Ceci n'est pas un blog
Posts tagged music
Opto ergo sum (3) you are what you listen to
22 Sep 2007

You're at a party. Talking to someone new. It's someone of the opposite sex. Thought goes through your mind (again): maybe this could be the one? Who knows? How could you tell? Nice weather, mmm. Really? I've been there too! What did you think? Small talk, small talk. But how to find out what this person is like...? Let's get beyond the superficialities. Ah!
What kind of music do you like?
As if that could matter! What a strange question! What about her background? What does her father do? Or her grandfather? Where has her family lived? Where do they originate from? What was her up-bringing like? What kind of school was she sent to? Is her family religious? Where do they stand in the social ladder? Surely these are the questions you should be asking if you want to find out what she is like!
Don't be silly.
Those questions have nothing - absolutely nothing - to do with what sort of person you are. They are about what you inherit by virtue of your birth, not by any fault - choice - of your own.
On the other hand, your choice of music - what you listen to on your iPod or other similar/superior device - ultimately has absolutely nothing to do with your birth. True, in childhood you may have been limited both in what you knew about and what you had access to. But that is no longer the case. Nor is your choice of music affected by anyone else. It makes no difference to them, and it's none of their business. There are no constraints on what you listen to in private. It is one of the freest choices you will ever make. And if you value your ability to choose, your choice of music will be very close to your heart.
You are most human when your choices are least constrained.
What you listen to is your own free and unconstrained choice, and therefore it is an indicator of who you are.
You are what you listen to.
Don't you think?
Recitals in May
1 May 2007
I'll be trying my hand at singing a couple of solo recitals this month, with James Lloyd Thomas accompanying me on the piano, and with a guest appearance from Gavin Ashenden (tenor) at one of the performances.
Here's the programme:
- Mozart: In diesen heil'gen Hallen, from The Magic Flute
- Handel: I rage, and O ruddier than the cherry, from Acis and Galatea
- Schubert: The Fisher-maiden, Stänchen and The Erl-King (see picture)
- Piano solo (Brahms Intermezzo, perhaps)
- Elgar: Like to the damask rose
- Finzi: Let us garlands bring
- (Tuesday 8th only) Bizet: The Pearl Fishers Duet, with Gavin Ashenden (tenor)
Do come if you can - they are free! Details:
- Tuesday 8th May, 1.20-2.10pm, Meeting House, University of Sussex
- Saturday 12th May, 3-3.45pm, St Paul's Church, West Street, Brighton

I live in York and I