so much ground has been covered! i see there hasn't been God every minute, either.
One does one's best...
i suppose i should shake some cinnamon over things again.
For baptismal or aphrodisiacal reasons?...
i did laugh about the depth of water and your funny outtakes on life, religion, piano, and triple etudes of chopin. what bizarre things composers do. but, i suppose - no more bizarre than what 'religious folk' do.
Not for nothing did Sorabji use the phrase (although I'm not certain if he actually coined it) "composers and other lunatics".
i mean, it's kind of all the same.
Oh, no, susanistimo, it isn't - it REALLY isn't the same at all! For starters, we composers rarely make frequent posts to piano fora that are sprinkled (like your cinnamon) with quotations from, references to and thoughts about verse x from chapter y of WTC or the Études Op. 10.
we just 'ooh and ahh' over different things. marc andre-hamelin, although genius that he is - is just another ordinary person to me. i don't put him way up here - but i also wouldn't dare to rub shoulders with him for fear of saying something utterly stupid. i would - gaze from a distance and always appreciate his playing.
But then no one is suggesting that Marc-André should be accorded deity status (well, not in this thread, anyway). But isn't he one of your near neighbo(u)rs in Philly?
God, on the other hand - whom i want to meet and shake hands with - has got to be one of the most mysterious things (God) i should ever know. that is why i anxiously await His return. i want to see Him in the clouds, experience His divinity, feel the reality of the spiritual world that He speaks of as 'seeing through a glass darkly' for us right now, and to be amazed at His ability to allow the deaf to hear, the lame to walk, the blind to see - and for me to finally play the piano perfectly (thus eliminating competition like marc andre-hamelin - or at least evening the score).
Neatly put, but I don't think that Marc-André believes that he plays "perfectly" at all..
now, this may not seem like a very good reason (being that there might be a tinge of jealousy reeking out of a green puff cloud on one side of my brain. but, really - it's not competition that i wish to destroy - but rather that i should like to at least be in the running - say fifth or sixth. i do not wish to be in the thousandths rank. then, once that is accomplished - i shall drink the wine - as you say - should be drunk. and, at that point will not do anything stupid that i should regret.
Yes, it's usually wiser to play the piano first and drink the wine afterwards, les you happen to be Fats Waller...
as i see it - the invitations were sent out for this party when Christ came at pentecost to divide up the Holy Spirit.
Well, I didn't receive one; now whether that is because one was not sent to me as an non-baptised-Christian or because it got lost in the post like not only the proverbial cheque but almost half the mail around these parts these days, I cannot say with certainty.
He said it was a down payment and that more was coming.
OK, so maybe I did get that invitation after all but, since it referred to down payments, I probably chucked it straight in the shredder because I assumed it was yet another of these special offer loan deals, or something of the sort.
He also spoke of crowns, and cities, and joyful triumph of the saints. but, there is no triumph in small numbers - so, dutifully - i again implore thal, ahinton, and pianolist (and mephisto - and anyone else who might be reading this) to consider baptism a sort of quick dunk and not a drowning. and, whomever you truly feel has the spirit that you are seeking - for repentance from sin - is who you should have lay hands upon your head when you come up for air. now, if i understand correctly, mostly men do this in almost all churches except perhaps presbyterian. if ahinton is needing the assurance that he will come up after going down - i suggest a man to bring him back up to the surface. we don't want a woman parishner going down trying to bring him up. i'm not sure what the 'worst case' scenario has ever been for a baptism - but i'd say a near drowining would not be a 'good experience.' this is not to say that a few women of other faiths wouldn't try to baptize.
My reference to the "not baptising but drowning" scenario was not meant to be taken as seriosuly as you appear to suggest here that you have done; what I meant was that any official of the Christian Church about to "baptise" me would probably feel inclined to use this situation as an opportunity to indulge in a little drowning. When you write that
we don't want a woman parishner going down trying to bring him up
I rather think that you're playing right into Thal's hands for one of those special kind of curt, salacious retorts for which we all know and admire him.
But let's be serious now. Why, in any case, would I want "a quick dunk"? and, even if I did, why would I want someone else to do this for me? and, again, why would such a person have to be an official of the Christian Church? I know that I could be baptised into the Christan faith if I were so minded, but I am also well aware that to ask for and expect this would be dishonest of me, so I would not dream of insulting the Christian Church by doing so. Repentance from sin? Now just how honest would THAT be from me, especially were I to leave the Church building afterwards and then return promptly to my desk to continue work on my latest sin (it's a piano quintet, incidentally).
I know that your motives are well-meaning, susanistimo dear, but it's really a non-starter, I'm afraid; put it down, perhaps, to the fact that, for me, "distance lends enchantment" - by which I do not, of course, mean to imply distance from you, but the kind of distance from formal Christian practice that allows me to be an onlooker but debars me from being a participant.
By the way, since you mention "sin" (show me a preaching Christian that doesn't!), I've often been intrigued by the expression "miserable sinner"; it is intended to distinguish that type of sinner from a happy one with a well developed sense of humour?
To a string player, "sin" is the latter 60% of what he/she treats bow hair with, anyway.
To be serious again for a moment, the customary use of the term "sin" when it emerges, as so often it does, from Christian preachers (especially those of the so-called "born-again" variety) is invariably in a holier-than-thou patronising context; I'm not necessarily suggesting that this is how you use it when addressing others about it, but that kind of use of the word is certainly unpleasantly common parlance.
I wonder if can can ever sprinkle cinnamon over a cappuccino again without thinking of you, susanistimo dear, and your apparently fervent desire for me to be baptised into the Christian faith...
Best,
Alistair