A Flower

http://dbpedia.org/resource/A_Flower an entity of type: Thing

A Flower is a song for voice and closed piano by John Cage. It was composed in 1950, for a choreography by Louise Lippold, wife of sculptor Richard Lippold. There is no text; the singer vocalises a small number of phonemes such as "uh", "wah", etc., without vibrato. Instructions given in the score include, for some passages, "like a pigeon" and "like a wild duck". The entire vocal line is constructed of just four pitches, except for a single bar near the end where a fifth pitch is used. The pianist plays by hitting the piano lid in various ways - with his fingers, with his knuckles, etc. The composition is somewhat similar to the earlier work for voice and closed piano, The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs. rdf:langString
A Flower es una pieza para voz y piano cerrado, compuesta por John Cage en 1950. La pieza tiene una duración aproximada de cuatro minutos.​ rdf:langString
rdf:langString A Flower
rdf:langString A Flower
xsd:integer 14190550
xsd:integer 1017751904
rdf:langString A Flower is a song for voice and closed piano by John Cage. It was composed in 1950, for a choreography by Louise Lippold, wife of sculptor Richard Lippold. There is no text; the singer vocalises a small number of phonemes such as "uh", "wah", etc., without vibrato. Instructions given in the score include, for some passages, "like a pigeon" and "like a wild duck". The entire vocal line is constructed of just four pitches, except for a single bar near the end where a fifth pitch is used. The pianist plays by hitting the piano lid in various ways - with his fingers, with his knuckles, etc. The composition is somewhat similar to the earlier work for voice and closed piano, The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs.
rdf:langString A Flower es una pieza para voz y piano cerrado, compuesta por John Cage en 1950. La pieza tiene una duración aproximada de cuatro minutos.​
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1160

data from the linked data cloud