Words cannot express quite a lot of feelings, whereas a noise or tone or drone or sound, an accordion falling down a staircase, can somehow capture an emotion much better.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Music can describe emotions far more accurately than words ever can. As soon as I realised that, I knew music was where I wanted to be.
Words are but the vague shadows of the volumes we mean. Little audible links, they are, chaining together great inaudible feelings and purposes.
There's something in music that fascinates me - how it communicates emotion so immediately. That's something I wanted in my paintings.
Music is a very, very powerful tool that filmmakers use to sway people into emotions that they intend you to feel.
Music is an emotion, and I put it out there.
I'm a big music person. I compare a lot of my emotions to how something sounds.
Perhaps when music has been shouting for so long, a quieter voice seems attractive.
You can't hear a word and just hear it as raw sound; it always evokes an associated meaning and emotion in the brain.
If words don't have vibration behind them, and a real feeling behind them, then they're just words.
Music moves me - duh - and that is like having a window opening on a heightened reality, but the effect is fleeting: When the music ends, the magic, the uplifting, vanishes and the window slams shut. Words, on the other hand, by the nature of how they work, emotions evoked by dint of carefully laid out thoughts, have a more lingering effect.