Empty Words

by John Cage (1912-1992), Composer and Music Theorist

If you’ve read John Cage before, you’ll be aware of some of his concerns: the nature and future of music; the ways of dancers (and their appetites); the concept of the world as Megalopolis set in a global park; the ancient ideas of Eastern civilizations as they reverberate in Western minds; the several magics that reside in, say, the art of the painter or in the clashes and harmonies of words, whether arranged by chance or intent. All of these, in one fashion or another, are here in Empty Words; none of them, however, quite as you have seen them before. There are anecdotes, there are epigrams, there are even caustic analyses/criticisms of the world’s politico- economic puzzles and problems. And like all of John Cage’s writing, Empty Words is fresh, thought-provoking, full of beauty and challenge.

ISBN (Paperback) 9780714527048
Price (Paperback) £15.95
Publication January 1, 1973
Pages 200
Size 233 x 178 mm
Readership scholars, general readers
Rights This edition not for sale in North America, the Philippines or US Territories. Please order from Wesleyan University Press.

Information

Author Information

    • This text has 0 annotations
    • This text has 0 highlights

Book Information

    • This text has 0 annotations
    • This text has 0 highlights
    • This text has 0 annotations
    • This text has 0 highlights

Metadata

  • isbn
    9780714527048 (Paperback)
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield (U.K.)
  • rights
    This edition is not for sale in North America, the Philippines or US overseas territories. Please order from Wesleyan University Press.