
“Everyone thinks that Beethoven had his string quartets completely in his head—they somehow formed in his head—and all he had to do was write them down, and they would kind of be manifest to the world. But what I think is so interesting, and what would really be a lesson that everybody should learn, is that things come out of nothing. Things evolve out of nothing. You know, that the tiniest seed in the right situation turns into the most beautiful forest. And then the most promising seed in the wrong situation turns into nothing. And I think this would be important for people to understand, because it gives people confidence in their own lives that that’s how things work.
If you walk around with the idea that there are some people who are so gifted—they have these wonderful things in their head but you’re not one of them, you’re just sort of a normal person, you could never do anything like that—then you live a different kind of life. You could have another kind of life, where you say, well, I know that things come from nothing very much, and start from unpromising beginnings. And I’m an unpromising beginning, and I could start something.”
Brian Eno
more infosource: quoted in Brian Eno’s Another Green World by Geeta Dayal (New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2009), 31.
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category: Beethoven, creativity, genius, music, nothing
medium: Conversation
via: Kevin Lippert“Genius is initiative on fire.”
Holbrook Jackson
more infosource: Platitudes in the Making: Precepts & Advices for Gentlefolk (London: D. J. Rider, 1911), 14.
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category: genius, initiative, school of life
medium: Nonfiction
“Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, that amazing revolution in tumult and splendor of sound built on four tones based upon a rhythm a child could play on the piano with one finger. Supreme imagination reared the four repeated tones, simple rhythms, into a great symphonic poem that is probably the noblest thought-built edifice in our world.”
Frank Lloyd Wright
more infosource: Frank Lloyd Wright: An Autobiography (Petaluma, CA: Pomegranate Communications, Inc., 2005), 348.
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category: architecture, Beethoven, genius, music, symphony
medium: Autobiography
“Anyone can draw…it takes a genius to erase.”
Louis Auer
more infosource: Quoted by architect and writer Witold Rybczynski during an on-stage discussion with Bing Thom. Louis Auer, an architectural draftsman, taught Rybczynski how to draw.
category: architecture, draw, erase, genius
medium: Conversation
via: Kevin Lippert

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