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The old piano in the old house

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Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog




I hear Moonlight Sonata, Beethoven on the piano, in deep concentration about a girl wishing to see the moon and the stars in glorious sight even though she was blind;

Music to make the blind see through the inner eye, the deaf to hear through the inner ear - senses cut from the outside world only to be connected to an internal world;

I hear Tosselli's Serenade  in violin in the middle of the night in complete silence except the throbbing of the heart of a lover longing and pleading for the sweetest answer;        


Music is the radiance of the morning sun 'til sunset and into the lovely night for those in love, the kundiman of Abelardo and Santiago, Hating Gabi (Midnight) of Molina;   

I hear Alleluia or the Messiah, the greatest religious song ever written, which Handel composed in isolation for days, emerging with heavenly light on his face;

Music that brings us closer to God, and God closer to man, a communion of Creator and 
creation, an expression of the highest level of reverence to the Supreme Being;    


I hear Brahm's Lullaby the greatest composition that make babies smile, babies crying to stop and settle on their mothers' breast or in their crib guarded by angels;


Music that is universal to baby and mother, the origin of prototype melodies, inspiring our own Lucio San Pedro  to compose Ugoy ng Duyan in a compatible melody;    


I hear Czardas by Monti, typical Russian, vibrant and quick yet romantic and  classical, 
a challenging piece to play with virtuosity on the violin accompanied by piano; 


Music that tests the ultimate of skill in playing a musical instrument, alone and with accompaniment, virtuosity on the stage, flawless and finesse; 

I hear Requiem of Amadeus Mozart, his last and his own, commissioned by an unknown 
patron.  Was he a ghost, or that of Mozart?  Music accompanies us to our grave;  


Music that laments, bringing out the sorrow and pain in the saddest hour, yet kind and soothing, calming the bereaved, releasing them from pain and prison; 


I do not hear them anymore - Beethoven, Tosselli, Handel, Brahms, Monti, Mozart et al - they're no longer around, not in the old house, and the piano is forever silent. ~

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