I failed miserably at piano lessons; my attempts to maintain two fluid melodic lines in the most simple
counterpoint was a disaster. For some reason, however, listening to music where two ore more musical ideas are developed and elaborated in counterpoint has always helped me think and work. I discovered this specifically while writing my dissertation at the Troy Public Library. I purchased a cheap Radio Shack CD player and headphones and helped myself to the library's CD collection as I worked. That's when I became really attached to Bach's organ works, and fell in love all over again with his masterful counterpoint. So what's a "thought pump?" It's my bastardization of Daniel Dennett's term
"intuition pump," which is a term he uses to describe philosophical thought experiments. Dennett is brilliant.
I own two complete sets of J.S. Bach. Today I burned a 7 hour CD of music that is great for working at my desk. It contains:
- Two Part Inventions
- Three Part Inventions
- French Suites
- English Suites
- Clavier-Ubung
- Goldberg Variations
All pieces are played on a modern piano (harpischord and clavichord are not great for working, and people aren't able to tune them out when you answer the phone or have a visitor. I'm very much enjoying these.
1 comment:
Steve, I'd like a copy of that. Unless you think Bach would mind.
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