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People have been talking about that story in which world-class violinist Joshua Bell plays a world-class Stradivarius playing world-class music for forty-five minutes in a Washington Metro station and most people don't notice.

And I've been thinking about it, and it doesn't bother me as much as it bothers some other folks.

It was mentioned in the transcript of an online chat that the author did that similar things have been done with other artists in various locations around the world, with similar results.

To me, this means one major thing. Busking is a skill-set. Buskers don't just have to play good, or even world-class, music -- they need to do something else as well. What exactly that is, I'm not sure -- I've never really successfully busked. But there IS something else there -- virtuosity isn't enough; you need personal charisma, as well.

In a lot of ways, it's an example of this experiment, with the basketballs. You know this one, right? Watch it, and count how many passes the people make. Every time someone throws and catches the basketball, that is one pass. It can be bounced, or thrown, or whatever -- just count the number of passes.

Then, answer the following question, which is ROT-13: Qvq lbh frr gur tbevyyn?

I think it's the same thing. If you're concentrating on one thing, such as getting to work, or counting basketball passes, you miss other things, like violinists and gorillas. It's just how the brain works.

And the part of the brain which allows you to do that is the prefrontal lobes, which are not fully developed in children, which is why THEY notice the violinist.

And then, one final thought hit me. $32 is actually pretty damn good for a busker for 45 minutes. People actually DO recognize and reward quality.

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Date: 2007-04-10 02:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] xiphias.livejournal.com
I kind of thing that it's hard to say "I don't like classical", because "classical" is SUCH a broad category. I mean, it includes Mozart, Bach, Brahms, Stravinsky, Tsachovsky, Verdi, Pachabel, Vivaldi. . . none of those sound ANYTHING alike; they're all basically different genres.

I mean, the term "classical" refers to, pretty much, anything written over, like, five or six centuries across two or more continents.

That said, the local commercial "classical" station manages to fill most of its time with utter CRAP. There is plenty of symphonic muzak and worse that you can find in those thousands upon thousands of pieces -- classical music certainly follows Sturgeon's Law.

Our local PBS station does a better job of playing GOOD classical music, but most classical stations really appear to attempt to showcase the most inoffensive, bland, BORING shit that just turns into stupid background noise that ANYBODY with taste would hate.

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