Once you start playing a piece, there is a connection between every note. You cannot say, 'I will not concentrate on this note.' You cannot ignore things the way you do in the rest of your life.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
In the first place, it must be remembered that our point of view in examining the construction of a play will not always coincide with that which we occupy in thinking of its whole dramatic effect.
Normally when I read, I don't like music playing.
While you're writing, you can't concentrate nearly as well on what the speaker is saying.
If you're concentrating so damn hard on a piece of mathematics or a musical - a piece of music or a piece of art, the restraint that holds the rest of - the rest of the world back off and vanishes in the rest of your life.
But when you have to deal with notes, and to be able to make a full definition of what a sound is - if you are not around that environment, then you'll find you lose that feel, that momentum, you lose all that.
You have to really concentrate on piano or acting. You can't do both.
Music is the silence between the notes.
We tune down a full step when we play but I never miss a note. I've learned how to keep my voice.
I myself never make any notes. Usually, if I write something down, I can't read it afterwards.
I never use notes, they interfere with me.