Taylor Swift says, essentially, in one of her songs that this urge - TopicsExpress



          

Taylor Swift says, essentially, in one of her songs that this urge to move or shake poets have insulates them from lots of common, nagging type emotions that bog down teenagers during the most insecure years. There is something to this. In fact even the English poet William Blake said, exuberance is beauty When you have good energy, the overflow of energy from which style comes, you ARE insulated. You CAN decide to think about whatever the minor situation tomorrow instead of today. And, beyond that, according to the measure of your exuberance, you can stave off even larger worries or probable dangers. Frederich Nietzsche, who was a master scholar of early Greek culture taught that lyric poetry and song (the same for the Greeks) proceed from the urge to dance. Nietzsche stepped one step further into the core idea by saying melody or word poems proceed from a palpitation of the will. Now, Jack Kerouac and Neil Cassady got ahold of this and made I got to move into our whole western youth culture. The Dionysian culture (Baal to the Hebrew). Nevertheless it is instructive to see clear and sharply outlined exactly what we are talking about. In such a way that you will never wonder again. Below is Stevie dancing to a song she wrote. But it is more. It is Stevie expressing folk dance style the exact palpation of the will which filled her mind, cast an image of Stevie there, and proceeded to her limbs. She probably wrote the song sitting in a chair. But here is, as Nietzsche said, the form of herself she saw rise before her lucid dreaming eyes.. and precisely how she was moving.
Posted on: Fri, 16 Jan 2015 18:40:34 +0000

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