Comments on: Silence is Golden http://macaulay.cuny.edu/seminars/saldana07/2007/10/silence-is-golden/ Art Is Where You Find It Thu, 27 Dec 2007 13:38:45 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.2.1 By: Wendy Huang http://macaulay.cuny.edu/seminars/saldana07/2007/10/silence-is-golden/comment-page-1/#comment-135 Wendy Huang Fri, 19 Oct 2007 00:50:46 +0000 http://web.honorscollege.cuny.edu/seminars/saldana07/?p=312#comment-135 Good job, Eilene! You are right. That accordion player's music was nothing like Joseph Petric's at all!! But I think that could be because Petric was playing classical music, and the Hispanic guy on the train was playing a tune he composed himself?? Anyway, I totally agree with you. That music he played sounded like painful nonsense to me. Good job, Eilene! You are right. That accordion player’s music was nothing like Joseph Petric’s at all!! But I think that could be because Petric was playing classical music, and the Hispanic guy on the train was playing a tune he composed himself?? Anyway, I totally agree with you. That music he played sounded like painful nonsense to me.

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By: Zoe Sheehan Saldana http://macaulay.cuny.edu/seminars/saldana07/2007/10/silence-is-golden/comment-page-1/#comment-125 Zoe Sheehan Saldana Thu, 18 Oct 2007 13:28:07 +0000 http://web.honorscollege.cuny.edu/seminars/saldana07/?p=312#comment-125 This is a fun observation and I especially enjoy your final sentence. It seems like the 'horrible' noise made you listen more carefully to 'ordinary' noise - 'ordinary' noise thus became more musical, somehow? This is a fun observation and I especially enjoy your final sentence. It seems like the ‘horrible’ noise made you listen more carefully to ‘ordinary’ noise – ‘ordinary’ noise thus became more musical, somehow?

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