MUSIC QUOTES IV

quotations about music

Every man is full of music; but it is not every man that knows how to bring it out.

HENRY WARD BEECHER

Proverbs from Plymouth Pulpit


Our relation to music must remain open, in a way. This is the privilege of music, not to let itself be formalized, to be locked in a certain procedure, in a certain way.

LUCIANO BERIO

interview with Bruce Duffie

Tags: Luciano Berio


Musical training is a more potent instrument than any other, because rhythm and harmony find their way into the inward places of the soul.

PLATO

The Republic


Whenever humans come together for any reason, music is there: weddings, funerals, graduation from college, men marching off to war, stadium sporting events, a night on the town, prayer, a romantic dinner, mothers rocking their infants to sleep ... music is a part of the fabric of everyday life.

DANIEL J. LEVITIN

This Is Your Brain on Music


We may regard rhythm as the intellectual side of music, melody as its sensuous side. The pipe is the one instrument that seems to affect animals--hooded cobras, lizards, fish, etc. Animals' natures are purely sensuous, therefore the pipe, or to put it more broadly, melody, affects them. To rhythm, on the other hand, they are indifferent; it appeals to the intellect, and therefore only to man.

EDWARD MACDOWELL

"The Origin of Music", Critical and Historical Essays


True life, was something that was stored in music. True life was kept safe in the lines of Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin while you went out in the world and met the obligations required of you.

ANN PATCHETT

Bel Canto


Music, the greatest good that mortals know,
And all of heaven we have here below.

JOSEPH ADDISON

A Song for St. Cecilia's Day


I wish my life had background music so I could understand what the hell is going on.

ANONYMOUS


The music, yearning like a God in pain.

JOHN KEATS

"The Eve of Saint Agnes"


Music is organized sound, but the organization has to involve some element of the unexpected or it is emotionally flat and robotic. The appreciation we have for music is intimately related to our ability to learn the underlying structure of music we like--the equivalent to grammar in spoken or signed languages--and to be able to make predictions about what will come next. Composers imbue music with emotion by knowing what our expectations are and then very deliberately controlling when those expectations will be met, and when they won't. The thrills, chills, and tears we experience from music are the result of having our expectations artfully manipulated by a skilled composer and the musicians who interpret that music.

DANIEL J. LEVITIN

This Is Your Brain on Music


Articulating the connection between music and the outer world remains devilishly difficult. Musical meaning is vague, mutable, and, in the end, deeply personal. Still, even if history can never tell us exactly what music means, music can tell us something about history.

ALEX ROSS

preface, The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century


Music attacks my inner ear like an antagonist, it's not my world.

DORIS LESSING

The Golden Notebook


It was by music that the ancient kings gave elegant expression to their joy. By their armies and axes they gave the same to their anger.

CONFUCIUS

The Wisdom of Confucius


For me, my voice and music was always an outlet. Growing up in an unstable environment and whatnot, music was my only real escape.

CHRISTINA AGUILERA

Rolling Stone, Aug. 24, 2006


I don't read music. And my mom is this classically trained person, and I went the other way. And I think it's helped me write songs that I wouldn't have written if I were going at the technical way. Because they go, "Oh, you can't go from this chord to that chord. It's not the way you're supposed to do it."

MARIAH CAREY

Larry King Live, Dec. 19, 2002


Music is the universal language of mankind -- poetry their universal pastime and delight.

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW

Outre-Mer


If music thus carries us to heaven, it is because music is harmony, harmony is perfection, perfection is our dream, and our dream is heaven.

HENRI-FREDERIC AMIEL

Journal Intime


Darwin's theory that music had its origin "in the sounds made by the half-human progenitors of man during the season of courtship" seems for many reasons to be inadequate and untenable. A much more plausible explanation, it seems to me, is to be found in the theory of Theophrastus, in which the origin of music is attributed to the whole range of human emotion.

EDWARD MACDOWELL

"The Origin of Music", Critical and Historical Essays


I saw my music, and indeed all pop music, as simply a form of entertainment, a way to please audiences for an hour or two, in live concert or on an album. What I failed to understand then, but came to learn again and again, is the incredible power that music possesses -- the power to heal, to shape destiny, even to change lives. A popular song may be three minutes of not terribly profound poetry, but the right combination of words and music can touch people at their very core.

ANNE MURRAY

All of Me


My earliest memory of waking up with a melody in my head was, you know, 8, 9, 10. I've always heard kind of melodies in my head. I remember standing under a piano at my grandmother's house, when the keys of the piano were higher than my head and kind of pressing down on the keys, and then hearing one note and then looking for another one to follow it, because you always -- you know, if you're a musician or if you're a songwriter, somehow when you hear one note, you hear another one.

BONO

interview, Larry King Weekend, Dec. 1, 2002