...make a joyful noise...
Let the sea roar, and all that fills it;
the world, and they that dwell therein.
Let the floods clap their hands; let the hills be joyful together.
Instead of focusing on having a "roar" of cacophony, Young chose to focus on the wide variety of sounds he could enable a book to produce. He achieved this by "building the book with resonating chambers, sympathetic vibrating strings, and chambers for objects that could rattle, ring, or make hushed rasping sounds - depending on how the book was played." The coloring of the book is vibrant and playful, nearly clashing.
These are only a few examples from a body of work spanning decades, and each one emphasizes something different about the relationship between book and performance. Of these books, which is the most typically booklike - and which is the least - and why? How does our perception of these books change as the chief purpose moves from being mostly about the text, like Stanzas, to mostly about the sound, like the Four Horseman performance book? At one point Young describes his pieces as being "accompaniment" to the books themselves, but in some cases his works were never performed (as was the case with a series of anti-war books in the 80s). What changes when his performance books are severed from the performances they were intended for?