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List of Silent Musical Compositionsreport

  • Funeral March for the Obsequies of a Deaf Man (1897) by Alphonse Allais, a French writer and humorist (1854–1905); published in his Album primo-avrilesque (Classical compositions)

  • In futurum (1919) by Erwin Schulhoff (1894–1942) (Classical compositions)

  • Silent music (1941), by Raymond Scott (1909–1994) (Classical compositions)

  • Monotone-Silence Symphony (1949), by Yves Klein (Classical compositions)

  • 4′33″ (1952) by John Cage (1912–1992) (Classical compositions)

  • 4'33" No. 2 (1962) by John Cage (Classical compositions)

  • "Piste Silencieuse" by Wax Tailor (Songs)

  • "12:97:24:99" by Mudvayne (Songs)

  • "15 Minutes" by Télépopmusik (Songs)

  • "18 sekúndur fyrir sólarupprás"(18 seconds before sunrise) by Sigur Rós (Songs)

  • "23 Seconds of Silence" by Wilco (Songs)

  • "42 Minutes of Silence" by Milosh on Quiet Time, with Milosh (2002) (Songs)

  • "9-11-01" by Soulfly (Songs)

  • "A big thank you to" and "Turn" by C418 on Bushes and Marshmallows (2009) (Songs)

  • "Absolute Elsewhere" by Coil (Songs)

  • "Ad Interim" by E.S.T on Leucocyte (2008) (Songs)

  • "A Moment of Silence" by The Neighbourhood (Songs)

  • "Anniversary Of World War III" by The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band on Volume 3: A Child's Guide to Good and Evil (1968) (Songs)

  • "Are We Here? (Criminal Justice Bill? Mix)" by Orbital (Songs)

  • "The Ballad of Richard Nixon" by John Denver (Songs)

  • "The Best of Marcel Marceau" by Michael Viner (Songs)

  • "Beware! The Funk is Everywhere" by Afrika Bambaataa (Songs)

  • "Birthdeath Experience" by Whitehouse (Songs)

  • "(Blank)" by The All-American Rejects (Songs)

  • "blank track" by The Jesus Lizard on deluxe remastered reissues of Liar (1992) and Down (1994) and "[silence]" on Goat (1991) (Songs)

  • "BunaB #5" by Al Crowder (Songs)

  • "Le chant des carpes" by Ludwig von 88 on Houlala II "la mission" (1987) (Songs)

  • "Gestenstücke" by Juan María Solare, a collection of five pieces for 4 performers in which a musical structure is used to put order in non-sounding elements, concretely gestures. For instance, the first piece of the cycle is a canon of gestures. (2008) (Songs)

  • "I Predict Some Quiet" by the Kaiser Chiefs (2005) (Songs)

  • "In Remembrance" by Pan.Thy.Monium on Khaooohs and Kon-Fus-Ion (1996) (Songs)

  • "[intermission]" by Titus Andronicus (band) on The Most Lamentable Tragedy (2015) (Songs)

  • "Intentionally Left Blank" by James Holden (in The Idiots Are Winning (2006)) (Songs)

  • "A Lot of Nothing" by Coheed and Cambria (Split into 11 sections ranging from 5–15 seconds in length) (Songs)

  • "Magic Window" by Boards of Canada (Songs)

  • "The Misinterpretation of Silence and its Disastrous Consequences" by Type O Negative on Slow, Deep and Hard (1991) (Songs)

  • "The Most Important Track On the Album" by Astronautalis (2008) (Songs)

  • "(nothing)" by The Microphones (Songs)

  • "Tense Atmosphere", a graphic score by Juan María Solare which consists of a silence with a sforzato sign (2013) (Songs)

  • "The Nutopian International Anthem" by John Lennon (1973) (Songs)

  • "Two Minutes Silence" by John Lennon and Yoko Ono (Songs)

  • "Omitted for Clarity" by Karnivool on Themata (2005) (Songs)

  • "One Minute of Silence" by Soundgarden (Songs)

  • "A One Minute Silence" by Mike Batt (Songs)

  • "Page 13" by Fantômas (Songs)

  • "Path XII Inlustra Nigror" by Vesania (Songs)

  • "Pause" by Rob Dougan (Songs)

  • "Pregnant Pause... Intermission" by Leila Bela (Songs)

  • "Pure Digital Silence" by the Melvins (Songs)

  • "Room 0: Solo for Conductor" by Nits (Songs)

  • "Rwanda" by Radio Boy (2001). (Songs)

  • "Schweigeminute" by VNV Nation on Praise the Fallen (1999) (Songs)

  • "Silence" by Karl Bartos (2013) (Songs)

  • "(Silence)" by Ciccone Youth (Songs)

  • "[Silence]" by Korn (Songs)

  • "[Silence]" ("A suitable place for those with tired ears to pause and resume listening later") by Robert Wyatt (Songs)

  • "Silence" by Brian Eno on Drums Between the Bells (2011) (Songs)

  • "Silence" by Knife Party (Songs)

  • "Silencio sepulcral" (Sepulchral Silence) by Soziedad Alkoholika (Songs)

  • "Song of the Deaf Girl" by Cloud Cult on The Meaning of 8 (2007) (Songs)

  • "Štrajk" by Hladno pivo on Šamar (2003) (Songs)

  • "The Sound of Free speech" by Crass (Songs)

  • "Tathagatagarbha" by Clarence Clarity on No Now (2015) (Songs)

  • "There's a Riot Goin' On" by Sly Stone (Songs)

  • "Thirty-second Silence" by Guster (Songs)

  • "Three Bagatelles, for David Tudor" by György Ligeti (Songs)

  • "The Ten Coolest Things About New Jersey" by The Bloodhound Gang (Songs)

  • "Track 3," accidentally released as a promotional single on Taylor Swift's album 1989. It consisted of eight seconds of white noise and topped the iTunes chart in Canada. (Songs)

  • "Tunnel of Goats XVII" by Coil (Songs)

  • "You Can Make Your Own Music" by Covenant (a 4-minute and 33 second silent track, in reference to John Cage's composition 4′33") (Songs)

  • "Leave On" by Blackmail (Songs)

  • "Minut ćutanja" (Moment of silence) by Marčelo (Songs)

  • "Non Musical Silence" by The All-American Rejects (Songs)

  • "Silence" by Alva Noto on Unitxt (Songs)

  • "Weg" by Die Fantastischen Vier on Die 4. Dimension (Songs)

  • Silent Tracks of Various Useful Lengths, a 2010 album by Brett Black consisting of 8 tracks of silence, was the first completely silent album to be commercially available through the iTunes Store. (Albums)

  • The Wit and Wisdom of Ronald Reagan, satirical LP issued by Stiff Records in 1980. (Side one is "The Wit" and side two "The Wisdom", both are divided into multiple tracks but are silent.) (Albums)

  • Sleepify, a 2014 album by Vulfpeck consisting of 10 tracks of silence. The album was released on the music streaming service Spotify and generated $20,000 in royalty over a two-month period. It exposed a loophole in the streaming service's royalty calculation model. (Albums)

  • Être Est Ne Pas Être and Tout Est Une Variation De Tout, two 2020 albums by Pierre Laurent, use still images as music without sound. (Albums)

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About This Tool

The first musicians to produce Silent Musical Compositions must have been controversial and representative pioneers of performance art. Because there are very few people who know the Silent Musical positions. This kind of music through the continuous creation of sensation to arouse fans for the pursuit of music and yearning, in itself is a break from the traditional performance skills and composition techniques. The tool generates 78 of the world’s most famous Silent Musical Compositions for those who love this genre.

When you randomly search for these Silent Musical Compositions, you can find the full title of the song and its author. All of this reduces or indirectly excludes the role of the composer. Music itself is a process from hope to despair and a work of art. It is worthwhile for those who appreciate their beauty to know and understand them better.

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of silent musical compositions.

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