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A bit of perspective. For what it’s worth:

It would be a great mistake to imagine that my art is an easy matter to me. I assure you, my dear friend, no one has given more trouble to the study of composition than myself. It would not be easy to find a celebrated musician whose works I have not studied often and laboriously.
Wolfgang Mozart, in Prague late October 1787, to conductor Jan Kuchaƙ, translated by Pauline Townsend, 1882

When you appreciate classical music, you can . . .

  • enrich your life
  • enhance your creativity
  • explore other cultures
  • move your body through dance
  • move your spirit through contemplation
  • travel through time without a time machine
  • gain entirely new perspective on history and the present
  • discover much more potential listening that you enjoy

Discover Classical Music

E-mail: discoverclassical [at] outlook [dot] com.

Phone: (888) 912-4101

Mailing Address:

815 Fairview Avenue A-4
Murfreesboro, TN 37130
United States of America

A warning for anyone who might listen:

When you have no case, the lawyers say, you had better shout. When you have no culture, you shout political slogans. It is the easiest thing in the world to do. We should expect more such political hollering in the future, not less, in proportion as our students and their teachers at all levels grow more ignorant, more narrowly trained, less proficient in classical and modern languages, harder of hearing the music of poetry, less able to weigh moral claims against the evidence of history and the distilled experience of human nature that the great artists give us, less chastened by the wise men of the past and by the ideals of religious faith, more apt to huddle in a timorous and insecure individualism, set upon a hair trigger of intolerance, sensitive to any perceived threat to themselves, but all too ready to threaten their opponents with destruction. You heard it here first.
American English professor Anthony Esolen, Providence College

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