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John Cage - composer, artist, writer, provocateur, citizen mycologist and much more - was born 111 years ago on the 5th of September 1912. I’m publishing this 2023 episode on his birthdate, and the composition is made in homage to him and the inspiration I’ve found in his work and ideas since the late 1970s. There is much to discover about his life and works on the vast repositories of the internet, so you can perhaps bounce around there for a bit while listening…

If you’re up for a little old-fashioned book-reading, an excellent biography titled Where the Heart Beats was written by Kay Larson and first published by The Penguin Press in 2012.

Later this week I’m opening a solo show of drawing works at DRAW Space, a new gallery here in Gadigal/Sydney. One of the works is titled ‘Sound drawing for DRAW Space and John Cage’. It’s constructed from reworked post-consumer packaging, primarily plastic, cardboard and aluminium, formed into channels, tunnels, chutes and drops arranged in site-specific marble-run slaloms on the gallery walls.

A visitor climbs a platform ladder to drop quandong* nuts into the tops of the slaloms. These natural wooden marbles sequentially sonify the various materials as they roll, zig-zag, drop and bounce along their gravity-assisted journey to terminal receptacles on the gallery floor.

Both visual score and sounding instrument, each slalom is an analogue sound sequencer creating a replicable noise-melody and while repetitive of the same sequence, each tumbling quandong ‘run’ varies depending on initial conditions and the momentary physics of material encounters along the way.

While not alone in exploring the creative potentials of chance operations and actively addressing questions about how to think about sound and what music might be, John Cage was uncannily prolific, and his influence across art forms wide-ranging. This episode is a new composition built from preliminary recordings of tests for the work I’ll be installing later in the week, entwined with various other sonic explorations of the past few months and years.

With thanks to Barbara Campbell for performing the piano chords derived from the music of Erik Satie.