Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/03/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Peter Klein wrote: > > A blind writer can dictate words to a secretary. A blind composer can > dictate or play music to a musical secretary. Bach was blind at the end > of his life, and dictated his last compositions. Including some of "The > Art of Fugue." And while Evelyn Glennie is deaf, she performs barefoot so > she can "feel" the music with her feet. I doubt she can perceive melody or > harmony, but being a percussionist, it doesn't matter. > > I think that there is much wisdom in what Peter has said. If I remember correctly one of the things Bach wrote when he was blind and near the end of his life is the Organ Choral, "When in the Hour of Greatest Need (Perhaps one of the Bach scholars on the list will be kind enough to correct me if I am in error.) This piece has, aside from its obvious theological implications, always said something to me about the very high level of extra difficulty and struggle which become required to do art when significant disability become involved. For me an answer can be found in Evelyn Glennie's experience. As Peter says she's deaf and takes her shoes off so she can feel the music through her feet. I've seen and heard her perform, and she is wonderful. Her world of vibrations is as real to her as is my world of sounds. Perhaps she even enjoys her drumming more that I enjoy my cello playing. Who knows. Could be. If she and Peter were playing in the same orchestra it would seem to you as an audience member that she, he, and you were living in the same reality space. But you are not. The situation is very much like states of altered quantum reality in a Star Treck Episode. The worlds exist simultaneously, are both equally valid, and yet are totally different. I also think that Peter is correct when he says that this falls apart when pushed to the visual world. There is no question that Evelyn Glennie is a world class musician. No musician I know would turn down a chance to do a gig with her. If one wants to call the work of a blind photographer pointing a camera at something and pushing the button high art then I say fine. I am not going to fight with you about it. But, I am going to say that the result exists in an alternative universe which, while perhaps valid, is also quite alien, at least to me. IMHO. <grin> :-) Barney - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html