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August 20, 2006

'As Slow as Possible' by John Cage: 639 years in duration, it's the world's longest — and slowest — piece of music

Uuuoiuioiou

"The first notes of the longest and slowest piece of music in history, designed to go on for 639 years," were played on a church organ in Halberstadt, Germany on Wednesday, February 5, 2003.

The piece will conclude in 2640.

But you say, wait a minute: 2640 — 639 = 2001.

And the first notes were played in 2003, it says in the first sentence of this post.

What gives?

Vexed me too: I couldn't sleep for weeks as I wrestled with this seeming contradiction.

Until I reread the BBC article below for the hundredth or so time.

The penny dropped.

See where it says, "the performance has already been going for 17 months - although all that has been heard so far is the sound of the organ's bellows being inflated?"

Res ipsa loquitur.

But I digress.

Can't wait to hear how it ends.

Here's the February 5, 2003 BBC story.

    First notes for 639-year composition

    The first notes in the longest and slowest piece of music in history, designed to go on for 639 years, are being played on a German church organ on Wednesday.

    The three notes, which will last for a year-and-a-half, are just the start of the piece, called As Slow As Possible.

    Composed by late avant-garde composer John Cage [top], who died in 1992, the performance has already been going for 17 months - although all that has been heard so far is the sound of the organ's bellows being inflated.

    The music will be played in Halberstadt, a small town renowned for its ancient organs in central Germany.

    It was originally a 20-minute piece for piano, but a group of musicians and philosophers decided to take the title literally and work out how long the longest possible piece of music could last.

    They settled on 639 years because the Halberstadt organ was 639 years old in the year 2000.

    "We started discussing - what is as slow as possible for the organ?" Swedish composer and organist Hans-Ola Ericsson told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

    "We, a group of theologians, musicologists, philosophers, composers and organists, met during a couple of years solely to discuss this question. It was rather wonderful to have one topic to discuss at length."

    "We came up with the answer that the piece could last for the duration of the organ - that is the lifetime of an organ."

    Mr Ericsson said John Cage would have liked what they had done with it.

    "It's a sound that we give to the future to take care of, and hopefully the aesthetics and the ideas of John Cage will manage to survive."

    The first note is due to be struck at 1800 local time (1700 GMT) on Wednesday.

    The performance follows a legal case in which composer Mike Batt was forced to pay a six-figure sum to Cage's publishers, who accused him of plagiarising a silent piece of music.

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Comments

This organization:

http://www.longnow.org/

Is building a clock to last 10,000 years.

http://www.longnow.org/projects/clock/

It will look something like this.

http://www.longnow.org/projects/clock/prototype1/
http://www.longnow.org/projects/clock/prototype1/clock/

And will live in a cave high on a mountain in Nevada.

http://www.longnow.org/projects/nevada/

Where it is hoped that people (long now time druids) will make arduous annual pilgimages to hear it tick once a year (playing chimes to celebrate), and bong once a century.

Brian Eno who is part of the time-druid team, donated a series of sounds simlulating the actual physical chimes that will be triggered by the clock's mechanically instantiated algorithm each year so that over 10,000 years, no series of bell-chimes will be the same. His recordings of studies for the bell chimes can induce trance-like states.

http://www.longnow.org/shop/prints-cds/bells-cd.php

Depending on how you look at it, once it commences ticking, the clock of the long now playing its annual chimes over 10,000 years may displace Guage's longest piece of music.

Posted by: sb | Aug 20, 2006 12:46:50 PM

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