Word: caged
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Kinasewich scored the tie-breaker in incredible, Kinasewich fashion. Standing on the goal line to the far right of the cage, he somehow slapped the puck into the nets at a zero-degree angle...
...play with a quick goal on the varsity's Bob Bland. The Crimson took the puck from the opening face-off into the Princeton end and then lost it to the Tigers on the boards. Dave Hershey brought the disc up ice and passed to Tom Hyland behind the cage. John Cook, 1-Ivy wing and 1961 scoring leader, slapped Hyand's pass into the cage past Bland...
...Princeton lead stood for nine minutes of play. Tim Taylor's tying goal at 9:31 was similar to Cook's tally. Gene Kinasewich fought for the puck on the boards behind the cage. Chris Norris eventually flipped the loose disc out to Taylor, who was ten feet from the goal, near the face-off circle. He flipped the puck home although he fell flat on his back in the process...
...John Cage's a Cartridge Music hooted at the traditional techniques: the piano was struck, plucked, hammered, loaded with paper and blankets--all within a minutely-timed schedule whose details were as ironically pointless as incomprehensible...
Despite the commitment to improvisation, both Cage and Christian Wolff do limit the performer's freedom. In his Atlas Eclipticalis Cage lays out alternative paths between groups of notes whose duration and number, though not order, are specified; Wolff, in his Duo for piano and violin, details no paths but indicates specific cues to follow. The performers did not display any of the intense fascination or variation of common patterns which mark jazz and are essential to improvisation in general. Even if the performance of the Cage piece had been good--and it certainly was not--no compelling seriousness would...