Ted,
As I read through your posts again, I find myself deeply wishing to dig at almost everything you are "saying". The more I dig, the more intricate and complex the thoughts become. Many things become related and it gets difficult for me to address a single aspect
without addressing a complexly dimensional figure. In thinking about your responses, two questions come to mind.
1.
What am I?
2. How does the "answer" to this first question affect my piano playing?
In thinking on this here:
This business of constantly "seeing the universe in a grain of sand" - is it an excuse for not striving, a reason to be a happy pig instead of a wretched Socrates ? And if so, does it really matter ? Why would I want to strive when the gates of heaven open at the touch of a chord ? (Not quite that simple, but you know what I mean).
I must let myself mention a few things. As you mentioned of yourself, I also have always been able to easily see beauty in very small things. I am one who is constantly seeing the universe in a grain of sand, so to speak. It is not this simple however, as I am sure that you must know. When I behold these glimpses into the universe, whether it be in a vast panorama or literally in a grain of sand, it is much more than this one thing that I am "seeing". Just typing these thoughts on this subject in this moment, heighten for me this sense which percieves such things and opens wide doors to deeper creativity.
An excuse for not striving? I suppose I do not understand the direct relevance. If anything, these glimpses engage my desire to learn more and they increase my hope to gain in opportunity to glimpse further. Within every glimpse, there is always a corner that has not yet been turned. How could one consider this as the state of being a "happy pig" ? I just truly do not know.
This question, "does it matter ?" is largely unanswerable, although I believe you did not actually mean for me to answer it anyway.
While I do indeed understand the gist of what I think you mean when you ask "Why would I want to strive when the gates of heaven open at the touch of a chord ?", I would say two things.
1. I don't think it is a matter of
desire as much as I think it is a matter of fear.
2. You have never stricken me as someone who simply does not
strive.
I suppose it is simply about
curiousity. 'What happens when I mix Red with Blue?' My very curiousity will not let me rest on any one thing. My very curiousity propels me into exploration. You also,
do not strike me as being
uncurious.
It dawns on me that if one can glimpse the universe within a thing such as a grain of sand, and if one can easily see the beauty in such a thing...
what I am suddenly takes on a different purpose. If "I" am as a grain of sand by which the universe can be glimpsed, then I suppose for me, "feeling good is good enough for me" has a different depth to it than I would have otherwise thought. Knowing
what "I" am more clearly defines who I am, and should I consider my playing as for "myself", this also has a much different meaning.
Do I want to leave a pile of scores behind on the slim chance some people in fifty years time may enjoy them ? I don’t think so. Do I want to expend enormous and embarrassing efforts of self-promotion trying to force my music onto people ? Again, what on earth for ?
I suspect there is no logical reason in "earth" toward any subject. But to me, your last question in the quote just above invites an unearthly response. For this, there may be reasons. I for one am quite grateful that somebody decided to write the 48 Preludes and Fugues for reasons that go beyond Earth. I for one am quite grateful to you for your willingness to have responded to my thread. But, to what end? Who knows for certain?
Although my thoughts on all of this are quite unfinished, I have realized something here. I guess either way, whether I am performing for only myself or for others, it comes down to what it is that is satisfying
for me. In this I think I can do as you say here:
Make the choice to be happy; claim the right to feel good through music
And I thank you for taking the time that you have. I
should probably just go practice instead of thinking about why I am practicing.
Thanks,
m1469