Almost as remarkable as John Cage's actual music is how varied it is. Nothing obvious connects The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs, a beautifully simple four-note piece for soprano and piano lid, to Four Solos for voice, a late work in which four singers independently do a series of strange things at the same time. But somehow all the works connect; each exudes the same sense of serendipitous serenity; they stand alongside each other much like the four soloists in Four Solos, totally distinct and yet together too.
The vocal group Exaudi are exemplary performers of anything they do, and this was a typically spotless rendition of all the Cage pieces, sounded in St. Leonard's Church, Shoreditch to beautiful effect. At the other concerts I've attended here, it's always taken ensembles a few minutes or movements to adjust their balance to the acoustic, but there were no such problems for Exaudi, despite their beginning with a performance of Four2 (1990) in which singers were stationed in various places around the church, presumably impairing communication between them. The layout meant that most of the audience seemed to have no idea where the piece's occasional very low bass notes were coming from, and the many turning heads and confused giggles contributed to an eminently Cagean atmosphere.
The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs (1942) and A Flower (1950) were performed by soprano Amy Moore with the ensemble's director James Weeks tapping away on a piano lid. This is earlier Cage, and the works have an ecstatic simplicity about them, with the most minimal of vocal lines, made up of just four notes and the occasional slide. Moore sang the pieces with a direct, pure tone, clear and presentational but a little expressive too. Though I couldn't make out the words of The Wonderful Widow from where I sat, they were taken from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake so it probably didn't make much difference, and this piece blended seamlessly into the vowels-only A Flower.