Re: Music and Lucid Dreaming
Quote:
Originally posted by Cord
I was just wondering if anyone had any unique experiences with music in their lucid dreams? I myself have had 3 lucid dreams and can only imagine the possibilties and benefits lucid dreaming will have on a musician. This is something I so dearly want to experiment with.
Oh, yes, I began by playing… or fooling around with Violin, and then picked up guitar, and then bass guitar and then keyboard. I was never serious, but played as a diversion. I would simply put on a record or tape (that is how old I am) and later CD’s and then just play along by ear, developing my chording as I could progressively become more elaborate. Studying Music would have been a wonderful shortcut to proficiency, but I simply wanted a hobby, not another profession. But even at my level I often enough had dreams. In one dream, I accompanied Bob Dylan in concert for a rendition of his “Like a Rolling Stone”, on violin, where I counter-posed his harmonic. Then in another dream I played guitar with Carly Simon. She was sweet. After the dream concert she asked us all to her estate in on Martha’s Vineyard where she was the most gracious party hostess, and she even sat down on the sofa with me and chatted pleasantly with me for 5 minutes. I truly was enchanted. There have been other dreams where I have displayed my aptitude on keyboard. Luckily I always seem to be better than adequate when playing in my dreams.
What I suppose is happening is that one is Auditioning for Heaven. We think of living for all Eternity in our Afterlives, but what shall we do? I think I have earned my place in the Heaven of Popular Musicians and their serious fans… being a serious Fan more than one of the actual musicians… playing only well enough so that my appreciation would not be seem as meaningless and rather gratuitous.
Of course, most of my attention goes toward writing, and that is something I have never done in a dream… nor have I made any stirring speeches. But maybe music is all part of that. What makes good writing is what makes good music – a sense of rhythm and cadence and a dash of rhyme. Good narrative, like good poetry, like good music, must have melody, harmony and even percussion. It brings to mind an essay I recently read from one of my favorite authors, Raymond Chandler, who said that American Writers miss one of the great things the English have a sense for, and that is ‘tone’. American writing is monotonously flat, but the English can adopt and project in their writing what they naturally do in their speaking, and that is, use ‘Tone’ to convey subtly, beyond mere words, what their various emotional intents are – to be compared to Music which uses Major and Minor Keys to create the Emotional Milieu that anticipates the strict meaning of their words. Good Writing must have something of Music in it.
Re: Music and Lucid Dreaming
Quote:
Originally posted by Leo Volont
Oh, yes, I began by playing… or fooling around with Violin, and then picked up guitar, and then bass guitar and then keyboard. I was never serious, but played as a diversion. I would simply put on a record or tape (that is how old I am) and later CD’s and then just play along by ear, developing my chording as I could progressively become more elaborate. Studying Music would have been a wonderful shortcut to proficiency, but I simply wanted a hobby, not another profession. But even at my level I often enough had dreams. In one dream, I accompanied Bob Dylan in concert for a rendition of his “Like a Rolling Stone”, on violin, where I counter-posed his harmonic. Then in another dream I played guitar with Carly Simon. She was sweet. After the dream concert she asked us all to her estate in on Martha’s Vineyard where she was the most gracious party hostess, and she even sat down on the sofa with me and chatted pleasantly with me for 5 minutes. I truly was enchanted. There have been other dreams where I have displayed my aptitude on keyboard. Luckily I always seem to be better than adequate when playing in my dreams.
What I suppose is happening is that one is Auditioning for Heaven. We think of living for all Eternity in our Afterlives, but what shall we do? I think I have earned my place in the Heaven of Popular Musicians and their serious fans… being a serious Fan more than one of the actual musicians… playing only well enough so that my appreciation would not be seem as meaningless and rather gratuitous.
Of course, most of my attention goes toward writing, and that is something I have never done in a dream… nor have I made any stirring speeches. But maybe music is all part of that. What makes good writing is what makes good music – a sense of rhythm and cadence and a dash of rhyme. Good narrative, like good poetry, like good music, must have melody, harmony and even percussion. It brings to mind an essay I recently read from one of my favorite authors, Raymond Chandler, who said that American Writers miss one of the great things the English have a sense for, and that is ‘tone’. American writing is monotonously flat, but the English can adopt and project in their writing what they naturally do in their speaking, and that is, use ‘Tone’ to convey subtly, beyond mere words, what their various emotional intents are – to be compared to Music which uses Major and Minor Keys to create the Emotional Milieu that anticipates the strict meaning of their words. Good Writing must have something of Music in it.
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