The Seasons (Cage)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Seasons is a ballet with music by John Cage and choreography by Merce Cunningham, first performed in 1947. It was Cage's first piece for orchestra[1] and also the first to use what Cage later called the gamut technique, albeit in an early form.[2][3]
Contents |
[edit] General information
Cage composed the music in early 1947, in the midst of working on Sonatas and Interludes. A piano version was first completed, and an orchestral arrangement followed. Cage dedicated The Seasons to Lincoln Kirstein. The ballet was premiered on 18 May 1947 at the Ballet Society of Ziegfeld Theatre (by which the work was commissioned[4]) in New York City, with original choreography by Merce Cunningham (now lost[4]). Costumes and scenery were designed by Isamu Noguchi. The dancers at the first performance were Gisela Caccialanza, Fred Danieli, Dorothy Dushock, Gerard Leavitt, Tanaquil LeClerc, Job Sanders, Beatrice Tompkins and Cunningham himself.[5]
The ballet is in one act divided into nine sections: Prelude I, Winter; Prelude II, Spring; Prelude III, Summer; Prelude IV, Fall; Finale (Prelude I). Like in Sonatas and Interludes and the later String Quartet in Four Parts (1950), Cage was influenced by Indian aesthetics and like the latter work, The Seasons is built on the Indian concept of seasons: winter is associated with quiescense, spring with creation, summer with preservation and fall with destruction. The Finale is a reprise of the first Prelude, symbolizing the cyclical nature of seasons.[1]
As in the majority of Cage's compositions from the 1940s, the music of The Seasons is based on a predefined proportion. In this case the proportion is 2, 2, 1, 3, 2, 4, 1, 3, 1, and it governs not only the construction of individual movements, but also the proportions of the entire work, roughly defining the relative lengths of the movements.[1] The compositional technique involves using gamuts of sounds, ie. predefined sonorities (single notes, chords, aggregates); Cage started developing this approach in The Seasons, and later perfected it in String Quartet in Four Parts and Concerto for prepared piano.[3]
[edit] See also
- List of compositions by John Cage
- Sixteen Dances
[edit] References
- David Nicholls. The Cambridge Companion to John Cage. Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0521789680
- James Pritchett. The Music of John Cage. Cambridge University Press, 1993. ISBN 0521565448
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c Pritchett, 40
- ^ Pritchett, 40-45
- ^ a b Nicholls, 189
- ^ a b William Fetterman. John Cage's Theatre Pieces: Notations and Performances, p. 14. Routledge, 1996. ISBN 3718656434
- ^ Date on the first performance and contributors from: Anatole Chujoy, Phyllis Winifred Manchester. The Dance Encyclopedia p. 811. Simon and Schuster, 1967. 992p.