Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/03/12

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Sensory deprivation
From: Johnny Deadman <lists@johnbrownlow.com>
Date: Wed, 12 Mar 2003 18:37:40 -0500

On Wednesday, March 12, 2003, at 06:17 PM, Mark Rabiner wrote:

> I have found this discussion of blind photographers and deaf musicians 
> frustrating.
> I keep waiting for the punch line but its amazing that nobodies telling
> a joke!

[snip]

> Beethoven wrote half his output deaf. From the start unlike most
> composers who sat at the piano to compose Beethoven composed at his
> desk. Beethoven was a towering genius who did loop de loops around his
> non competition

Many if not most serious composers write music in their heads rather 
than noodling at a piano. Noodling is in fact quite stifling as you 
tend to start pattern-playing so your hands write the music instead of 
your brain.

I am certainly not remotely a serious composer but even when writing 
pop songs I could do most of it in my head. You don't have to hear how 
it sounds to know how it should sound. Even now (and I am very out of 
practice) I could write you a song with words and write out the melody, 
accompaniment and vocal harmonies without having to pick up an 
instrument or hum a tune.

These days I have a pretty clear idea of the photographs I want to make 
long before I pick up the camera. That includes street-shooting.

I am reasonably confident that you could blindfold me and, given a 
helpful and knowledgeable assistant, I could make you some interesting 
photographs that the assistant on their own would have been quite 
unable to conceive of. I am sure you could do the same. Maybe we should 
try it.

- --
John Brownlow

http://www.pinkheadedbug.com

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