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Re: OT: Busking--it's hard for everyone
(If it was Britanny Spears i would have ran the other way.)
And miss a potential 'upskirt' shot?!
--
Paul Richards
---- Teddy Kumpel <teddybut@mac.com> wrote:
> Yes, good article, thanks for forwarding...
>
> if you want something to be true... it can be for you with a little
> help from your imagination.
>
> You obviously lean towards thinking that North Americans are herd
> mentality and have lost touch with music and therefore will be more
> inclined to interpret the findings of the article in that light.
>
> I, on the other hand, interpret it as a bunch of very busy people
> going to a place where they will do something important to them and
> they don't want to be to be bothered with some guy jamming on a
> violin no matter how good he is. How presumptuous and narcissistic it
> is of us musicians to think that people actually want to hear music
> on the way to work anyway. They've got things on their mind after
> all. Gearing up for the day can be great and perhaps best done in
> relative silence and anything other than that would be a distraction.
> Personally I'd rather have control over what I listen to and that's
> why the ipod is good. I bet a lot of those passers by had headphones
> on too and found the violin to be an intrusion.
>
> I'm all for freedom but busking, for me, sucks on many levels. It can
> be an Intrusion, sometimes as bad as smoking cigarettes in a public
> place. There are good points... but not as many as bad for me.
> There's the rare occasion that a busker is doing something I'm
> remotely interested in like playing a chinese violin or using
> puppets. That I'll take off my headphones for... but a virtuoso
> classical violinist playing Schubert or a bebop guitarist playing
> standards? forget it. I don't care if it's Joe Pass himself, I'd
> rather have holes punched in my ears with toothpicks. but... of
> course, that's just me. So... no, if I knew it was Josh Bell or any
> other famous classical person I wouldn't have stopped... if it was
> Stevie Wonder I would have stopped. If it was Britanny Spears i would
> have ran the other way.
>
> I'm a professional musician who has never busked... so of course my
> take is skewed towards non busking.
>
> just keep it on topic... have any of you ambient loopers ever busked?
> How did you get power in the subway? I think ambient looping would be
> interesting busking since ambient music is all about setting a mood
> without being in the way of people's thoughts anyway.
>
> Teddy
>
>
> On Apr 9, 2007, at 1:12 PM, Richard Sales wrote:
>
> > I thought the article was amazing not just for the actual
> > experiment but for other snippets that occurred, like Bell denying
> > that he is a genius and the 'if a tree falls' bit.
> >
> > The guy is obviously a top notch virtuoso and I'm dazzled that more
> > folks didn't stop. In a way, to me, it says something about how
> > the importance of music has slipped for many folks.
> >
> > I also think it makes a comment about the conformity and herd mind
> > of North America. If folks had KNOWN he was a world famous
> > violinist, they most certainly would have stopped - work or no
> > work. I mean, if Bob Dylan or Stevie Wonder or Britney Spears
> > busked at the same train station you would have had a serious
> > gridlock of gawkers and listeners. BUT! If someone equally as good
> > and creative (this adjective does not apply to Ms Spears) did it
> > and wasn't recognizable as a 'famous' person they would have been
> > shined on just like J Bell. I found it very fascinating and high
> > protein food for thought.
> >
> > I think it would be a fun experiment to repeat the experiment but
> > with the Washington Post cameras in full view and maybe some
> > bodyguards there to show that this was an important person. I bet
> > the results would be quit different. And that would be telling.
> >
> > And I think it says a lot about our vocation (or hobby maybe) for
> > some. And it should be sweet solace for those who know they are
> > very gifted and working at Wal Mart. The moral might be, "Fame has
> > its advantages." And it also brings to mind the brilliant human
> > observation, "To them that have more shall be given."
> >
> >
> > richard sales
>
>