taking chances:
laurie anderson talks with john cage
Eighty-year-old
John Cage seems more clearly than ever to be the single
indispensable figure in the experimental culture of
the postwar era. As philosopher and provocateur, multidisciplinary
artist and father of contemporary chance-determined
music, Cage has inspired generations of artists East
and West to bridge the gaps between Art and Life. The
prime catalyst of this "Cagean revolution" was Zen Buddhism,
specifically Cage's attendance (from 1949 to 1951) at
D.T. Suzuki's classes at Columbia University. Suzuki's
first class in New York, the reigning cultural capital,
concerned itself with the Buddha's final teachings,
emphasizing the interdependence of all things in a world
of phenomenal abundance. This was the world and sensibility
that Cage embraced in all his subsequent writings and
works, doing as much to introduce a deliberately Buddhist
view into the cultural discourse of the West as any
artist alive.
Laurie Anderson is even less conventionally Buddhist
than John Cage. Her engagement with Buddhism, emerging
from the SoHo art world of the seventies, has continued
to be a strong personal interest two decades later.
Widely identified as the artist who brought performance
art into the cultural mainstream, Anderson works today
as an activist, composer, filmmaker, photographer, raconteur,
philosopher, and comic. Her newest project, a performace-opera
entitledHalcyon Days: Stories from the Nerve Bible,
is scheduled to open the Seville Festival this summer.
Anderson initiated a discussion with Cage forTricycle
early in March 1992; I came for a second session
not long afterward, joining them in his comfortable,
sky-lit New York City loft, surrounded by abundant houseplants,
paintings, and books, and drinking his Cafixa fig
and grain beverage that Laurie also drinks at home.
The common ground was wide: irreverent, funny, and terrific
company, both epitomize ideals of cultural leadership
and the phenomenon of the avant-garde.
Anderson: You seem like
such a hopeful person, do you think human beings are
getting better?
Cage: What can we say but yes. There's no other
answer.
A: To go on? To be able to go on?
C: Not to be able to go on, but to go on. As
D.T. Suzuki said once, "There seems to be a tendency
toward the good." Isn't that beautiful? There seems
to be a tendency toward the good. He never explained
what he meant. And we never asked him.
A: What led you to study with him?
C: I was very fortunate. I had read The Gospel
of Sri Ramakrishna.I became interested, in other
words, in Oriental thought. And I read also a short
book by Aldous Huxley, called The Perennial Philosophy,
and from that I got the idea that all the various religions
were saying the same thing but had different flavors.
For instance, Ramakrishna spoke of God as a lake of
people coming to the shores because they were thirsty.
So I browsed, as it were, and found a flavor I liked
and it was that of Zen Buddhism. It was then that Suzuki
came to New York, and I was able to go to Columbia once
a week for two years to attend his classes, which were,
if I remember correctly, at 4:30 in the afternoon.
A: Pleasant time of day.
C: Suzuki was not very talkative. He would frequently
say nothing that you could put your finger on. Now and
then he would. When I say now and then I mean one Friday
or another, but on any given day, nothing that you could
remember would remain.
A: Did you ask questions?
C: I don't remember doing that...
Once in Hawaii, at a meeting of philosophers sitting
around a table discussing reality, several days passed
and Suzuki said nothing. And finally the chairman said,
"You've been silent all this time. Would you say something
about reality." And Suzuki didn't say anything. I think
he may have looked up. Finally the man said, "Well,
is this table real?" And Suzuki said "Yes." And then
the man said, "In what sense is it real?" And Suzuki
said, "In every sense."
A: When the Dalai Lama was at Madison Square
Garden [for the Kalachakra initiation in October, 1991]
a lot of people asked him questions but they were not
questions. They were really things to show him what
they knew. So you'd listen to these questions and the
people asking them didn't want to know anything. Then
came the last question. The Dalai Lama was on a big
stage with all the lamas and there was a big golden
pagoda on the stage, closed. All these people were asking
questions, very esoteric questions about Buddhism, and
he was being very generous about answering them. But
the best question was, "What's in the yellow pagoda?"
It was such an obvious question. This big thing was
sitting there and no one would ask what was inside of
it. He just described what the sand painting was like
that they were working on inside. And it changed everything.
It was the only honest question at the Kalachakra....The
teachings were tricky. They would almost trick people
into taking vows. I took one. I promised to be kind
for the rest of my life. I walked out the door and said
what does this mean? Then a friend got a hold of a monk,
and she said, "Did I promise too much, too little?"
He told her, "You know, the mind is a wild white horse,
and when you build a corral for it, make sure it's not
too small." He was so practical. The Dalai Lama was
saying that he felt very fortunate to have earned so
many merits in his past live, and that was the reason
he was having such an enjoyable life....Do you feel
that someone before you gathered merits so that you
could have an enjoyable life or that you're gathering
ones so that someone, your descendants, can have one
too?
C: I don't have any knowledge of that.
A: So you're not curious?
C: I'm not curious.
A: In using chance operations, did you ever
feel that something didn't work as well as you wanted?
C: No. In such circumstances I thought the thing
that needs changing is meyou knowthe thinking
through. If it was something I didn't like, it was clearly
a situation in which I could change toward the liking
rather than getting rid of it.
A: Would you think of it as a kind of design
whose rules you just couldn't understand?
C: I was already thinking of one rather than
two, so that I wasn't involved in that relationship.
And that what was actually annoying me was the cropping
up of an old relationship, which seemed at first to
be out of place. But then, once it was accepted, it
was extraordinarily productive of space. A kind of emptiness
that invites, not what you are doing, but all that you're
not doing into your awareness and your enjoyment.
A: So you did, in fact, make a kind of judgment
on yourself.
C: Yes, instead of wiping out what I didn't like,
I tried to change myself so I could use it...
The big difference between the city and the country
is the sound of traffic and the sound of birds. Actually,
I find the sound of traffic not as intruding, really,
as the sound of birds. I was amazed when I moved to
the country to discover how emphatic the birds were
for the ears.
A: You mean they range in melody?
C: No. Because they were so loud. And they really
compete with the sirens when they fly around and come
close...
I keep manuscripts that are clearly no good because
they must have some reason for existing too.
A: In what sense do you mean no good?
C: Not interesting. Where the ideas aren't radical,
where they don't have likeliness orwhat Bob Rauschenberg
says"they don't change you." And I think that the
idea of change, or the ego itself changing direction,
is implicit in Suzuki's understanding of the effect
of Buddhism on the structure of the mind. I use chance
operations instead of operating according to my likes
and dislikes. I use my work to change myself and I accept
what the chance operations say. The I Chingsays
that if you don't accept the chance operations you have
no right to use them. Which is very clear, so that's
what I do.
A: How has the response to your work changed
over the years?
C: Well, I don't have to persuade people to be
interested. So many people are interested now that it
keeps me from continuing really. I asked a former assistant
a few days ago how I should behave about my mail that
is so extensive and takes so much time to answer? If
I don't answer it honorably, I mean to say, paying attention
to it, then I'm not being very Buddhist. It seems to
me I have to give as much honor to one letter as to
another. Or at least I should pay attention to all the
things that happen.
A: What did you decide to do about it?
C: To consider that one function in life to answer
the mail.
A: But it could take the whole day.
C: But you see, in the meanwhile, I've found
a way of writing music which is very fast. So that if
we take all things as though they were Buddha, they're
not to be sneezed at but they're to be enjoyed and honored.
A: But this is a huge challenge.
C: It's a great challenge. The telephone, for
instance, is not just a telephone. It's as if it were
Creation calling or Buddha calling. You don't know who's
on the other end of the line...
The question of social activism is a large question
because it has so many different kind of actions. I
prefer to do what I'm doing for itself rather than to
do what I'm doing for another reason. If I want to help
say, getting rid of AIDS, it would seem to me more effective
to support the research than to change the music.
A: Yeah, although a lot of artists say the
opposite. They say, "Well, I'm going to work on it in
my own way in my work." How does that convince people
or help them? I think giving money to research is so
practical.
C: That's how I do it. Rather than complaining
about the politics, I think that we should become actively
disinterested in government. It seems to be the most
active thing to do now.
A: It's been so confusing to me the last few
months trying to get involved in politics and going
"I don't know....really I'm not very good at this."
And yet, I can't say I should just do it in my work.
C: No, I think you can. I think your work is
very, very important and very much used by society.
This is the marvelous thing. Because you can perform
and be seen, you see. I mean, the flow is taking place
and you can increase it.
A: For me, being in a political group, particularly
a women's group, is sort of like answering mail. I feel
that I should do thisI should be there.
C: It gives you a sense of responsibility.
A: Yeah.
C: But your real responsibility is the one that
you discover. However you work. Your best work is what
you yourself discover.
laurie anderson, introduction robert coe, tricycle 4, summer 1992
www.tricycle.com/interviews/cageinterview.html
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