In this post Michael says:
Reading these words, I immediately thought, well, not only Beethoven but also we can hear the music from within our heads and not an external source, not even our mouth. I think most of us, musically educated people, have the power to evoke music, the music we have stored in our brain from previous listening experiences, without the need to move one muscle of the phonation organs. Perhaps we are alone, or in the middle of a crowd if you like, and you are remembering some fragment of a composition that comes to your mind, and the whole thing is a purely intellectual process, the brain being "decoupled" from the organs of phonation at that moment. And you can let the music flow, up to where you can remember that music, or until your are urged by the external world.
Or may be you do it deliberately because you are boring yourself, and you decide to put your self some music. I remember I had a system to keep time when waiting for some event, which consisted in evoking the first movement of the symphony in G minor. I was used to a particular version whose duration I knew, and that explains the trick. And by the way I amused myself.
So my thesis is that all human beings can make the music sound in their heads, even though some of them are more used to it than others. And of course, having the instruments playing in front of you, or a good pair of headphones, is preferable from the point of view of fidelity. But given that I am in a tribune were all voices are heard, I'd like too know if I am wrong, in which case some of you could come to the forefront and let hear his/her opinion. I mean it.
I think Beethoven's later music is ideally suited for headphones because it gives me the impression that the music is inside my head - and not coming from an outside source - which is how B heard it.
Or may be you do it deliberately because you are boring yourself, and you decide to put your self some music. I remember I had a system to keep time when waiting for some event, which consisted in evoking the first movement of the symphony in G minor. I was used to a particular version whose duration I knew, and that explains the trick. And by the way I amused myself.
So my thesis is that all human beings can make the music sound in their heads, even though some of them are more used to it than others. And of course, having the instruments playing in front of you, or a good pair of headphones, is preferable from the point of view of fidelity. But given that I am in a tribune were all voices are heard, I'd like too know if I am wrong, in which case some of you could come to the forefront and let hear his/her opinion. I mean it.
Comment