KPFA-FM Music Dept. ➔ Overpopulation and Art: A reading by John Cage
Analog Audio
Event Type
Lectures and Panel DiscussionsOrigin
KPFAIdentifier
AM.1992.01.28Program Length
34 minsDates
| broadcast| 1992-01-28 | created
Description
On January 28, 1992, John Cage delivered a series of lectures at Stanford University in Palo Alto California, just a few months before his death. Representing his last major writing, “Overpopulation and Art” is a mesostic poem that covers a wide variety of Cage’s concerns, from the implications of technology on the environment, to the role of art in society. Although often remembered as a radical composer of aleatoric music, John Cage was also an extremely intelligent man, who remained curious about most aspects of life, be it scientific, artistic, political, or philosophical. Unrelentingly optimistic about humanity’s potential, and yet painfully aware of its faults, Cage’s concluding words, in which he describes the arc of one’s achievements as going from “failure to failure, until the final victory,” serves as a fitting epitaph for this incredible man’s life.Genres
PoetryLiterature
Musical Selections
Overpopulation and Art [a mesostic poem] (ca. 1992) (26:12) / John CagePerformers
John Cage, readerSubjects
PoetryPolitics and culture
Related places
Palo Alto (Calif.) (was recorded at)Berkeley (Calif.) (was broadcast at)