HenHanna
2024-07-02 15:18:15 UTC
|Is that a P D Q Bach piece?
Two days ago, I heard a simple and beautiful slow piece, not
too fast, with one and two voices (i.e., notes played at the
same time) played on a classical guitar (with nylon strings).
I thought that - if I would practice it carefully - I should be
able to play that piece. I wanted to do this. Then, I woke up.
It was a kind of an acoustic dream.
i've had similar experience a few times....Two days ago, I heard a simple and beautiful slow piece, not
too fast, with one and two voices (i.e., notes played at the
same time) played on a classical guitar (with nylon strings).
I thought that - if I would practice it carefully - I should be
able to play that piece. I wanted to do this. Then, I woke up.
It was a kind of an acoustic dream.
One time, it was so good that i hummed it into my PC.
there are a few interesting cases where sleep played a crucial
Paul McCartney and "Yesterday": McCartney famously claims the
melody for "Yesterday" came to him in a dream. He woke up with the song
in his head, unsure if he'd actually written it or dreamt it. He
presented it to friends and other musicians, concerned it might be a
subconscious plagiarism, but no one recognized it. "Yesterday" became a
massive hit for The Beatles.
---------- i guess George was once sued, and lost
Niccolo Paganini and the Devil's Violin Concerto: This is more
legend than fact, but the story goes that Paganini, a virtuoso violinist
and composer, sold his soul to the devil in exchange for unmatched
musical talent. One version of the legend claims he composed his most
famous piece, the "Violin Concerto No. 1 in D Minor," in a dream after
making the pact.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and his Requiem: While not entirely
composed in a dream, Mozart claimed the opening bars of his Requiem came
to him in a dream, a premonition of his own death.