Exhibitions. There are a few in my life at present. Botticelli is the obvious one. And I'm about to play Pictures at an exhibition again. Then this turned up: Sam Row playing the original Mussorgsky piano version of PaaE at a Wesley lunchtime session. I was there to record and it was a wonderful reminiscence and visit to the music. And impressive, too, how he played the work from memory. Not just that, but also an encore, Frank Hutchins By the river. I've spoken before how you come to know music so well by playing it. My experience here was just more proof. I'd played the Ravel orchestration which is the version everyone knows, but it was very similar. Unless I haven't imbibed quite as well as I thought, the music was essentially identical. The colours of various instruments were not there, but all the lines were. To me, it was the same. I sat back with eyes closed and marvelled at the vivid and various dissonant responses to the artworks and the variations on the recurring promenades. Just a thing of huge pleasure and a thing of great admiration for Sam who did this all, so competently, and with no music. Loved this one.
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