We opened the Indica gallery with John Dunbar, Peter Asher and people like that. I heard about people like John Cage, and that he’d just performed a piece of music called 4’33” (which is completely silent) during which if someone in the audience coughed he would say, ‘See?’ Or someone would boo and he’d say, ‘See? It’s not silence—it’s music.’ I was intrigued by all of that. So these things started to be part of my life. I was listening to Stockhausen; one piece was all little plink-plonks and interesting ideas. Perhaps our audience wouldn’t mind a bit of change, we thought, and anyway, tough if they do! We only ever followed our own noses—most of the time, anyway. ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ was one example of developing an idea.
The Beatles Anthology (2000), p. 212
“Bless Madison Ave for restoring the magical art of the cavemen to suburbia.”
Source: 1960s, Counterblast (1969), p. 130
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Marshall McLuhan 416
Canadian educator, philosopher, and scholar-- a professor … 1911–1980Related quotes
'Search for the Real in the Visual Arts', p. 40
Search for the Real and Other Essays (1948)
“Art is magic delivered from the lie of being truth.”
Kunst ist Magie, befreit von der Lüge, Wahrheit zu sein.
E. Jephcott, trans. (1974), § 143
Minima Moralia (1951)
“Many secrets of art and nature are thought by the unlearned to be magical.”
Cited by Peter Nicholls (1979) The Encyclopedia of science fiction: an illustrated A to Z. p. 376
“Magic is the science and the art of causing change to occur in conformity with will.”
Source: Liber Null & Psychonaut (1987), p. 15; this is a slight paraphrase of the definition of Aleister Crowley in Magick in Theory and Practice: Magick is the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will.
“Art is essentially the affirmation, the blessing, and the deification of existence.”
The Necessity of Art: A Marxist Approach (1965), Penguin Books, translated by Anna Bostock.
“Bless advertising art for its pictorial vitality and verbal creativity.”
Source: 1960s, Counterblast (1969), p. 18