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"Buffalo
Bob" |
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By
now, the audience is used to this ritual. They sit quietly while he
makes his way across the stage to his chair. They remain reverently
silent while he undoes the clasps on his legs. They wait until he is
ready to play. But this time, something went wrong. Just as he finished
the first few bars, one of the strings on his violin broke. You could
hear it snap -- it went off like gunfire across the room. There was no
mistaking what that sound meant. There was no mistaking what he had to
do. People
who were there that night thought to themselves: "We figured that
he would have to get up, put on the clasps again, pick up the crutches
and limp his way off stage to either find another violin or else find
another string for this one."
But
he didn't. Instead, he waited a moment, closed his eyes and then
signaled the conductor to begin again. The orchestra began, and he
played from where he had left off. And he played with such passion and
such power and such purity, as they had never heard before. Of course,
anyone knows that it is impossible to play a symphonic work with just
three strings. I know that, and you know that, but that night Itzhak
Perlman refused to know that. You could see him modulating, changing,
re-composing the piece in his head. At one point, it sounded like he was
de-tuning the strings to get new sounds from them that they had never
made before. When
he finished, there was an awesome silence in the room. And then people
rose and cheered. There was an extraordinary outburst of applause from
every corner of the auditorium. We were all on our feet, screaming and
cheering, doing everything we could to show how much we appreciated what
he had done.
He
smiled, wiped the sweat from this brow, raised his bow to quiet us, and
then he said, not boastfully, but in a quiet, pensive, reverent tone,
"You know, sometimes it is the artist's task to find out how much
music you can still make with what you have left." What
a powerful line that is. It has stayed in my mind ever since I heard it.
And who knows? Perhaps that is the definition of life... not just for
artists but for all of us. Here is a man who has prepared all his life
to make music on a violin of four strings, who, all of a sudden, in the
middle of a concert, finds himself with only three strings; so he makes
music with three strings, and the music he made that night with just
three strings was more beautiful, more sacred, more memorable, than any
that he had ever made before, when he had four strings.
So,
perhaps our task in this shaky, fast-changing, bewildering world in
which we live is to make music, at first with all that we have, and
then, when that is no longer possible, to make music with what we have
left.
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