circusboy wrote:As to the first point, your premise that people smoke pot to escape reality is faulty. Most regular users, I dare say, would argue that the psychoactive effects of this plant create a different, deeper and/or enhanced perspective of reality that promotes an awareness and understanding similar to other forms of purposeful introspection.
As to the second point, my understanding of Cage's 4:33 is not that it was intended simply to shock or cause confusion, but rather to demonstrate that there is music to be found in the sound that surrounds us here at all times. I believe that his impulse to create and promote such a piece came from his Buddhist, rather than anarchist, tendencies and beliefs. This doesn't mean that I'd care to pay money to experience a "performance" of this piece, but I do respect it as an important, seminal and inspiring work of conceptual art.
Your response makes my point. If reality needs enhanced perception, then the
real perception of reality is apparently unacceptable and therefore requires escape. What if the enhancement turns out to produce false detail, like oversharpening a photograph in Photoshop? Then, it becomes an alternative simulation of reality. I prefer the real one.
I also dispute your conclusion on empirical grounds. I am of an age such that many of my friends are regular pot smokers, and always have been. I have not noticed that their perception of reality is any more profound than my own. In fact, when they are smoking pot, it seems to me that their perception of reality differs from my own in negative ways. So, different? Sure. But deep or enhanced? I don't see any evidence of it.
It must also be said that marijuana is a depressant, which is why it has medicinal value in some cases. Those I know who use it don't do so to achieve a deeper or more enhanced perception of reality, but rather to suppress their feelings, which they don't like because of whatever is going on in their lives.
And, personally, I think one needs that enhanced perception of reality to feel anything but confusion at a performance of 4:33, if they didn't know what the work was beforehand. Those who go to a performance knowing it already bring with them their expectations of what they will feel at the time. That doesn't mean the art evoked those feelings. By my observation, it usually means that they want to look profound and hip to their music-school or culture-club buddies.
I do know a number of avant-garde musicians, and I have come to appreciate some of the work they do. I'm quite happy with the notion that some art is difficult. William F. Buckley told the story of people complaining to him that his vocabulary was out of reach. His response was to point them to a performance he had attended. The musician was Thelonius Monk. As he told it, Mr. Monk played some chords that were simply beyond his understanding and downright bizarre. But he did not feel compelled to suggest to Mr. Monk that he simplify his chords so that they could be understood. But being hard to understand and being utterly opposed to form and value of understanding are two different things.
I do not find it compelling or inspiring, except that it compels me to complain about it. I suspect his first audience responded with nervous laughter (because they didn't want to appear to be uncool), or with pot-enhanced profundities such as "Oh, wow, man."
Rick "who has lived through the same times you guys have, and more of it in many cases" Denney