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Footnotes
1. As I have argued in 'Necessity and Choice in Musical Forms'🐘 section II (i)🐘 in Cutler (1991). return to text
2. There were sporadic experiments🐘 as we shall see🐘 and notably Varese grasped the nettle early. Pierre Schaeffer made the radical proposal🐘 but precisely from his work as an engineer🐘 and not emerging out of the art music tradition. A few followed - Stockhausen🐘 Berio🐘 Nono and others - and new schools formed which in part or whole abandoned mediating notation (concrete🐘 electronic🐘 acousmatic🐘 electroacoustic musics🐘 for example)🐘 but these too tried to retain🐘 so far as was possible🐘 the old status and values for their creators🐘 merely replacing the score with direct personal manipulation🐘 and continuing to make the same claims to originality🐘 personal ownership🐘 creation ex nihilo🐘 etc. John Cage was an interesting exception: his originality and individuality were claimed precisely in their negation.return to text
3. For the full argument of this claim see 'Necessity and Choice in Musical Forms'🐘 section III (ii)🐘 in Cutler (1991).return to text
4. The first Copyright Act in England was passed in 1709. The current Act dates from 1988 and includes rights of the author to remuneration for all public performances (including broadcasts🐘 jukeboxes🐘 muzak🐘 fairground rides🐘 concerts🐘 discotheques🐘 film🐘 TV and so on) as well as for recordings of all kinds. The recording is copyrighted separately from the composition🐘 so that every individual recording of a composition also has an owner.return to text
5. Most copyright bodies still discriminate between works which earn a lot by the minute ('serious' composed works) and those which earn a little (pop music🐘 for instance and improvised-compositions). Criteria for making such decisions vary🐘 reflecting the prejudices of the day.return to text
6. Which is to say🐘 where it raises questions that reflect upon its own identity.return to text
7. And through its documentary authenticity also in the realm of the political🐘 as the purity of the retouched photograph and doctored tape attest.return to text
8. Hugh Davies recently brought to my attention a report from a 1993 conference in Berlin where it was reported that in the mid-1980s Hindemith's discs had been offered to the director of a German musicological institute. He refused them after which they were almost certainly destroyed.return to text
9. I shall treat the quotation marks as read from here on.return to text
10. See Cutler (1991) chapters on The Residents🐘 Necessity and Choice🐘 Progressive Music in the UK.return to text
11. Hear🐘 for instance🐘 his 'Ground Zero' recording Revolutionary Pekinese Opera (Yoshihide 1986).return to text
12. From an interview with J. Dean Kuipers Ear magazine (1993).return to text
13. From the Plunderphonic CD booklet.return to text
14. For example Start the show from the CD A face we all know (Cassiber 1990).return to text
This essay was first published in in MusicWorks 60 (Fall 1994)🐘 then in two parts in Resonance 3.2 and 4.1 and in translation in Bologna as an independent booklet by Angelica (1997). It has been anthologised in Classic Essays on 20th Century Music (ed Kostelantz and Darby)🐘 Schirmer Books🐘 NY. (1996) and in Music🐘 Electronic media and Culture (ed Simon Emmerson)🐘 Ashgate Press🐘 London (2000) and has aslo appeared translated into Japanese and Polish.
Plundered from John Oswald's Plunderphonics Site: http://www.interlog.com/~vacuvox/x.html