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Dick Higgins and Alison Knowles performing Danger Music Number Two
The event card for Danger Music Number Fifteen
Dick Higgins and Harry Ruhé performing Danger Music Number Twenty-Two
The handwritten score for Danger Music Number Twenty-Three
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Emmett Williams and Geoffrey Hendricks performing Danger Music Number Two
The event card for Danger Music Number Twenty-Four
Dick Higgins performing Danger Music Number Two
Dick Higgins performing Danger Music Number Fifteen (For the Dance)
Dick Higgins (1938-1998) was an American artist, composer, art theorist, poet, publisher, printmaker, and a co-founder of the Fluxus international artistic movement and community. 

He attended the New School of Social Research (1958-1959) taught by John Cage and Henry Cowell, and inspired by Cage, Higgins was an early pioneer of using electronic correspondence.

In 1963, Higgins founded Something Else Press in turn contributing greatly to the medium now widely known as "artist books." From 1963 to 1974, Higgins and his collaborators designed and produced over sixty publications including seminal works by Fluxus artists and projects by other influential twentieth-century artists.

Higgins coined the term intermedia to describe his own artistic activities, defining it in a 1965 essay by the same name, which was published in the first issue of the Something Else Newsletter.

His most notable audio contribution remains to this day, the Danger Music scores.