Cage Against The Machine: 2010 CAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE: TOP MUSICIANS FALL SILENT And so it came to pass that over 60 musicians crammed into the live room at Dean Street Studios in Soho, and for four minutes and 33 seconds stood in total silence. Actually, it was nine minutes and six seconds, because the group recorded two different versions of John Cage’s silent composition, ‘4′33″‘, as part of the Cage Against The Machine project. As much previously reported, the aim is to get the four and half minutes of silence to the Christmas number one spot later this month - beating the customary first single from this weekend’s ‘X-Factor’ winner - while raising money for five lesser known charities, the British Tinnitus Association, the Campaign Against Living Miserably (CALM), Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy, Youth Music and Sound And Music. It’s all the idea of three friends - Dave and Julie Hilliard and John Rogers - who were inspired by last year’s Rage Against The Machine Christmas number one campaign. They were immediately attracted to the perverse idea of forcing silence into the festive top spot, while they couldn’t help but be pleased, and rightly so, with the brilliant name they’d come up with in ‘Cage Against The Machine’. Xfm DJ and CMU columnist Eddy Temple Morris stumbled across their campaign on Facebook and, already looking to work on a fund-raising campaign with Ou Est Le Swimming Pool’s Joe Hutchinson, approached the CATM team about getting involved. And so one thing led to another, Eddy spent a few weeks glued to his mobile phone, and yesterday’s recording came into being. Among the eclectic bunch of artists taking part yesterday were Mr Hudson, Guillemots, UNKLE, The Big Pink, The Kooks, Enter Shikari, Coldcut, Orbital, Heaven 17 and Jon McClure, plus last minute additions Suggs, Scroobius Pip, Gallows and Pendulum. Imogen Heap and Billy Bragg both phoned their contributions in - Bragg from his tour bus and Heap in the back of a taxi - with telephones in the studio sat on top of the studio’s piano during the recording. Pete Doherty, meanwhile, contributed his silence in the way you’d probably expect, by promising to take part and then not showing up. As well as the main track, Alex Metric, Adam F, Hot Chip, Herve and Mr Scruff are all set to create ‘4′33″‘ ‘remixes’ - actually four and a half minute audio snapshots of their own lives - as B-sides for the single release. After thirty seconds of noise-making to get it out of their system - which Dan Le Sac later described as being “like an orchestra tuning up, but a really bad drunken orchestra of ex-ravers” - the group went straight into the first take. The discomfort of having to be quiet was noticeable amongst some, though there were outbreaks of dancing and arm-waving among others as time went on. What was most striking though was just how long four and a half minutes feels when spent in total silence. Take two was an altogether more relaxed affair, done more for the video of the venture, being made by film maker Dick Carruthers. Although Mr Hudson later said he felt the second take was “more magical”, the feeling amongst everyone else we spoke to was that the first was the best. Temple-Morris said: “It’s all about that first take for me, the second one was for the video, the honesty was there in the first one”, while the man who matters - BRIT winning Producer Of The Year Paul Epworth, who took charge in the control room - said: “It sounded good, everyone performed admirably. Even with the little cough and splutter here and there, it was good”. Despite the task of standing in silence for four and a half minutes, not to mention the challenge of fitting all the eager musicians into one small studio, there was a real party atmosphere at the recording. A few extra touches were thrown in here and there at the last minute, in particular artist Kilford, best known for making ‘visual representations of music’ on stage at concerts, who was asked to paint a visual representation of the silence. Unsurprisingly, at the end of the session he was signing a blank piece of paper. Two challenges now remain for the Cage Against The Machine project. First, the team at Wall Of Sound have to master the track and get it into pretty much every digital music store by Saturday night. And then CATM’s supporters have to buy the track in sufficient numbers to get it to the top of the chart in time for Christmas. Having come together in a major way somewhat late in the day, the CATM project is behind both the ‘Surfin Bird’ campaign this year and the Rage campaign this time last year in terms of numbers of Facebook followers, though 10,000 were added yesterday alone as media interest began to gain momentum. And the collective fan bases of the artists involved in the recording are considerable, Imogen Heap alone has 1.5 million followers on Twitter. And in terms of originality, surely getting an original recording of nothingness to the top of the charts is the most innovative proposal this Christmas. As the core aim of last year’s Rage campaign - on which all these projects are based - was to restore some originality in the uniquely British pastime of caring about who is number one at Christmas, after years of lukewarm ‘X-Factor’ creations automatically taking that prize, the truly sublime Cage project surely best fits the bill. And the odds of CATM taking the top spot are now down to 4/1, putting it in second place behind this year’s ‘X-Factor’ winner. Either way, all of this is happening in aid of five brilliant under-funded charities, so whatever happens in terms of the chart race, it is definitely something we’d urge you all to support. If you want to get involved, sign up at www.facebook.com/cageagainstthemachine, watch yesterday’s recording at www.ustream.tv/recorded/11289286 and then get ready to buy yourself some silence (well, four and half minutes of quiet ambience from a very crowded studio) next Sunday. Hurrah. CAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE: SOME QUOTES Co-organiser Eddy Temple Morris: “[This project has been] stressful, ageing, laborious, but ultimately rewarding, joyous and very very emotional. I’m shattered, humbled, full of love and admiration for all those who contributed, from the artists to the camera people to Buttercup Cakes, who made VV Brownies and Lethal Drizzle cake for us all!” Participant Dan Le Sac: “It was good, it was really good. It was lovely to see a lot of people uncomfortable with hearing their own thoughts. You know, lots of people who, all they’ve heard is basslines for the last ten years, and now they’re going: ‘Silence?! What do I do?’. But I got it once I was in there, that idea that it’s not always about the noise you’re making, it can be about the noise you’re not making. There was something quite lovely about it”. Participant Alice Russell: “I bought my Rage Against The Machine last year, and I think there’s enough people that wanna support that side of things, and also for the charity side of things. I think it’ll do well. I think there’s so many people that need that, they’re sort of fed up with the sugar-sweet, crazy ‘X-Factor’ pop crud that they need a bit of this. We need to be refreshed”. Artist Kilford: “I see lots of colours when I hear music and I paint music for bands. I go on stage with them and start painting a picture on the first note and then finish on the last note. [But '4'33'''] is a musical piece which is based on silence, so I didn’t see any colours. So therefore the painting, as far as I’m concerned, represents the true piece. It’s a painting without paint. I think it’s a perfect piece to represent that specific piece of music”. Co-creator and co-organiser Julie Hillard: “When the campaign was originally started we had no idea it would grow to be so big. I think after the original Guardian piece was published about us, that’s when we realised the potential. Eddy has been a huge help in mobilising bands and getting the venue, producer and label on board. Throughout we have fought to maintain the integrity of Cage’s ‘4′33″‘ piece in relation to this project, and this has sometimes meant saying ‘no’ to the media types we’ve needed to deal with to make this thing happen”. On the chances of ‘4′33″‘ now being the Christmas number one, Hillard continues: “I feel like we hit a niche of people who really get how cool the idea is. Whether the rest of Britain concurs with that is another story. I do feel like the blankness of ‘4′33”’ is what makes it special and really unique. It allows people to put their own agenda or meaning on it. For some it will be about beating the ‘X-Factor’. Some people want it to be all about raising funds for charity. For others it is about honouring a classical composer. And for some people, they will just find it a really wonderfully funny joke - which, to be honest, was exactly what it originally set out to be”.
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