For the BirdsM. Boyars, 1981 - 239 Seiten One of America's great twentieth-century composers in a series of wide-ranging conversations. |
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Seite 77
... situation to which we are accustomed and which can remain what it is without our feeling obliged to inter- vene , but an entirely new situation , in which any sound or noise at all can go with any other . D.C .: What you call an ...
... situation to which we are accustomed and which can remain what it is without our feeling obliged to inter- vene , but an entirely new situation , in which any sound or noise at all can go with any other . D.C .: What you call an ...
Seite 119
... situation like that . So I explained to Cathy that I personally preferred a concert that actually developed through indeterminacy . So that no one knew when it began or when it ended . And I told her that that's what I expected for the ...
... situation like that . So I explained to Cathy that I personally preferred a concert that actually developed through indeterminacy . So that no one knew when it began or when it ended . And I told her that that's what I expected for the ...
Seite 148
... situation . In that situation , objects surge forth . But the fact that it is conversation , not communica- tion , means that we are deterred from talking about them . What is said is not this or that object . It is the circus situation ...
... situation . In that situation , objects surge forth . But the fact that it is conversation , not communica- tion , means that we are deterred from talking about them . What is said is not this or that object . It is the circus situation ...
Inhalt
Note on the Books History | 7 |
Forward I | 64 |
Third Interview | 101 |
Urheberrecht | |
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