
“It is always fatal to have music or poetry interrupted.”
Source: Middlemarch
Quoted in The Musical Times, February 1909; cited from Percy A. Scholes The Mirror of Music, 1844-1944 (London: Novello, 1947) vol. 1, p. 267.
“It is always fatal to have music or poetry interrupted.”
Source: Middlemarch
“Opening", opening
Forty Stories (1987)
“Musicians don't retire; they stop when there's no more music in them.”
As cited in: Ruth Hanna Sachs, D. E. Heap, Joyce Light (2005). White Rose History, Volume II (Academic Version). p. 366
Source: Girl, Interrupted (1994)
Context: I've gone back to the Frick since then to look at her and at the two other Vermeers. Vermeers, after all, are hard to come by, and the one in Boston has been stolen. The other two are self-contained paintings. The people in them are looking at each other -- the lady and her maid, the soldier and his sweetheart. Seeing them is peeking at them through a hole in a wall. And the wall is made of light -- that entirely credible yet unreal Vermeer light. Light like this does not exist, but we wish it did. We wish the sun could make us young and beauitful, we wish our clothes could glisten and ripple against our skins, most of all, we wish that everyone we knew could be brightened simply by our looking at them, as are the maid with the letter and the soldier with the hat. The girl at her music sits in another sort of light, the fitful, overcast light of life, by which we see ourselves and others only imperfectly, and seldom.
“Music completely overpowers me. Love it when I can experience it with my live audience.”
Concert at Auckland Sydney New Jersey Dallas https://www.facebook.com/shreyaghoshal/photos/a.10150127795216484.302690.11541726483/10154457107311484/
On a dramatic work having its own energy in “GEORGE C. WOLFE” https://www.interviewmagazine.com/culture/george-c-wolfe in Interview Magazine (2016 May 9)
“The musician is as rich as the music they give away.”
Guitar Craft Monograph III: Aphorisms, Oct. 27 1988