John Cage Performs Water Walk on “I’ve Got a Secret” (1960) [video] http://www.openculture.com/2011...
"In 1952, John Cage composed his most controversial piece, 4′33,″ a four-and-a-half minute reflection on the sound of silence. Now fast forward eight years. It’s February, 1960, and we find the composer teaching his famous Experimental Composition courses at The New School in NYC, and paying a visit to the CBS game show “I’ve Got a Secret.” The TV show offered Cage something of a teachable moment, a chance to introduce the broader public to his brand of avant-garde music. Cage’s piece is called Water Walk (1959), and it’s all performed with unconventional instruments, save a grand piano. A water pitcher, iron pipe, goose call, bathtub, rubber duckie, and five unplugged radios — they all make the music. And the audience doesn’t quite know how to react, except with nervous laughter. It wasn’t particularly courteous. But, as one scholar has noted, it’s equally remarkable that prime time TV gave ten minutes of uninterrupted airtime to avant-garde music." ["Water Walk" starts at 5:35] - Amira
See also Sounds of Silence: John Cage’s 4’33″ performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra http://ff.im/OzdqA John Cage's Norton Lectures, given at Harvard in 1989 [MP3] http://ff.im/WPK73 - Amira