''Imaginary Landscape No. 3'' is a composition for six
percussionists by American composer
John Cage
John Milton Cage Jr. (September 5, 1912 – August 12, 1992) was an American composer and music theorist. A pioneer of indeterminacy in music, electroacoustic music, and non-standard use of musical instruments, Cage was one of the leading fi ...
and the third in the series of
Imaginary Landscapes. It is the last ''Imaginary Landscape'' to feature percussion instruments and, therefore, the last one to be considered a
chamber piece. It was composed in 1942.
Composition
After using the idea of tone records in turntables to create music in ''
Imaginary Landscape No. 1
''Imaginary Landscape No. 1'' is a composition for Phonograph record, records of constant and variable frequency, large chinese cymbal and string piano by American composer John Cage and the first in the series of Imaginary Landscapes. It was compo ...
'', John Cage started working in radio station across the United States to practice with the possibilities of both broadcasting and the use of electronic devices as musical instruments. ''Imaginary Landscape No. 3'' was created in
Chicago, where he was working in early 1942. This piece was made after he learned about the amplified coil of wire, a technique that he also used in ''
Imaginary Landscape No. 2'' and which he came in contact with after knowing a sound effects producer in Chicago.
The premiere took place on March 1, 1942, just a few months prior to the premiere of his ''Imaginary Landscape No. 2''. On this occasion, Cage was given a hearing by the
Arts Club in Chicago. After a buffet supper, Cage himself conducted in shirtsleeves a concert entitled ''Music for Percussion Orchestra''. Ten performers, among which was his own wife at the time,
Xenia Cage, then premiered works by
William Russell and
Lou Harrison, the dedicatee of ''Imaginary Landscape No. 2'', as well as his own ''Imaginary Landscape No. 3''. Due to its unusual scoring, which also called for a
siren, he had to obtain official permission from the
Chicago police.
This premiere became well known because he used a beer bottle, which he had to shatter into an iron bar getting the bits into a barrel. The
Chicago Daily Times famously reported that Xenia told Cage to "be careful" and not to "cut" himself. After Cage burst the bottle, splinters of glass cut his hands, so he smiled to the audience and announced: "That is the finale". Especially because of the finale, the concert brought Cage national attention: the
New York World-Telegram ran the headline "They Break Beer Bottles Now to Make Music in Chicago", and numerous magazines published pictures of him laughing while banging and playing the piano with his elbows.
After this, since the Cages disliked Chicago very much, they moved to another apartment and remodeled it with new furniture. Getting these changes allowed John to composed his ''
Fourth Construction'', a piece which eventually became ''Imaginary Landscape No. 2''.
''Imaginary Landscape No. 3'' was dedicated to
Lavinia Schwartz and was later published by
Edition Peters.
Structure
This piece consist of only one movement and has a total duration of three minutes. It is scored for six percussionists playing
tin cans, a
muted gong,
audio frequency oscillators, three
variable speed turntables using
tone recordings,
buzzers, a microphone-amplified
marimbula and an amplified coil of wire attached to a phonographic tone arm. This latter technique was first used in this composition, even though it was also used in ''Imaginary Landscape No. 2''. To a certain extent, this composition is a combination of the first two in the series.
Recordings
The following is an incomplete list of recordings of ''Imaginary Landscape No. 3'':
* The
Maelström Percussion Ensemble recorded of the piece. The recording took place between May 28 and June 1, 1995 and was released by
Hat Hut.
* The Italian
Ensemble Prometeo recorded this piece in 2009. The recording was later released in 2012 by
Stradivarius.
* The
Percussion Group Cincinnati also performed this piece in 2011. It was recorded and released by
Mode Records both on CD and DVD.
References
{{John Cage
1942 compositions
Compositions by John Cage