well I agree with you orn    I think something new  is on its way,, probably
form of a commune.. probably religious based,, but teligion will have to
change first to avoid  being abused
Allan

On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 8:00 PM, ornamentalmind
<[email protected]>wrote:

> Yes, in ‘my day’, everyone learned music, art etc. And, paradox, it is
> more than opinion that the arts are of great value when it comes to
> IQ, productivity and many other benchmarks. The web is full of such
> studies.
>
> Here is where the actual crime against us all is found in defunding
> public education. This was not an accident either…starting with
> Reagan. Of course, if one actually is amongst the elite, it is quite
> easy to blame the victims and suggest that they ‘eat cake’ and need to
> ask for less and give public money to privatization.
>
>
> On Aug 4, 8:21 am, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Yeah, quite right Rigsy; as with all art forms, it's what we make it.
> > Funny image of Strauss there; i imagine him, head buried in his
> > manuscripts, wife berating him for paying her as little attention as
> > he possibly can, the poor chap thinking..."well, someone's gonna have
> > to pay for this assault! Dont know why i pay the damn orchestra
> > anything, they cant play 5 beats on a drum!" Lol.
> >
> > I know, i feel the same as you on public funding for the musical arts;
> > i think the liberating effects of (much) music on cognitive
> > development is still too poorly understood and undervalued; i do know
> > that i'm quite biased in that view though.
> >
> > On Aug 4, 1:25 pm, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > Music is also a political, military, cultural tool. Richard Strauss is
> > > fantastic but associated with Nazis, henpecked by his wife and stingy
> > > with his orchestra- even cheating them. The eye and ear directly
> > > affect the brain in proportion to sensitivity or understanding so some
> > > seem immune to the effects which are tuned out. It is a shame that
> > > public education has cut music and art from the curriculum.
> >
> > > On Jun 29, 11:32 am, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > > Today, i found myself completely lost in the magical wonderland of
> > > > Patrick Doyle's "My Fathers Favourite"; it is a breathtakingly
> > > > beautiful place indeed. Which got me thinking...what is it about
> > > > certain pieces of music that invoke in us an overwhelming emotional
> > > > landscape?- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > > - Show quoted text -
>



-- 
 (
  )
I_D Allan

If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,

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