable, Peters
- Music for Piano 69-84 for solo piano or ensemble (1955), Peters
- 27'10.554” for a percussionist (1956), Peters
- Music for Piano 53-68 for piano or ensemble (1956), 12 mn, Peters
- For Paul Taylor and Anita Dencks for piano's interior and undetermined sources (1957), 3 mn, Peters
- Winter music for one to twenty pianos (1957), Peters
- elec Music for Carillon No. 4 for electronic chime with percussion and live electronics or magnetic tape (1958), 10 mn, Peters
- Solo for Bassoon (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Cello (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Clarinet (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Double Bass (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Flute (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Piano (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Sliding Trombone (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Trumpet (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Tuba (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Viola (1957-1958), Peters
- Solo for Violin (1957-1958), Peters
- TV Köln for piano and other sound sources ad libitum (1958), variable, Peters
- Duet for Cymbale part of Cartridge Music (1960)
- elec Music for Amplified Toy Pianos for toy pianos (1960), Peters
- Piano Duet for piano (1960)
- elec Music for Piano 85 for piano with live electronics (1962), Inédit
- Sonata for clarinet for clarinet (1963, 1933), 6 mn, Peters
- elec Electronic Music for Piano for one or more pianos, with electronics (1964), Peters
- elec Music for Carillon No. 4 for electronic instrument with accompaniment (1961-1966), Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 5 for four-octave carillon with 47 bells (1967), Peters
- elec Adaptation of some "Studies pour Player Piano" (Conlon Nancarrow) for piano and live electronics (1969), partition perdue
- Cheap Imitation for piano (1969), 35 mn, Peters
- Untitled piece for Antoinette Vischer, for harpsichord (1969), Inédit
- Untitled (work for Joan Miró) for piano (1970), Inédit
- elec 52/3 for piano and electronics? (1972), 52 mn, pas d'éditeur
- Child of tree for percussion using amplified plant material (1975), 8 mn, Peters
- Études australes for piano (1974-1975), Peters
- elec Branches for percussion with amplified plant material, in duo, trio or orchestra (1976), 8 mn, Peters
- Imitations II for clarinet (1976), Peters
- Cheap Imitation for violin (1977), 35 mn, Peters
- Chorals for solo violin (1978), Peters
- Etudes boréales for percussionist using a piano (1978), pas d'éditeur
- Études boréales I-IV for cello and/or piano (1978), between 15 mn and 20 mn, Peters
- Some of “The Harmony of Maine” for organist with three assistants (1978), 45 mn about , Peters
- Freeman Etudes two times sixteen studies for solo violin (1977-1980, 1989-1990), variable, Peters
- Postcard from Heaven for one to twenty harps (1982), Peters
- R/13 (where R=Rioanji) for percussionist with thirteen found objects (1983)
- Ryoanji for percussion (1983), Peters
- Souvenir for organ (1983), Peters
- Haikai for flute and zoomoozophone (1984), 15 mn, Peters
- Perpetual Tango for piano (1984), Peters
- Eight Whikus for violin (1985), 7 mn, Peters
- ASLSP for piano or organ solo (1987-1985), variable, Peters
- One for solo piano (1987), 10 mn, Peters
- Organ2/ASLSP for organ (1987), Peters
- One2 for one to four pianos (1989), Peters
- Sports: Swinging for piano (1989), 2 mn, Peters
- One4 for percussionist with ten cymbals and / or drums (1990), 6 mn 59 s, Peters
- One5 for piano (1990), 20 mn 40 s, Peters
- One6 for violin (1990), 46 mn 50 s, Peters
- elec The Beatles 1962-1970 for piano and tape (1990), 8 mn, pas d'éditeur
- Haikai for flute and zoomoozophone (1991), 8 mn
- Lullaby for music box (1991), autre
- One8 for cello (1991), 43 mn 30 s, Peters
- One9 for shô (1991), maximum 2 h, Peters
- One10 for violin (1992), 24 mn 30 s, Peters
- elec One13 for a cello and recording of three cellos (1992), 12 mn, Inédit
- Chamber music
- Sonata for Two Voices for two or more instruments, on specific scales (1933), 6 mn, Peters
- Composition for Three Voices for three unspecified instruments (1934), 4 mn, Peters
- Duet for Two Flutes for two flutes (1934), Inédit
- Six Short Inventions for alto flute, clarinet, trumpet, violin, two violas and cello (1934, 1958), 7 mn, Peters
- Solo with Obligato Accompaniment of Two Voices in Canon, and 6 Short Inventions on the Subject of the Solo for minimum three instruments, on the g-g scale (1933-1934), 15 mn, Peters
- Quartet for percussion (1935), 20 mn, Peters
- Three Pieces for Flute Duet for two flutes (1935), 6 mn, Peters
- String Quartet for string quartet in scordatura (1936), pas d'éditeur
- Trio for three percussionists (1936), 12 mn, Peters
- Music for Wind Instruments for wind quintet (1938), 8 mn, Peters
- First Construction in Metal percussion sextet with an assistant using chimes (1939), 9 mn, Peters
- elec Imaginary Landscape No.1 for two variable-speed phono turntables, frequency recordings, muted piano and cymbal (1939), 6 mn, Peters
- Marriage at the Eiffel Tower for two pianos partly for four hands, various whistles, toys and sirens (1939), Inédit
- Dance Music: for Elfrid Ide for six percussionists (1940), 15 mn, Inédit
- Fads and Fancies in the Academy for five performers (1940), 17 mn, Peters
- elec Imaginary Landscape No. 2 first version, for constant and variable frequency discs, piano and percussion (1940), Inédit
- Living room music for percussion and speech quartet with or without instrumental solo (1940), 8 mn, Peters
- Second Construction for percussion ensemble (1940), 6 mn, Peters
- Double Music for percussion quartet (1941), 6 mn, Peters
- Third Construction for four percussionists (1941), 15 mn, Peters
- elec Credo in Us for four performers (1942), 12 mn, Peters
- Imaginary landscape No 3 for percussion sextet (1942), 3 mn, Peters
- Imaginary Landscape No. 2, March n° 1 for percussion quintet (1942), 7 mn, Peters
- Amores for prepared piano and three percussionists (1943), 9 mn, Peters
- A Book of Music for two prepared pianos (1944), 30 mn, Peters
- Arrangement of ‘Socrate’ (Erik Satie) for two pianos (1944, 1947), 35 mn, Eschig
- Experiences I for two pianos four hands (1945), 3 mn, Peters
- Three Dances for two prepared pianos (1944-1945), 21 mn, Peters [program note]
- Prelude for 6 Instruments in A Minor for piano, flute, bassoon, trumpet, violin and cello (1946), 5 mn, Inédit
- Nocturne for violin and piano for violin and piano (1947), 4 mn, Peters
- Six melodies for violin and piano (1950), 15 mn, Peters
- String Quartet in Four Parts (1949-1950), 20 mn, Peters
- Adaptation of ‘Ixion’ de Morton Feldman for chamber orchestra or for two pianos (1958), Peters
- elec Music Walk for one or more pianists with radios and producing auxiliary sounds by singing or otherwise (1958), variable, Peters
- Socrate, Portrait de Socrate for two pianos (1968, 1947), 20 mn, Eschig
- Inlets Improvisation II, for three performers playing seashells filled with water and one performer playing a shell in circular breathing and with the sound of fire (1977), Peters
- Furniture Music Etcetera for two pianos (1980), 20 mn, Inédit
- Thirty pieces for string quartet for string quartet (1983), 30 mn 15 s, Peters
- Thirteen Harmonies for violin and keyboard (1985), 38 mn, Peters
- elec Vis-à-vis for two performers using records, photos, films and piano (1986)
- Two for flute and piano (1987), 10 mn, Peters
- Five for five voices and/or instruments (1988), between 4 mn 15 s and 5 mn, Peters
- elec Five Stone Wind for three performers, one with a clay drum, the others with unspecified instruments and electronics (1988), 60 mn, Peters
- Seven for seven instruments (1988), 20 mn, Peters
- Four for string quartet (1989), between 20 mn and 30 mn, Peters
- Three for three recorders players (1989), Peters
- Two2 for two pianos (1989), Peters
- Five2 for English horn, two clarinets, bass clarinet and timpani (1991), between 4 mn 15 s and 5 mn, Peters
- Five3 for trombone and string quartet (1991), between 39 mn 30 s and 40 mn, Peters
- Five4 for soprano saxophone, alto saxophone and three percussionists (1991), between 4 mn 45 s and 5 mn, Peters
- Five5 for flute, two clarinets, bass clarinet and percussionist using five instruments (1991), between 4 mn 45 s and 5 mn, Peters
- Four3 for four performers (1 or 2 pianos, rainsticks, violin or oscillator, silence) (1991), 30 mn, Peters
- Four4 for percussionist quartet (1991), 1 h 12 mn, Peters
- Four5 for four saxophones (1991), 12 mn, Peters
- Six for six percussionists (1991), 3 mn, Peters
- Three2 for three percussionists (1991), 9 mn, Peters
- elec Two3 for shō and five amplified seashells (1991), between 60 s and 2 h, Peters
- Two4 for violin and piano or shō (1991), 30 mn, Peters
- Two5 for piano and tenor trombone (1991), 40 mn, Peters
- Four6 for four performers with any sound sources (1990-1992), 30 mn, Peters
- Two6 for violin and piano (1992), 20 mn, Peters
- Instrumental ensemble music
- stage The Seasons ballet in one act, for solo piano or orchestra (1947), 15 mn, Peters
- Sixteen Dances for soloist and company of three (1950-1951), 53 mn, Peters [program note]
- Concert for Piano and Orchestra (1957-1958), variable, Peters
- elec Cartridge Music for small amplified sounds (1960), variable, Peters
- elec Atlas Eclipticalis for one to eighty six instruments with live electronics ad libitum (1961-1962), 14 mn, Peters
- elec HPSCHD for more than seven harpsichords and fifty-one tapes (1967-1969), Peters
- Cheap Imitation orchestral version (1972), 35 mn, Peters
- elec Etcetera for ensemble with three conductors and magnetic tape with environmental sounds (1973), maximum 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- Exercise for orchestra made up of an undetermined number of soloists (1973, 1984), Inédit
- Quartets I-VIII for twenty-four instrumentalists (1976), 40 mn, Peters
- Quartets I-VIII for orchestra of ninety-three performers (1976), 40 mn, Peters
- Quartets I-VIII for chamber orchestra of forty one performers (1976), 40 mn, Peters
- Thirty Pieces for Five Orchestras for orchestra divided into five groups and radio or radios ad libitum (1981), 30 mn 15 s, Peters
- Alphabet Dance / 4 Orchestras , radio piece for orchestra divided into four groups (1982), between 18 mn and 30 mn, Peters
- But What About the Noise of Crumpling Paper... for three to ten percussionists (1985), Peters
- Etcetera 2/4 Orchestras for four orchestral groups (1985), 30 mn, Peters
- Haikai for gamelan (eight performers) (1986), 20 mn, Peters
- elec stage Europeras 1 & 2 for voice(s) and chamber orchestra (1985-1987), 4 h 15 mn, Peters
- 1O1 for orchestra (1988), 12 mn, Peters
- Twenty-Three for string ensemble (1988), 23 mn, Peters
- Fourteen for ensemble (1990), 20 mn, Peters
- Seven2 for seven instruments (1990), 52 mn, Peters
- 103 for orchestra (1991), 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- 108 for orchestra (1991), 43 mn 30 s, Peters
- Eight for eight instruments (1991), 60 mn, Peters
- Ten for ten instrumentalists (1991), 30 mn, Peters
- Twenty-eight for twenty-eight wind instruments (1991), 28 mn, Peters
- Twenty-nine for two timpani, two percussionists, piano and low strings (1991), 29 mn, Peters
- Twenty-six for twenty-six violins (1991), 26 mn, Peters
- Twenty-six, Twenty-eight, Twenty-nine for orchestra (1991), 29 mn, Peters
- Eighty for orchestra of eighty musicians (1992), 30 mn, Peters
- Fifty-Eight for fifty-eight wind instruments (1992), between 44 mn 45 s and 45 mn, Peters
- Seventeen for seventeen instruments (1992)
- Seventy-Four for orchestra of seventy-four instrumentalists (1992), 12 mn, Peters
- Sixteen for sixteen instruments (1992), Inédit
- Sixty-Eight for orchestra of sixty-eight instrumentalists (1992), 30 mn, Peters
- Thirteen for thirteen instrumentalists (1992), 30 mn, Peters
- Concertant music
- Concerto for Prepared Piano for prepared piano and chamber orchestra (1951), 21 mn, Peters [program note]
- Vocal music and instrument(s)
- Greek Ode for voice and piano (1932), 12 mn, Inédit
- Three Songs for Voice and Piano for voice and piano or solo piano (1933), 3 mn, Peters
- Five Songs for Contralto for voice and piano (1938), 8 mn, Peters
- Ho to AA for voice and piano (1939), partition perdue
- America Was Promises for narrator and piano for four hands or two pianos (1940), 40 mn, pas d'éditeur
- Forever and Sunsmell for voice and two percussionists (1942), 5 mn, Peters
- The City Wears a Slouch Hat for narrator and four, five or six percussionists (1942), 36 mn, Peters
- The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs for voice and piano (1942), 2 mn, Peters
- Four Dances For prepared piano, percussion, and tenor voice (wordless). (1942-1943), 20 mn, Peters
- She is asleep first part for percussion quartet, second part for voice and prepared piano (1943), 12 mn, Peters
- stage Four Walls for piano and voice (1944), 52 mn, Peters
- A Flower for voice and closed piano (1950), 4 mn, Peters
- elec Indeterminacy for voice, piano and tape (1959)
- elec Mewantemooseicday for loudspeakers, singers, pianos, orchestra, record players and audience (1969), pas d'éditeur
- Apartment House 1776 for four singers with an undetermined number of instrumentalists, with piano or melodic instrument and a drum ad lib. (1976), Peters
- elec Quartets I, V, VI for twelve amplified voices and wind ensemble and timpani (1976-1977), 13 mn, Peters
- elec Sounday radiophonic piece for violin, piano, voice, nine performers with amplified plant materials and water-filled conch shells, blown conch shells and tape. (1977-1978), 10 h, Inédit
- A Collection of Rocks for choir and orchestra (1984), 20 mn, Peters
- Nowth Upon Nacht for voice and piano (1984), 60 s, Peters
- Ryoanji solos for oboe, flute, double bass, voice, trombone with percussion or orchestra obbligato (1983-1985), Peters
- elec The First Meeting of the Satie Society for two speakers, singer with ensemble and/or tape (1984-1985), variable, Inédit
- Hymnkus for any solo from or combination of voice and ensemble (1986), 30 mn, Peters
- Improvisation A+B for voice and ensemble (1985-1986), 1 h 30 mn, Inédit
- Music for ________ for voice, flute, oboe, clarinet, trumpet, horn, trombone, percussion, piano, violin, viola, cello (1984-1987), maximum 30 mn, Peters
- elec Europera 3 for six singers, two pianos, six victrola players (1990), 1 h 10 mn, Peters
- elec Europera 4 for soprano, mezzo-soprano, solo piano and a victrola player (1990), 30 mn, Peters
- Scottish Circus for Scottish or Irish voices and instruments (1990), 30 mn about , Peters
- elec stage Europera 5 For two singers, piano, tape machine operator, and lighting technician (1991), 60 mn, Peters
- A cappella vocal music
- A Chant with Claps for voice and hand clapping (1940), Inédit
- Experiences II for solo voice (1948), 4 mn, Peters
- Lecture on Nothing rhythmically structured speech with silences (1950), 20 mn
- Lecture on Something rhythmically structured speech with silences (1951)
- 45' for a Speaker (1953), 45 mn, Inédit
- Unfinished composition for voice for voice (1953), Inédit
- elec Speech for narrator and five radios (1955), variable, Peters
- Aria for voice (1958), 12 mn, Peters
- Communication for narrator (1958)
- Solo for voice I for solo voice or as part of the Concert for piano and orchestra (1958), variable, Peters
- Solo for voice 2 for voice or choir (1960), Peters
- Lecture on Commitment for voice (1961)
- How to pass kick, fall and run for a speaker (1965)
- 36 Mesostics Re and not Re Marcel Duchamp (1970)
- Dialog or Dialogue, action for two people (1970), Inédit
- elec Mureau for narrator (s) and magnetic tapes (1970), autre
- elec Song Books solos for voices n°1 to 92, for an unspecified number of voices, theatrical action, with or without electronics (1970), 27 mn, Peters
- elec Sixty-two mesostics Re Merce Cunningham for voice with microphone (1971), between 7 mn 30 s and 3 h, Peters
- elec Lecture on the Weather for twelve amplified speakers (singing voices and / or instruments), magnetic tape and film (1975), between 22 mn 45 s and 36 mn 24 s, Peters
- Empty Words for voice (1973-1978), Inédit
- elec Letters to Erik Satie for voice and cassette (1978)
- Hymns and Variations for twelve amplified voices (1979), 28 mn, Peters
- Litany for the whale recitation and thirty-two answers for two equal voices without vibrato (1980), 25 mn, Peters
- Themes and Variations for a speaker (1980)
- Ear for EAR (Antiphonies) for two or more separate voices, one visible and the other invisible (1983), 4 mn, Peters
- Mushrooms “et variationes” for a speaker (1983)
- Eight Whiskus for voice (1984), 4 mn, Peters
- Mirakus 2 for voice (1984), 9 mn, Peters
- Selkus 2 for voice (1984), 9 mn, Peters
- Sonnekus 2 for voice (1985), 6 mn, Peters
- Wishing Well for four speakers (1986), 30 mn, Peters
- Anarchy for voice (1988)
- I-VI for mesostic voice with different sound sources (1988)
- Solos for Voice 93-96 four solos for voice, for solo or combination of soprano, mezzo-soprano, tenor and bass (1988), 15 mn, Peters
- Time (Three Autokus) three texts for narrator (1988)
- Stufen: an Autoku for Siegfried Unseld for voice (1989)
- Four2 for choir (1990), 7 mn, Peters
- elec Muoyce No. 2 for narrator with six recordings of traffic sounds from different cities (1992), 60 mn about , autre
- One12 for narrator (1992), Peters
- Electronic music / fixed media / mechanical musical instruments
- elec Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (March No. 2) for twelve radios (twenty-four players and conductor) (1951), 4 mn, Peters
- Imaginary Landscape No. 5 for any forty-two recordings and 8 magnetic tapes (1952), 4 mn, Peters
- elec Williams Mix for magnetic tape (1952), 4 mn 15 s, Peters
- Unfinished composition for Magnetic Tape for magnetic tape (1953), Inédit
- elec Radio Music for one to eight performers each at one radio (1956), 6 mn, Peters
- elec Fontana mix for magnetic tape (1958), variable, Peters
- elec Sounds of Venice for solo TV performer (1959), 3 mn, Peters
- elec Water walk for solo TV performer (1959), 3 mn, Peters
- elec Music for “The Marrying Maiden” for magnetic tape (1960), 9 mn, Peters
- elec Where Are We Going? And What Are We Doing? for magnetic tapes (1961), 60 mn, Peters
- elec Collage of some 'Studies pour Player Piano' (Conlon Nancarrow) for tape (1964)
- elec Rozart mix correspondence and notes, for magnetic tape, for a minimum of four performers with a minimum of twelve tape recorders and a minimum of eighty-eight loop recordings (1965), Peters
- elec Variations VI for several amplified sound sources (1966), variable, Peters
- elec Newport Mix for invited audience, each person producing a loop recording (1967), Inédit
- elec Assemblage for magnetic tape (1968), 59 mn
- elec 33 1/3 installation in which the audience is participating, with twelve disks, twelve amplifiers, twelve pairs of loudspeakers and approximately three hundred disks (1969), Peters
- elec Program (KNOBS) for the Listener instructions for controlling the volume, treble and bass of the left and right channels of a preamp for listening to the HPSCHD record (1969), 21 mn, pas d'éditeur
- elec Bird Cage For twelve pre-recorded tapes to be distributed by a single performer in a space in which people are free to move and birds to fly (1972), Peters
- elec Address for five musicians with tape recorders, cassettes and records operated by the public and an electric bell (1977)
- elec Cassette for five performers with five tape recorders and an undetermined number of magnetic tapes (1977), 40 mn
- elec Telephones and Birds for three performers using telephones and bird recordings or other recordings (1977), Peters
- elec ircam Roaratorio: An Irish Circus on Finnegans Wake radio program for electronic recordings, voice and Irish folk musicians (1979), 60 mn, Peters [program note]
- elec Silent Environment sound installation (1979), Inédit
- elec Improvisation No. 3 for four or more musicians, each with the same six stereo cassettes of music or sound of the same kind (1980), Peters
- elec Fifteen Domestic Minutes nine-part radio piece (1982), 15 mn, Inédit
- elec Improvisation No. 4 for three performers with tape recorders equipped with a device created by John Fulleman and twelve cassettes of music or sounds of two different types (1980, 1982), Peters
- elec Instances of Silence for an unspecified number of tape recorders with recordings of sounds from the environment (1982), Inédit
- elec Klassik nach Wunsch Radio happening (1982), Inédit
- elec HMCIEX radio program (1983-1984), 29 mn, Inédit
- elec Writing Through On The Duty of Civil Disobedience installation with eighteen cassette recordings (1985)
- elec Rocks for combination of electronic instruments (1986), Inédit
- elec Truckera for tape (1987), Inédit
- elec Voiceless Essays for four computer-generated tapes (1985-1987), 16 mn 49 s
- elec Essay for computer generated tapes (1987-1988), between 14 mn 4 s and 16 mn 49 s, Peters
- elec Sculptures musicales for a combination of sounds forming a sound sculpture (1989), Peters
- elec Five Hanau Silence for tapes (Hanau recordings in specific days, times and locations) (1991)
- elec Mozart Mix sound installation for five cassette tape recorders, twenty-five cassettes / tape-loops and silkscreen printing (1991), Inédit
- One11 for solo cameraman (1992), 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- Unspecified instrumentation
- Music for an Aquatic Ballet (1938), partition perdue
- stage 25 Ballets in 1 acte for a solo dancer (1939), partition perdue
- Fourth Construction unfinished (1942), pas d'éditeur
- 4'33" for any instrument or combination of instruments (1952), 4 mn 33 s, Peters [program note]
- Haiku for any sound source (1958), Inédit
- Variations I for any instrument (s) or sound source (s) (1958), variable, Peters
- stage Theatre Piece for one to eight performers (1960), Peters
- WBAI for an performer with one to four machines (1960), variable, Peters
- Variations II for any instrument(s) or sound source(s) (1961), variable, Peters
- elec 0'00” (4'33" No.2) for a performer with amplification producing actions (1962), Peters
- Variations III for any one or any number of people performing any actions (1962-1963), Peters
- Variations IV for an unspecified number of performers, sounds or combinations of sounds produced or not by activities (1963), Peters
- elec Variations V for performers with photocells and a minimum of thirteen amplified sound sources (1965), Peters
- Variations VII 7 statements re a performance six years before, for performers picking up sounds from the environment at the time of performance and using photocells and a large number of amplified sound sources (1966), Inédit
- Music for “Museum Event No. 5" (1967), partition perdue
- Musicircus for an unspecified number of interpreters prepared to play in the same place (1967), Inédit
- elec 0'00” No. 2 for two or more players on an amplified gaming table with contact microphones (1968)
- elec Reunion chess game played in an electronic board prepared with photoreceptors, eight amplifiers and speakers (1968), 5 h about , pas d'éditeur
- Variations VIII for an unspecified number of musicians playing with what they find on site (1968, 1978), 12 mn, Peters
- Sound Anonymously Receive for an unsolicited instrument (1969), Inédit
- First Week of June (1970), partition perdue
- Demonstration of the Sounds of the Environment for three hundred people silently walking a random walk on the campus of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (1971)
- Les chants de Maldoror pulvérisés par l'assistance même two hundred pages for a French-speaking audience of no more than two hundred people (1971), 1 mn 30 s, Peters
- WGBH-TV for composer and technicians (1971), Peters
- Three Pieces of Furniture Music (1972), pas d'éditeur
- Music for “Westbeth” (1974)
- elec Score (40 Drawings by Thoreau) and 23 parts for twenty-three instrumentalist and / or singers and magnetic tape (1974), Peters
- Renga seventy-eight parts to be performed alone or with Apartment House 1776 (1975-1976), between 30 mn and 40 mn, Peters
- 49 Waltzes for the five Boroughs for performer(s), listener(s), or disc(s) (1977), Peters
- A la ricerca del silenzio perduto for prepared train (1977), autre
- A Dip in the Lake: Ten Quicksteps, Sixty-two Waltzes, and Fifty-six Marches for Chicago and Vicinity for performers or listeners or record makers (1978), Peters
- Pools for an amplified musician, shell filled with water and the sound of fire (1978)
- Circus On ways to turn a book into a performance without actors (1979), Peters
- elec Concerto Grosso for four televisions and twelve radios (1979), Inédit
- Paragraphs of Fresh Air for voices and four performers using any instrument and with eleven sound sources which are a combination of typewriters, cassettes, record players, microphones and telephone lines (1979), 2 h, Inédit
- Evene/Environne METZment for an audience producing sounds and a performer moving chairs (1981), 60 mn, Inédit
- A House Full of Music for a large number of music students, playing or singing their repertoire simultaneously (1982), 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- Musicircus for Children for a large number of children singing or playing simultaneously (1984), Inédit
- One3 for any instrument (1989), Inédit
- Composed Improvisations for solo or combination of timbre drum, Steinberger bass guitar and tambourine (1987-1990), 8 mn, Peters
- One7 for performer using indeterminate sounds (1990), 30 mn, Peters
- 1992
- Eighty for orchestra of eighty musicians, 30 mn, Peters
- Fifty-Eight for fifty-eight wind instruments, between 44 mn 45 s and 45 mn, Peters
- Four6 for four performers with any sound sources, 30 mn, Peters
- elec Muoyce No. 2 for narrator with six recordings of traffic sounds from different cities, 60 mn about , autre
- One10 for violin, 24 mn 30 s, Peters
- One11 for solo cameraman, 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- One12 for narrator, Peters
- elec One13 for a cello and recording of three cellos, 12 mn, Inédit
- Seventeen for seventeen instruments
- Seventy-Four for orchestra of seventy-four instrumentalists, 12 mn, Peters
- Sixteen for sixteen instruments, Inédit
- Sixty-Eight for orchestra of sixty-eight instrumentalists, 30 mn, Peters
- Thirteen for thirteen instrumentalists, 30 mn, Peters
- Two6 for violin and piano, 20 mn, Peters
- 1991
- 103 for orchestra, 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- 108 for orchestra, 43 mn 30 s, Peters
- Eight for eight instruments, 60 mn, Peters
- elec stage Europera 5 For two singers, piano, tape machine operator, and lighting technician, 60 mn, Peters
- elec Five Hanau Silence for tapes (Hanau recordings in specific days, times and locations)
- Five2 for English horn, two clarinets, bass clarinet and timpani, between 4 mn 15 s and 5 mn, Peters
- Five3 for trombone and string quartet, between 39 mn 30 s and 40 mn, Peters
- Five4 for soprano saxophone, alto saxophone and three percussionists, between 4 mn 45 s and 5 mn, Peters
- Five5 for flute, two clarinets, bass clarinet and percussionist using five instruments, between 4 mn 45 s and 5 mn, Peters
- Four3 for four performers (1 or 2 pianos, rainsticks, violin or oscillator, silence), 30 mn, Peters
- Four4 for percussionist quartet, 1 h 12 mn, Peters
- Four5 for four saxophones, 12 mn, Peters
- Haikai for flute and zoomoozophone, 8 mn
- Lullaby for music box, autre
- elec Mozart Mix sound installation for five cassette tape recorders, twenty-five cassettes / tape-loops and silkscreen printing, Inédit
- One8 for cello, 43 mn 30 s, Peters
- One9 for shô, maximum 2 h, Peters
- Six for six percussionists, 3 mn, Peters
- Ten for ten instrumentalists, 30 mn, Peters
- Three2 for three percussionists, 9 mn, Peters
- Twenty-eight for twenty-eight wind instruments, 28 mn, Peters
- Twenty-nine for two timpani, two percussionists, piano and low strings, 29 mn, Peters
- Twenty-six for twenty-six violins, 26 mn, Peters
- Twenty-six, Twenty-eight, Twenty-nine for orchestra, 29 mn, Peters
- elec Two3 for shō and five amplified seashells, between 60 s and 2 h, Peters
- Two4 for violin and piano or shō, 30 mn, Peters
- Two5 for piano and tenor trombone, 40 mn, Peters
- 1990
- Composed Improvisations for solo or combination of timbre drum, Steinberger bass guitar and tambourine, 8 mn, Peters
- elec Europera 3 for six singers, two pianos, six victrola players, 1 h 10 mn, Peters
- elec Europera 4 for soprano, mezzo-soprano, solo piano and a victrola player, 30 mn, Peters
- Four2 for choir, 7 mn, Peters
- Fourteen for ensemble, 20 mn, Peters
- One4 for percussionist with ten cymbals and / or drums, 6 mn 59 s, Peters
- One5 for piano, 20 mn 40 s, Peters
- One6 for violin, 46 mn 50 s, Peters
- One7 for performer using indeterminate sounds, 30 mn, Peters
- Scottish Circus for Scottish or Irish voices and instruments, 30 mn about , Peters
- Seven2 for seven instruments, 52 mn, Peters
- elec The Beatles 1962-1970 for piano and tape, 8 mn, pas d'éditeur
- 1989
- Four for string quartet, between 20 mn and 30 mn, Peters
- One2 for one to four pianos, Peters
- One3 for any instrument, Inédit
- elec Sculptures musicales for a combination of sounds forming a sound sculpture, Peters
- Sports: Swinging for piano, 2 mn, Peters
- Stufen: an Autoku for Siegfried Unseld for voice
- Three for three recorders players, Peters
- Two2 for two pianos, Peters
- 1988
- 1O1 for orchestra, 12 mn, Peters
- Anarchy for voice
- elec Essay for computer generated tapes, between 14 mn 4 s and 16 mn 49 s, Peters
- Five for five voices and/or instruments, between 4 mn 15 s and 5 mn, Peters
- elec Five Stone Wind for three performers, one with a clay drum, the others with unspecified instruments and electronics, 60 mn, Peters
- I-VI for mesostic voice with different sound sources
- Seven for seven instruments, 20 mn, Peters
- Solos for Voice 93-96 four solos for voice, for solo or combination of soprano, mezzo-soprano, tenor and bass, 15 mn, Peters
- Time (Three Autokus) three texts for narrator
- Twenty-Three for string ensemble, 23 mn, Peters
- 1987
- ASLSP for piano or organ solo, variable, Peters
- elec stage Europeras 1 & 2 for voice(s) and chamber orchestra, 4 h 15 mn, Peters
- Music for ________ for voice, flute, oboe, clarinet, trumpet, horn, trombone, percussion, piano, violin, viola, cello, maximum 30 mn, Peters
- One for solo piano, 10 mn, Peters
- Organ2/ASLSP for organ, Peters
- elec Truckera for tape, Inédit
- Two for flute and piano, 10 mn, Peters
- elec Voiceless Essays for four computer-generated tapes, 16 mn 49 s
- 1986
- Haikai for gamelan (eight performers), 20 mn, Peters
- Hymnkus for any solo from or combination of voice and ensemble, 30 mn, Peters
- Improvisation A+B for voice and ensemble, 1 h 30 mn, Inédit
- elec Rocks for combination of electronic instruments, Inédit
- elec Vis-à-vis for two performers using records, photos, films and piano
- Wishing Well for four speakers, 30 mn, Peters
- 1985
- But What About the Noise of Crumpling Paper... for three to ten percussionists, Peters
- Eight Whikus for violin, 7 mn, Peters
- Etcetera 2/4 Orchestras for four orchestral groups, 30 mn, Peters
- Ryoanji solos for oboe, flute, double bass, voice, trombone with percussion or orchestra obbligato, Peters
- Sonnekus 2 for voice, 6 mn, Peters
- elec The First Meeting of the Satie Society for two speakers, singer with ensemble and/or tape, variable, Inédit
- Thirteen Harmonies for violin and keyboard, 38 mn, Peters
- elec Writing Through On The Duty of Civil Disobedience installation with eighteen cassette recordings
- 1984
- A Collection of Rocks for choir and orchestra, 20 mn, Peters
- Eight Whiskus for voice, 4 mn, Peters
- elec HMCIEX radio program, 29 mn, Inédit
- Haikai for flute and zoomoozophone, 15 mn, Peters
- Mirakus 2 for voice, 9 mn, Peters
- Musicircus for Children for a large number of children singing or playing simultaneously, Inédit
- Nowth Upon Nacht for voice and piano, 60 s, Peters
- Perpetual Tango for piano, Peters
- Selkus 2 for voice, 9 mn, Peters
- 1983
- Ear for EAR (Antiphonies) for two or more separate voices, one visible and the other invisible, 4 mn, Peters
- Mushrooms “et variationes” for a speaker
- R/13 (where R=Rioanji) for percussionist with thirteen found objects
- Ryoanji for percussion, Peters
- Souvenir for organ, Peters
- Thirty pieces for string quartet for string quartet, 30 mn 15 s, Peters
- 1982
- A House Full of Music for a large number of music students, playing or singing their repertoire simultaneously, 1 h 30 mn, Peters
- Alphabet Dance / 4 Orchestras , radio piece for orchestra divided into four groups, between 18 mn and 30 mn, Peters
- elec Fifteen Domestic Minutes nine-part radio piece, 15 mn, Inédit
- elec Improvisation No. 4 for three performers with tape recorders equipped with a device created by John Fulleman and twelve cassettes of music or sounds of two different types, Peters
- elec Instances of Silence for an unspecified number of tape recorders with recordings of sounds from the environment, Inédit
- elec Klassik nach Wunsch Radio happening, Inédit
- Postcard from Heaven for one to twenty harps, Peters
- 1981
- Evene/Environne METZment for an audience producing sounds and a performer moving chairs, 60 mn, Inédit
- Thirty Pieces for Five Orchestras for orchestra divided into five groups and radio or radios ad libitum, 30 mn 15 s, Peters
- 1980
- Freeman Etudes two times sixteen studies for solo violin, variable, Peters
- Furniture Music Etcetera for two pianos, 20 mn, Inédit
- elec Improvisation No. 3 for four or more musicians, each with the same six stereo cassettes of music or sound of the same kind, Peters
- Litany for the whale recitation and thirty-two answers for two equal voices without vibrato, 25 mn, Peters
- Themes and Variations for a speaker
- 1979
- Circus On ways to turn a book into a performance without actors, Peters
- elec Concerto Grosso for four televisions and twelve radios, Inédit
- Hymns and Variations for twelve amplified voices, 28 mn, Peters
- Paragraphs of Fresh Air for voices and four performers using any instrument and with eleven sound sources which are a combination of typewriters, cassettes, record players, microphones and telephone lines, 2 h, Inédit
- elec ircam Roaratorio: An Irish Circus on Finnegans Wake radio program for electronic recordings, voice and Irish folk musicians, 60 mn, Peters [program note]
- elec Silent Environment sound installation, Inédit
- 1978
- A Dip in the Lake: Ten Quicksteps, Sixty-two Waltzes, and Fifty-six Marches for Chicago and Vicinity for performers or listeners or record makers, Peters
- Chorals for solo violin, Peters
- Empty Words for voice, Inédit
- Etudes boréales for percussionist using a piano, pas d'éditeur
- elec Letters to Erik Satie for voice and cassette
- Pools for an amplified musician, shell filled with water and the sound of fire
- Some of “The Harmony of Maine” for organist with three assistants, 45 mn about , Peters
- elec Sounday radiophonic piece for violin, piano, voice, nine performers with amplified plant materials and water-filled conch shells, blown conch shells and tape., 10 h, Inédit
- Études boréales I-IV for cello and/or piano, between 15 mn and 20 mn, Peters
- 1977
- 49 Waltzes for the five Boroughs for performer(s), listener(s), or disc(s), Peters
- A la ricerca del silenzio perduto for prepared train, autre
- elec Address for five musicians with tape recorders, cassettes and records operated by the public and an electric bell
- elec Cassette for five performers with five tape recorders and an undetermined number of magnetic tapes, 40 mn
- Cheap Imitation for violin, 35 mn, Peters
- Inlets Improvisation II, for three performers playing seashells filled with water and one performer playing a shell in circular breathing and with the sound of fire, Peters
- elec Quartets I, V, VI for twelve amplified voices and wind ensemble and timpani, 13 mn, Peters
- elec Telephones and Birds for three performers using telephones and bird recordings or other recordings, Peters
- 1976
- Apartment House 1776 for four singers with an undetermined number of instrumentalists, with piano or melodic instrument and a drum ad lib., Peters
- elec Branches for percussion with amplified plant material, in duo, trio or orchestra, 8 mn, Peters
- Imitations II for clarinet, Peters
- Quartets I-VIII for twenty-four instrumentalists, 40 mn, Peters
- Quartets I-VIII for orchestra of ninety-three performers, 40 mn, Peters
- Quartets I-VIII for chamber orchestra of forty one performers, 40 mn, Peters
- Renga seventy-eight parts to be performed alone or with Apartment House 1776, between 30 mn and 40 mn, Peters
- 1975
- Child of tree for percussion using amplified plant material, 8 mn, Peters
- elec Lecture on the Weather for twelve amplified speakers (singing voices and / or instruments), magnetic tape and film, between 22 mn 45 s and 36 mn 24 s, Peters
- Études australes for piano, Peters
- 1974
- Music for “Westbeth”
- elec Score (40 Drawings by Thoreau) and 23 parts for twenty-three instrumentalist and / or singers and magnetic tape, Peters
- 1973
- 1972
- elec 52/3 for piano and electronics?, 52 mn, pas d'éditeur
- elec Bird Cage For twelve pre-recorded tapes to be distributed by a single performer in a space in which people are free to move and birds to fly, Peters
- Cheap Imitation orchestral version, 35 mn, Peters
- Three Pieces of Furniture Music, pas d'éditeur
- 1971
- Demonstration of the Sounds of the Environment for three hundred people silently walking a random walk on the campus of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
- Les chants de Maldoror pulvérisés par l'assistance même two hundred pages for a French-speaking audience of no more than two hundred people, 1 mn 30 s, Peters
- elec Sixty-two mesostics Re Merce Cunningham for voice with microphone, between 7 mn 30 s and 3 h, Peters
- WGBH-TV for composer and technicians, Peters
- 1970
- 36 Mesostics Re and not Re Marcel Duchamp
- Dialog or Dialogue, action for two people, Inédit
- First Week of June, partition perdue
- elec Mureau for narrator (s) and magnetic tapes, autre
- elec Song Books solos for voices n°1 to 92, for an unspecified number of voices, theatrical action, with or without electronics, 27 mn, Peters
- Untitled (work for Joan Miró) for piano, Inédit
- 1969
- elec 33 1/3 installation in which the audience is participating, with twelve disks, twelve amplifiers, twelve pairs of loudspeakers and approximately three hundred disks, Peters
- elec Adaptation of some "Studies pour Player Piano" (Conlon Nancarrow) for piano and live electronics, partition perdue
- Cheap Imitation for piano, 35 mn, Peters
- elec HPSCHD for more than seven harpsichords and fifty-one tapes, Peters
- elec Mewantemooseicday for loudspeakers, singers, pianos, orchestra, record players and audience, pas d'éditeur
- elec Program (KNOBS) for the Listener instructions for controlling the volume, treble and bass of the left and right channels of a preamp for listening to the HPSCHD record, 21 mn, pas d'éditeur
- Sound Anonymously Receive for an unsolicited instrument, Inédit
- Untitled piece for Antoinette Vischer, for harpsichord, Inédit
- 1968
- elec 0'00” No. 2 for two or more players on an amplified gaming table with contact microphones
- elec Assemblage for magnetic tape, 59 mn
- elec Reunion chess game played in an electronic board prepared with photoreceptors, eight amplifiers and speakers, 5 h about , pas d'éditeur
- Socrate, Portrait de Socrate for two pianos, 20 mn, Eschig
- Variations VIII for an unspecified number of musicians playing with what they find on site, 12 mn, Peters
- 1967
- Music for Carillon No. 5 for four-octave carillon with 47 bells, Peters
- Music for “Museum Event No. 5", partition perdue
- Musicircus for an unspecified number of interpreters prepared to play in the same place, Inédit
- elec Newport Mix for invited audience, each person producing a loop recording, Inédit
- 1966
- elec Music for Carillon No. 4 for electronic instrument with accompaniment, Peters
- elec Variations VI for several amplified sound sources, variable, Peters
- Variations VII 7 statements re a performance six years before, for performers picking up sounds from the environment at the time of performance and using photocells and a large number of amplified sound sources, Inédit
- 1965
- How to pass kick, fall and run for a speaker
- elec Rozart mix correspondence and notes, for magnetic tape, for a minimum of four performers with a minimum of twelve tape recorders and a minimum of eighty-eight loop recordings, Peters
- elec Variations V for performers with photocells and a minimum of thirteen amplified sound sources, Peters
- 1964
- elec Collage of some 'Studies pour Player Piano' (Conlon Nancarrow) for tape
- elec Electronic Music for Piano for one or more pianos, with electronics, Peters
- 1963
- Sonata for clarinet for clarinet, 6 mn, Peters
- Variations III for any one or any number of people performing any actions, Peters
- Variations IV for an unspecified number of performers, sounds or combinations of sounds produced or not by activities, Peters
- 1962
- elec 0'00” (4'33" No.2) for a performer with amplification producing actions, Peters
- elec Atlas Eclipticalis for one to eighty six instruments with live electronics ad libitum, 14 mn, Peters
- elec Music for Piano 85 for piano with live electronics, Inédit
- 1961
- Lecture on Commitment for voice
- Variations II for any instrument(s) or sound source(s), variable, Peters
- elec Where Are We Going? And What Are We Doing? for magnetic tapes, 60 mn, Peters
- 1960
- elec Cartridge Music for small amplified sounds, variable, Peters
- Duet for Cymbale part of Cartridge Music
- elec Music for Amplified Toy Pianos for toy pianos, Peters
- elec Music for “The Marrying Maiden” for magnetic tape, 9 mn, Peters
- Piano Duet for piano
- Solo for voice 2 for voice or choir, Peters
- stage Theatre Piece for one to eight performers, Peters
- WBAI for an performer with one to four machines, variable, Peters
- 1959
- elec Indeterminacy for voice, piano and tape
- elec Sounds of Venice for solo TV performer, 3 mn, Peters
- elec Water walk for solo TV performer, 3 mn, Peters
- 1958
- Adaptation of ‘Ixion’ de Morton Feldman for chamber orchestra or for two pianos, Peters
- Aria for voice, 12 mn, Peters
- Communication for narrator
- Concert for Piano and Orchestra, variable, Peters
- elec Fontana mix for magnetic tape, variable, Peters
- Haiku for any sound source, Inédit
- elec Music Walk for one or more pianists with radios and producing auxiliary sounds by singing or otherwise, variable, Peters
- elec Music for Carillon No. 4 for electronic chime with percussion and live electronics or magnetic tape, 10 mn, Peters
- Solo for Bassoon, Peters
- Solo for Cello, Peters
- Solo for Clarinet, Peters
- Solo for Double Bass, Peters
- Solo for Flute, Peters
- Solo for Piano, Peters
- Solo for Sliding Trombone, Peters
- Solo for Trumpet, Peters
- Solo for Tuba, Peters
- Solo for Viola, Peters
- Solo for Violin, Peters
- Solo for voice I for solo voice or as part of the Concert for piano and orchestra, variable, Peters
- TV Köln for piano and other sound sources ad libitum, variable, Peters
- Variations I for any instrument (s) or sound source (s), variable, Peters
- 1957
- For Paul Taylor and Anita Dencks for piano's interior and undetermined sources, 3 mn, Peters
- Winter music for one to twenty pianos, Peters
- 1956
- 27'10.554” for a percussionist, Peters
- Music for Piano 53-68 for piano or ensemble, 12 mn, Peters
- elec Radio Music for one to eight performers each at one radio, 6 mn, Peters
- 1955
- 26'1.1499" for four-string instruments or a combination of two or more instruments, 12 mn, Peters
- Music for Piano 21-36; 37-52 for solo piano or ensemble, variable, Peters
- Music for Piano 69-84 for solo piano or ensemble, Peters
- elec Speech for narrator and five radios, variable, Peters
- 1954
- 31'57.9864” for prepared piano, variable, Peters
- 34'46.776" for prepared piano, variable, Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 2, variable, Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 3, variable, Peters
- 1953
- 1' 5½" for a String Player for any four-string instrument, 1 mn 5 s, Inédit
- 1' ½’’ for a String Player for any four-string instrument, 1 mn 30 s, Inédit
- 1'14’’ for a String Player for any four-string instrument, 1 mn 14 s, Inédit
- 1'18’’ for a String Player for any four-string instrument, 1 mn 14 s, Inédit
- 45' for a Speaker, 45 mn, Inédit
- 57½" for a String Player for any four-string instrument, 57 s, Inédit
- 59½" for a String Player for any four-string instrument, 59 s, Peters
- Music for Piano 20 for piano, Peters
- Music for Piano 4-19 for an unspecified number of pianos, Peters
- Music for Piano II for piano, 4 mn, Peters
- Music for Piano III for piano, Peters
- Unfinished composition for Magnetic Tape for magnetic tape, Inédit
- Unfinished composition for voice for voice, Inédit
- 1952
- 4'33" for any instrument or combination of instruments, 4 mn 33 s, Peters [program note]
- elec stage Black Mountain Piece for three speakers, piano, dancer, gramophone, radio, film, slide projectors and paintings, 44 mn 25 s, Inédit
- For M.C. and D.T for piano, between 60 s and 2 mn, Peters
- Imaginary Landscape No. 5 for any forty-two recordings and 8 magnetic tapes, 4 mn, Peters
- Music for Carillon No. 1, 4 mn, Peters
- Music for Piano I for piano, 3 mn 30 s, Peters
- Seven Haiku for piano, 3 mn, Peters
- Two Pastorales for prepared piano, 14 mn, Peters
- Waiting for piano, 3 mn 30 s, Peters
- elec Water music for a pianist with objects, 6 mn 40 s, Peters
- elec Williams Mix for magnetic tape, 4 mn 15 s, Peters
- 1951
- Concerto for Prepared Piano for prepared piano and chamber orchestra, 21 mn, Peters [program note]
- Haiku for piano, 5 mn, Peters
- elec Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (March No. 2) for twelve radios (twenty-four players and conductor), 4 mn, Peters
- Lecture on Something rhythmically structured speech with silences
- Music of Changes for piano, 43 mn, Peters [program note]
- Sixteen Dances for soloist and company of three, 53 mn, Peters [program note]
- 1950
- A Flower for voice and closed piano, 4 mn, Peters
- Lecture on Nothing rhythmically structured speech with silences, 20 mn
- elec Music for ‘Works of Calder’ for prepared piano and magnetic tape, 20 mn about , Inédit
- Six melodies for violin and piano, 15 mn, Peters
- String Quartet in Four Parts, 20 mn, Peters
- 1948
- Dream for solo piano, 6 mn 30 s, Peters
- Experiences II for solo voice, 4 mn, Peters
- In a landscape for solo piano or harp, 8 mn, Peters
- Orestes for solo piano, 5 mn, Inédit
- Sonatas and interludes for prepared piano, 1 h 10 mn, Peters
- Suite for toy piano for toy piano, 8 mn, Peters
- 1947
- Music for Marcel Duchamp for prepared piano, 5 mn, Peters
- Nocturne for violin and piano for violin and piano, 4 mn, Peters
- stage The Seasons ballet in one act, for solo piano or orchestra, 15 mn, Peters
- 1946
- Encounter for piano, 5 mn, Inédit
- Foreboding for piano, partition perdue
- Ophelia for piano, 5 mn, Peters
- Prelude for 6 Instruments in A Minor for piano, flute, bassoon, trumpet, violin and cello, 5 mn, Inédit
- Two Pieces pour Piano for piano, 9 mn, Peters
- 1945
- Crete for piano, 60 s, Inédit
- Dad for piano, 30 s, Inédit
- Daughters of the Lonesome Isle for prepared piano, 10 mn about , Peters
- Experiences I for two pianos four hands, 3 mn, Peters
- Mysterious Adventure for prepared piano, 8 mn, Peters
- Party Pieces Sonorous and Exquisite Corpses for any melodic or keyboard instrument, 12 mn, Peters
- Soliloquy for piano, 3 mn, Peters
- The Feast for piano, partition perdue
- Thin Cry for piano, partition perdue
- Three Dances for two prepared pianos, 21 mn, Peters [program note]
- 1944
- A Book of Music for two prepared pianos, 30 mn, Peters
- A Valentine out of season for prepared piano, 4 mn, Peters
- Arrangement of ‘Socrate’ (Erik Satie) for two pianos, 35 mn, Eschig
- stage Four Walls for piano and voice, 52 mn, Peters
- Prelude for Meditation for prepared piano, 60 s, Peters
- Root of an Unfocus for prepared piano, 4 mn, Peters
- Spontaneous Earth for prepared piano, 3 mn, Peters
- The Perilous Night for piano, 12 mn, Peters
- The Unavailable Memory of for prepared piano, 2 mn, Peters
- Triple-Paced No. 2 for prepared piano, 2 mn, Peters
- 1943
- A Room for piano or prepared piano, 2 mn, Peters
- Ad Lib for piano, 4 mn, Peters
- Amores for prepared piano and three percussionists, 9 mn, Peters
- Chess Pieces for piano, 8 mn, Inédit
- Four Dances For prepared piano, percussion, and tenor voice (wordless)., 20 mn, Peters
- Lidice for prepared piano, 15 mn, partition perdue
- Our Spring Will Come for prepared piano, 4 mn, Peters
- She is asleep first part for percussion quartet, second part for voice and prepared piano, 12 mn, Peters
- Tossed As It Is Untrouble for prepared piano, 2 mn 30 s, Peters
- Triple-Paced No. 1 for piano, 2 mn, Peters
- 1942
- And The Earth Shall Bear Again for prepared piano, 3 mn, Peters
- elec Credo in Us for four performers, 12 mn, Peters
- Dance to the West for piano, 4 mn, Inédit
- Forever and Sunsmell for voice and two percussionists, 5 mn, Peters
- Fourth Construction unfinished, pas d'éditeur
- Imaginary Landscape No. 2, March n° 1 for percussion quintet, 7 mn, Peters
- Imaginary landscape No 3 for percussion sextet, 3 mn, Peters
- In the Name of the Holocaust for prepared piano, 6 mn, Peters
- Jazz Study for piano, 3 mn, Peters
- Opening Dance for piano
- Opening Dance for Sue [Laub] for piano, 2 mn, Peters
- Primitive for prepared piano, 4 mn 30 s, Peters
- Shimmera for prepared piano, pas d'éditeur
- The City Wears a Slouch Hat for narrator and four, five or six percussionists, 36 mn, Peters
- The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs for voice and piano, 2 mn, Peters
- Totem Ancestor for prepared piano, 2 mn, Peters
- 1941
- Double Music for percussion quartet, 6 mn, Peters
- Third Construction for four percussionists, 15 mn, Peters
- 1940
- A Chant with Claps for voice and hand clapping, Inédit
- America Was Promises for narrator and piano for four hands or two pianos, 40 mn, pas d'éditeur
- Bacchanale for prepared piano, 6 mn, Peters
- Dance Music: for Elfrid Ide for six percussionists, 15 mn, Inédit
- Fads and Fancies in the Academy for five performers, 17 mn, Peters
- Four Songs of the Moment for piano, 12 mn, pas d'éditeur
- elec Imaginary Landscape No. 2 first version, for constant and variable frequency discs, piano and percussion, Inédit
- Living room music for percussion and speech quartet with or without instrumental solo, 8 mn, Peters
- Second Construction for percussion ensemble, 6 mn, Peters
- Spiritual for piano, pas d'éditeur
- 1939
- stage 25 Ballets in 1 acte for a solo dancer, partition perdue
- First Construction in Metal percussion sextet with an assistant using chimes, 9 mn, Peters
- Ho to AA for voice and piano, partition perdue
- elec Imaginary Landscape No.1 for two variable-speed phono turntables, frequency recordings, muted piano and cymbal, 6 mn, Peters
- Marriage at the Eiffel Tower for two pianos partly for four hands, various whistles, toys and sirens, Inédit
- 1938
- Five Songs for Contralto for voice and piano, 8 mn, Peters
- Metamorphosis for piano, 15 mn, Peters
- Music for Wind Instruments for wind quintet, 8 mn, Peters
- Music for an Aquatic Ballet, partition perdue
- 1936
- String Quartet for string quartet in scordatura, pas d'éditeur
- Trio for three percussionists, 12 mn, Peters
- 1935
- Quartet for percussion, 20 mn, Peters
- elec Quest for fifty toys amplified with microphone and speaker (first movement) and piano (second movement), 10 mn, Peters
- Three Pieces for Flute Duet for two flutes, 6 mn, Peters
- Two Pieces for Piano for piano, 4 mn, Peters
- 1934
- Allemande for clarinet in B flat, Inédit
- Composition for Three Voices for three unspecified instruments, 4 mn, Peters
- Duet for Two Flutes for two flutes, Inédit
- Music for Xenia for piano, Inédit
- Six Short Inventions for alto flute, clarinet, trumpet, violin, two violas and cello, 7 mn, Peters
- Solo with Obligato Accompaniment of Two Voices in Canon, and 6 Short Inventions on the Subject of the Solo for minimum three instruments, on the g-g scale, 15 mn, Peters
- 1933
- Sonata for Two Voices for two or more instruments, on specific scales, 6 mn, Peters
- Three Easy Pieces for piano, 3 mn, Peters
- Three Songs for Voice and Piano for voice and piano or solo piano, 3 mn, Peters
- 1932
- First Chapter of Ecclesiastes, The Preacher for piano, and voice ad libitum, 10 mn about , Inédit
- Greek Ode for voice and piano, 12 mn, Inédit
- Piano Etudes for piano, partition perdue
- 1931
- Untitled Composition for any instrument with specific ranges, 12 mn, Inédit
Bibliographie
Textes de John Cage
- John CAGE, Silence, Middletown, Connecticut, Wesleyan University Press, 1961 (Silence. Conférences et écrits [1961], Genève : Héros-Limite, 2003.)
- John CAGE, A Year from Monday, Middletown, Connecticut, Wesleyan University Press, 1968. (Une année dès lundi. Conférences et écrits [1967], Paris : Textuel, 2006.)
- John CAGE, M. Writings ’67-’72, Londres / Middletown : Calder & Boyars, 1973.
- John CAGE, Empty Words. Writings ’73-’78, Boston / Londres : Marion Boyars, 1980.
- John CAGE, X. Writings ’79-’82, Middletown : Wesleyan University Press, 1983.
- John CAGE, Charles Eliot Norton Lectures, Cambridge : Harvard University Press, 1990.
- John CAGE, I-VI. Cambridge, MA. and London, Harvard University Press, 1990.
- John CAGE, Je n’ai jamais écouté aucun son sans l’aimer : le seul problème avec les sons, c’est la musique, La Souterraine : La main courante, 1994.
- John CAGE, Escritos al oído (édition et traduction de C. Pardo), Murcia, Colegio Oficial de Aparejadores y Arquitectos Técnicos de Murcia, Colección de Arquilectura, nº 38, 1999.
- John CAGE en conversation avec Daniel CHARLES, For the Birds, Boston-London, Marion Boyars, 1981. (Pour les oiseaux. Entretiens avec Daniel Charles [1976], Paris : L’Herne, 2002.)
Textes sur John Cage
- Richard KOSTELANETZ, Conversations avec John Cage [1988], Paris : Syrtes, 2000.
- Joan RETALLACK, Musicage : Cage Muses on Words, Art, Music. John Cage in Conversation with Joan Retallack, Londres / Hanovre : Wesleyan University Press, 1996.
- Pierre BOULEZ et John CAGE, Correspondance et documents, Paris, Christian Bourgois, 1991.
- « John Cage » dansRevue d’esthétique, nouvelle série, nº 13-14-15, 1987-1988, Paris, éd. Privat, 1988.
- « De la composition : l’après John Cage» dans Revue d’esthétique, nouvelle série, nº 43, Paris, J.M. Place, 2003.
- Gino Di MAGGIO, Achille BONITO OLIVA, Daniele LOMBARDI, éd., John Cage, Milano, Fondazione Mudita, 2009.
- Daniel CHARLES, Jean-Louis HOUCHARD (contributions sollicités et rassemblées par), Rencontrer, encountering John Cage, Elne, VOIXéditions, 2008
- H. K. METZGER et R. RIEHN (éd.), Musik-Konzepte, Sonderband John Cage I et II. München, edition text+kritik, 1990.
- David NICHOLLS, éd., The Cambridge Companion to John Cage, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2002.
- David W. PATTERSON, éd., John Cage : Music, Philosophy, and Intention, 1933-1950, Londres / New York : Routledge, 2002.
- Jean-Yves BOSSEUR, John Cage, Paris : Minerve, 1993.
- Daniel CHARLES, Gloses sur John Cage [1978], Paris : Desclée de Brouwer, 2002.
- Marc FROMENT-MEURICE, Les Intermittences de la raison. Penser Cage, entendre Heidegger, Paris : Klincksieck, 1982.
- Ulrike Kasper, Écrire sur l’eau. L’esthétique de John Cage, Paris : Hermann, 2005.
- David NICHOLLS, John Cage, University of Illinois Press, 2007.
- Carmen PARDO SALGADO, Approche de John Cage. L’écoute oblique [2001], Paris : L’Harmattan, 2007 (La escucha oblicua: una invitación a John Cage, Editorial Universidad Politécnica de Valencia. Colección Letras Humanas, 2001).
- En el mar de John Cage, Ediciones de La Central, Barcelona, 2009
- James PRITCHETT, The Music of John Cage, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1993
- David REVILL, The Roaring Silence. John Cage a life, London, Bloomsbury, 1992
- Stefan SCHÄDLER et Walter ZIMMERMANN, John Cage. Anarchic Harmony, Francfort-sur-le-Main : Schott, 1992
- Anne DE FORNEL, John Cage, Paris : Fayard, 2019.
Lien internet
- http://johncage.org (administré par le John Cage Trust, vérifié en février 2010)
Filmographie
- Merrill BROCKWA, Aspects of a New Conciousness, Dialogue III, 1969, (30m.).
- John CORBER, John Cage: Man and Myth, 1990 (video).
- Elliot CAPLAN (dir.), Beach Birds for camera, 1992.
- Fundació Espai Poble Nou/Barcelona, John Cage. Essay, Gener - abril de 1991 (vídeo).
- Takahiko IIMURA, John Cage Performs James Joyce, 1985, (video 15m.).
- Henning LOHNER, One 11 and 103, 1992 (125m.).
- Allan MILLER, I have nothing to say and I am saying it, 1990. John Cage. Je n’ai rien à dire et je le dis. Music Project for Television Inc. American Masters, Lola Film, Wnet New York, 1994 (54m.).
- John Cage, 1990 (TV).
- Henning LOHNER, Die Rache der Toten Indianer, 1993, 125’, couleur, son.
- Nam June PAIK, A Tribute to John Cage, 1976 (1973), 29’02’’, couleur, son.