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By the way, I've been living in the mountain rice garden for almost a year. Supposedly, the mind should have been calm and natural, but lately there has been an indescribable anxiety and uneasiness, which from time to time invades the broken but calm state of mind. Yes, people are close to flowers, I don't want to be an anxious person of the times anymore, I just want to be a calm watchman. I need a strength that gives me quiet but not lonely. For this reason, I think of the companionship of music, because only it can give people quiet and not lonely.
Some people say that music is not for you to "understand", just you need to feel. When I was young, I learned a little bit of music, but I didn't have the talent, I was still a layman, but I never rejected music, even the teacher who taught me music, forty years later, we still keep in touch. She's a pretty good musician. I heard her say a long time ago: Not knowing how to appreciate music is a regret in life after all. In fact, it is not difficult to appreciate music, music can first make you physically, neurophysiologically relaxed, and then psychological pleasure, touching, cheerful or sad and so on. For so many years, I never took her teachings seriously, and I never really experienced the taste of music appreciation. Now it seems that it is really necessary to experience it well.

I don't have much interest in pop music, and I even have some rejection from my heart. I think it is better to get in touch with the classics. When it comes to classics, "Liang Zhu" is naturally a must-hear, and it is said that Takako Nishizaki plays the best. In addition to "Liang Zhu", more seems to be foreign, fortunately, music has no borders, can give me quiet strength on the line, of course, can soothe the heart, save the soul, let people noble nature is the best.
I remember the teacher once said that Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 21-25, Bach's "Law of The Average", Chopin's "Nocturne", Dvoshak's "New World Symphony", Beethoven's "Piano Sonata", as well as Schubert's "Musical Moments" and Tchaikovsky's "Like a Song", are more suitable for beginners. I think I should start from this and try to enjoy it as soon as possible: Carl Orff's "The Song of Boylen", which is written about people rushing out of the darkness, yearning for freedom and fantasizing about love; Kleber's Brahms Symphony No. 4, which hopes that people will face late autumn and face depression with a smile; Anday's "Country Knight" interlude, which bathes the soul. There is also Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto, which is a melody that gives people hope; and finally, to enjoy Crombele's "German Requiem", which can properly express the deepest compassion of man and soothe the soul.
Well, it's time to move the long-standing stereo in the city house, and I should have music with me. Hopefully it will still ring.