Archive for the ‘Excerpts & Quotes & Tidbits’ Category

Quotes About Music & Musicians Re-post

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010


Current mood:  busy
Category: Music

Quotes:  MUSIC / MUSICIANS

“One of the perks of being an unemployed musician is that you get to play much less bad music.”
Jack Daney

“After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.”
Aldous Huxley

“Music is, by its very nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all.  Music expresses itself.”
Igor Stravinsky

“Hell is full of musical amateurs.”
 George Bernard Shaw

“The drummer drives.  Everybody else rides!”
 
Panama Francis
    
“Some days you get up and put the horn to your chops and it sounds pretty good and you win. Some days you try and nothing works and the horn wins. This goes on and on and then you die and the horn wins.”
Dizzy Gillespie on playing the trumpet

“Music is my mistress, and she plays second fiddle to no one.”
Duke Ellington

“Jazz is the only music in which the same note can be played night after night but differently each time.”
Ornette Coleman
    
“We never play anything the same way once.”
Shelly Manne’s definition of jazz musicians

“Someone who knows how to play the accordion, and doesn’t.”
Al Cohn’s definition of a gentleman

“Music is a very hard instrument.”
Vido Musso


“The only tune they play in 4/4 is ‘Take Five!’”
(unknown-talking about the Don Ellis band)

“If I could play like Wynton (Marsalis), I wouldn’t play like Wynton.
Chet Baker

“I’m too old to pimp, and too young to die, so I’m just gon’ keep playin’.
Clark Terry

“A great teacher is one who realizes that he himself is also a student and whose goal is not dictate the answers,  but to stimulate his students creativity  enough so that they go out and find the answers themselves.”
Herbie  Hancock 

 

“To be a musician is a curse.  To NOT be one is even worse.
Jack Daney

“Don’t bother to look, I’ve composed all this already.”
Gustav Mahler, to Bruno Walter who had stopped to admire mountain scenery in rural Austria.

“I would rather play Chiquita Banana and have my swimming pool than play Bach and starve.”
Xavier Cugat

“[Musicians] talk of nothing but money and jobs.  Give me businessmen every time.  They really are interested in music and art.”
Jean Sibelius, explaining why he rarely invited musicians to his home.

“Only become a musician if there is absolutely no other way you can make a living.”
Kirke Mecham, on his life as a composer

“I am not handsome, but when women hear me play, they come crawling to my feet.”
Niccola Paganini

“What is the voice of song, when the world lacks the ear of taste?”
Nathaniel Hawthorne

“Flint must be an extremely wealthy town:  I see that each of you bought two or three seats.”
Victor Borge, playing to a half-filled house in Flint, Michigan.

“If one hears bad music it is one’s duty to drown it by one’s conversation.”
Oscar Wilde

“Critics can’t even make music by rubbing their back legs together.”
Mel Brooks

“Life can’t be all bad when for ten dollars you can buy all the Beethoven sonatas and listen to them for ten years.”
William F. Buckley, Jr.

“You can’t possibly hear the last movement of Beethoven’s Seventh and go slow.”
Oscar Levant, explaining his way out of a speeding ticket.

“Wagner’s music is better than it sounds.”
Mark Twain

“Berlioz says nothing in his music, but he says it magnificently.”
James Gibbons Hunekar

“If a young man at the age of twenty-three can write a symphony like that, in five years he will be ready to commit murder.”
Walter Damrosch on Aaron Copland

“There are still so many beautiful things to be said in C major.”
Sergei Prokofiev

“I never use a score when conducting my orchestra. Does a lion tamer enter a cage with a book on how to tame a lion?”
Dimitri Mitropolous

“God tells me how the music should sound, but you stand in the way.”
Arturo Toscanini to a trumpet player

“Already too loud!”
Bruno Walter at his first rehearsal with an American orchestra, on seeing the players reaching for their instruments.

“I really don’t know whether any place contains more pianists than Paris, or whether you can find more asses and virtuosos anywhere.”
Frederic Chopin

“When she started to play, Steinway himself came down personally and rubbed his name off the piano.”
Bob Hope, on comedienne Phyllis Diller

“Never look at the trombones, it only encourages them.”
Richard Strauss

“In opera, there is always too much singing.”
Claude Debussy

“Oh how wonderful, really wonderful opera would be if there were no singers!”
Giacchino Rossini

“I think popular music in this country is one of the few things in the twentieth century that has made giant strides in reverse.”
Bing Crosby

“A ponderous orchestral absurdity.”

Frank Zappa on his rock symphony debuted by the Los Angeles Philharmonic

“The bottom line of any country is, what did we contribute to the world?  We contributed Louis Armstrong.”
Tony Bennett

The Millennium Trilogy - by Bob Lefsetz

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

One of our songwriter performing artists, Olga, submitted a song titled “For The Love Of Music” that talks about how she performs because simply, she loves the music.  It’s not about the purse.  Here’s an interesting article by Bob that hits on that subject & then some. 

 

From: Bob Lefsetz 

I just finished reading the Millennium Trilogy.

It wasn't easy. Richard Griffiths had to send me the "The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets' Nest" from the U.K. It was six hundred pages long. But I savored every line. As I was introduced to a new world that was eerily similar to my own. Because, as Depeche Mode once sang, people are people.

Mikael Blomkvist is all about the work. He may get laid in the midst of his passion, but romance will not get in the way of his pursuit. For truth, justice and what we used to call the "American Way". Something Tea Partiers have bastardized to the point where socialistic Sweden is closer to what we used to be than their vision for the future. One in which we live in a society where everyone is included and the government makes sure no individual gets an unfair advantage.

Lisbeth Salander is an outcast, an outsider. No different from the pierced, tattooed denizens making up the audience at a punk show. Desirous of playing it their way, skeptical of anyone who wants them to conform, who wants them to play by their rules.

Well, this was before today's punks went home after the show and wrote software to become rich and famous on their laptops. Actually, Salander does become rich utilizing her computer skills. But fame? No, she's lurking behind the scenes, like a real artist.

A real artist doesn't do it for public adulation. If the unwashed masses love you, then what you're doing can't be too good, can't be very edgy, can't be testing too many limits. Great art makes people uncomfortable, yet ultimately draws them in. The Beatles were laughed at in America, they sounded nothing like Elvis or the Four Seasons. Then, suddenly, seemingly overnight, people threw off their mental constructs and embraced the four lads from Liverpool. They were born to follow...young men who were not restricted by convention. John Lennon was chastised by oldsters for stating the obvious, that the band was bigger than Jesus. Isn't it interesting that we remember him and his work yet not his detractors...

Stieg Larsson, author of the Millennium Trilogy, died before its publication. Do you get that? He wrote three books alone at night, not wondering all the while why he didn't have more Facebook friends or Twitter followers. He wasn't checking his bank account, he was following his passion. The passion of people who call themselves artists today is too often for riches and fame, not utmost personal expression. An artist does it for the work, too many of today's "stars" do it for the aftereffects of the work.

In today's L.A. "Times" there's a story about the infiltration of corporations in music. If you think this is the future, you're probably sucking at the tit. You too, want to get paid. That's what's wrong with too many agents, too many middlemen brokering corporate deals, they say they're about the music, but really, they're about the money. Do you really want to trust these people?

Who do you want to trust?

Lennon said he could only believe in Yoko and himself. That's the essence of an artist. You can't believe in the label or the promoter. They're necessary evils. But their interests are not aligned. You are the creator, they are the exploiter. So you end up with Clive Davis telling you how you should make your music to please him. That's like having Mickey Rourke over your shoulder telling you how to screw.

Maybe you don't get that reference. How Mr. Rourke supposedly had fourteen women in one night. It was all over the Web last week. Just like GaGa shopping in that ridiculous outfit. And the exploits and meanderings of too many little-talented but ultra-famous.

And then we've got the OK Go Rube Goldberg video. An incredible achievement sponsored by State Farm Insurance. Is this a victory or a loss?

In the world of music, it's a loss. Because if the underlying song, whose name escapes me, was that good, we'd already know it, and certainly remember it after seeing the clip. Unfortunately, the clip was more creative than the music. Damian Kulash's expertise seems to be as a performance artist more than a musician. And that's fine, but what about the music?

And there was some more hype about Phoenix in today's "New York Times". But at least the music led the way there. SNL wanted the band because it heard the new record, not because Procter & Gamble threw its weight behind the foursome.

It's hard to put an ad in a book.

No, let's restate that. It doesn't work too well. Or, most companies won't pony up, unless the author is already ubiquitous, and then the company's money isn't needed. The book stands alone. What makes the Millennium Trilogy work is the work itself. The writing.

Stieg Larsson sketched out a landscape of events, with assorted characters and motivations. Unlike "Avatar", the key wasn't the surface, but what was underneath. Today mainstream art is about the sheen. But it used to be different. Used to be art was edgy and oftentimes ugly. And the conflagration surrounding it brought the mainstream to it. And that's quite a difference. One is made for a market, the other creates a market.

Used to be it was almost impossible to get attention. When Andy Warhol uttered the famous aphorism, the average punter could not get on TV, not even in the newspaper. But now people put themselves and their wares up on MySpace and YouTube and expect endless attention and adulation. When most of us shrug. Because there's no reason to pay attention. Unless you're Tila Tequila showing us your boobs and alternately claiming pregnancy and miscarriage

I kept hearing good things about "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo". I saw it seeping into the public consciousness. I checked it out. Over a year after it was released in America. Ever play last year's pop hits? They sound as dated as a Pinto.

And when I entered the world, I was alone. Just like I was listening to great records in my bedroom. There was no club I could go to to try and chase women while someone read from the book in the background. I was drawn in, gave up my regular life to read, in thrall to the work.

"The Girl Who Played With Fire" wasn't quite as good. Because it ended abruptly. Little did I know its loose ends would be picked up in the third edition...

It was like following a band. You're dedicated. You wade through the morass, buy the not as great second album to get to the third. Because the band is on a mission, of exploration. Reaching for the Holy Grail of expressing themselves, of their art.

Music will be relevant once again when it is purveyed by people like Stieg Larsson. Doing it not for the fame, but the experience.

Do not confuse GaGa and Lucian Grainge and all the other tools trying to make a buck with music. That's commerce. And no wonder big corporations want to play along. That's what they want, money. No corporation wants to be involved with something unknown, edgy and dangerous. It can't risk its reputation. Whereas all the artist has is his reputation. So he won't do one thing that compromises it either. Even after he's made it. Because the audience knows.

All of America is a sham. Because the media and the politicians make like the audience doesn't know. It does. It knows that the Democrats are almost as bad as the Republicans and Obama can't lead and you can't trust Fox News. And the story of the decade is how the Internet is undermining the establishment and the old institutions can't cope. That's you, "New York Times". To think that a newspaper should be relevant in 2010 is to believe that we should all be driving Model T's and using electric typewriters. Times change. And you need to change with them.

And like I said, the people have changed. They know the music on the hit parade is vapid, evanescent and insignificant. They know who's selling out. They know, like Frank Zappa claimed, most people are only in it for the money. And they also know, just because you know how to use GarageBand and are hawking your music, that doesn't mean it's worth listening to.

Everybody wants to be famous. Everybody wants to party with the Hiltons and the Kardashians. Everybody wants to be atop the pecking order. As if we could truly live in Lake Wobegon, where all the children are above average.

But this is untrue. There are winners and losers in the world. And great artists speak of both. They don't tell us about their exotic lifestyles, in song and on TV, they speak about honest emotions, heartbreak and financial ruin. Because this is the fabric of America.

Sure, there are entertainments that provide escape.

But what we draw close to our bosom, and what truly lasts, is the unsullied honesty of the lifer, someone doing it because he has to, because he's got to get his message across, who will continue even if no one is paying attention. And believe you me, when most of today's failed "artists" realize no one cares, they jump ship immediately, into marketing something else. Because it's not about the music. It's never about the music. And to be valid, to be interesting, to draw us away from our smartphones and PlayStations and flat screens, it's got to solely be about the music. No dancing, no playing to hard drive, just expression, warts and all.

-- 
Visit the archive: http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/ 

Need A Laugh + Funny Stuff Copied From Another Blog

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Words written by a friend:
Truths for when you have nothing better to do:

1. I wish Google Maps had an “Avoid Ghetto” routing option.

2. Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong.

3. I totally take back all those times I didn’t want to nap when I was younger.

4. The letters T and G are very close to each other on a keyboard. This recently became all too apparent to me and consequently I will never be ending a work email with the phrase “Regards” again…. See More

5. There is a great need for sarcasm font.

6. Sometimes, I’ll watch a movie that I watched when I was younger and suddenly realize I had no idea what was going on when I first saw it.

7. How are you supposed to fold a fitted sheet?

8. I would rather try to carry 10 plastic grocery bags in each hand than take 2 trips to bring my groceries in.

9. I think part of a best friend’s job should be to immediately clear your computer history if you die.

10. The only time I look forward to a red light is when I’m trying to finish a text.

11. Was learning cursive really necessary?

12. I have a hard time deciphering the fine line between boredom and hunger.

13. How many times is it appropriate to say “What?” before you just nod and smile because you still didn’t hear what they said?

14. I love the sense of camaraderie when an entire line of cars teams up to prevent a jerk from cutting in at the front. Stay strong, brothers!

15. MapQuest really needs to start their directions on #5. Pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

16. Obituaries would be a lot more interesting if they told you how the person died.

17. Shirts get dirty. Underwear gets dirty. Pants? Pants never get dirty, and you can wear them forever.

18. I can’t remember the last time I wasn’t at least kind of tired.

19. Bad decisions and bad experiences make good stories

20. Is it just me or do high school girls look sluttier & sluttier every year?

21. You never know when it will strike, but there comes a moment at work when you’ve made up your mind that you just aren’t doing anything productive for the rest of the day.

22. There’s no worse feeling than that millisecond you’re sure you are going to die after leaning that your chair is back a little too far.

23. I’m always slightly terrified when I exit out of Word and it asks me if I want to save any changes to my ten page research paper that I swear I did not make any changes to.

24. I hate leaving my house confident and looking good and then not seeing anyone of importance the entire day. What a waste.

25. As a driver I hate pedestrians, and as a pedestrian I hate drivers, but no matter what the mode of transportation, I always hate cyclists.

26. Sometimes I’ll look down at my watch 3 consecutive times and still not know what time it is.

27. It should probably be called Unplanned Parenthood.

28. I keep some people’s phone numbers in my phone just so I know not to answer when they call.

10 Quotes To Live By - Re-post

Monday, September 28th, 2009

clingmansdomesmokies_thumb.jpg

Think about it.  Your favorite quotes are probably good guidelines for how you live your life–or would like to.  Mine tend to be about movement, possibly because I hate standing still, hate stagnation, and feel I need to keep moving. They also tend to be about journeys and blazing my own trails regardless of popular opinion.

1.  Traveler, there is no path.  Paths are made by walking. — Antonio Marchado

I don’t mind being the first to try something.  In fact, if I can be first, I prefer it.  There’s a thrill in making my own path, and if others follow the precedent I’ve set and it makes life easier for them, that’s great, too.

2. If you’re not living on the edge, you’re taking up too much room. — African Proverb

I like the idea of living life with passion, and that’s what this quote says to me.  Push the envelope.  Try new things.  Intensity!

3.  If it’s something I want, then it’s something I need; I wasn’t built for comfort I was built for speed.  –”Bad for Good” by Jim Steinman

This was my mantra early in my career and when I was first known as an uber-reformer in my job.  Pushing the envelope meant making some people uncomfortable because most people are comfortable with things as they are and don’t want change even when it’s a good thing.  I streamlined and reformed and got things done both well and quickly, and when I wanted to make something happen, it became a necessity for me to see it through.

4. Who is this that darkens my counsel with words without knowledge? The Book of Job

This is a reminder to me not to listen to negative and unhappy people, even friends and family I love, because often they don’t really know my motivations or the depth of my emotions or speak out of their own fears.  It’s a good reflection of my daughter’s golden words to me when well-meaning people were driving me crazy:  Don’t take advice from unhappy people.

5.  There are no statues to critics, only to those who are criticized. — various, including Timothy Ferriss, The Four Hour Workweek

I’ve always heard that it’s easy to criticize and hard to create, but sometimes it’s disheartening to create something and have negative people harp on what they don’t like about it or why it probably won’t work or how things like that never do well and then tell you they’re being “realistic.”  I’ve never encountered anyone who said he was being “realistic” who wasn’t actually being extremely negative.  So this quote is a reminder to me to push forward and do what I need to do and not to worry about small-minded naysayers and fault-finders.

6.  In the middle of the journey of our life,  I came to myself within a dark wood where the straight way was lost. –Dante

If the journey of our life is around 72 years and Dante was in his mid-30’s when he wrote this quote, then I think it makes an excellent mid-life crisis-slash-transformation reminder.  At around 40, you meet yourself in the Dark and have to shine a few lights to get rid of some of the shadows that have built up.  It’s a time of re-assessing, and you can only see the path you’ve been on when you stop and look back at it, especially when the way ahead feels more unknown than ever.

7.  Jump or be pushed, the Universe said.  It’s your choice.  –Lorna Tedder

Okay, so this is a quote of my own, but it sums up that feeling of a breakthrough, when you know things cannot go on as they have and you must decide to take action.  And if you can’t take action, the Universe will make things bad enough that you must take action.  It’s your choice to take the leap or let the situation push you into it.  Looking back, I’ve discovered that the leap or the fall is usually to prepare a way for something much, much better.

8.  Be bold, and mighty forces shall come to your aid. — Goethe

I’m not a shy person, but I do tend to be a quiet person in face to face situations, partly because I’m very soft-spoken and not a yeller.  I’m easy-going and unabrasive, mostly.  Sometimes I have to remind myself to be very assertive, aggressive even, to make myself heard.

9.  Two roads diverged in a wood, and I– I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. –Robert Frost

It’s fundamental to my nature to do something different, to live life on my own terms.  The last thing I want is to be like everyone else.  That was hard to adjust to in middle school and a few times since, but I’ve come to relish taking unique directions, especially with unique people.

10.  I never saved anything for the swim back. – “Gattaca”

In the movie “Gattaca,” the genetically engineered-to-perfection brother is bigger, stronger, better, everything, than his flawed older brother.  A turning point in the movie is when the flawed brother outswims his perfect sibling and saves him from drowning.  Years later, he reveals how he managed the feat–he didn’t save any energy for the way back to the safety of the shore.  This  quote has been very meaningful to me in the past few months, highlighted for me by two different men who’ve come into my life and noted this quote as one of their favorites at the exact moment I spoke of it.  That’s how I’m trying to live my life now–not saving anything for some future project or relationship but spending all of my energy and passion on what’s here now.

What are your favorite quotes?  And what do they say about you?

An Emerson Quote

Monday, September 21st, 2009

picnic-table.jpg

Ralph Waldo Emerson states, “Don’t waste life in doubts and fears; spend yourself on the work before you, well assured that the right performance of this hour’s duties will be the best preparation for the hours and ages that will follow it.” 

Business Plan For Your Life!!! - You Bet

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

excerpt from Strategic Planning For The Small Business by Craig S. Rice

Books jump into my hands at the right time.  While cruising the books for sale shelf at the local library, the above book jumped into my hands.  Best value for 25cents.  I also bought a book of poetry to send to two songwriters who are getting married tomorrow.  But back to business. 

Life is a business you know.  Each of us is our product that we sell.  We sell our time we sell our skills.  Some of you are songwriters and sell your songs, your performances, your art.  So it is good to have a plan of what you want to get in return, when you’d like to get it and how you will get it.  Here’s the excerpt:

“You may be wondering, “What does a business plan do for me?”  You are asking a sensible question that deserves an answer.  You get six strong benefits.

First - A plan favorable impresses your key people.  Your investors, owners, bankers, and employees often will say, “I like a person who has a good plan worked out!”  Investors are more willing to put in funds - and employees will invest more of their time, effort, and enthusiasm.  Programs motivate, and a person with a careful plan often has a certain attraction and influence.

Second - A plan increases your income.  Famous consultant Peter Drucker says, “What gets planned, gets done.”  So if you build a good, sensible program for increasing your sales and profits, you have a much better chance that those profits will come to you than you would if you had no such plan.

Third - A plan saves you time, work, and stress - and that’s not all bad.  You avoid wasted action, mistakes, and lost money.  The plan spreads and delegates the load.  (Why should you do it all?)  Plus, a plan anticipates problems and turns them into advantages before they hit you.  So it cuts your stress.  Good planners get more fun out of life.

Fourth - A plan applies your strengths, skills, abilities, interests.  Everyone and every company has talents.  Yet these are sometimes unrecognized, unappreciated, and under-employed, even though these very things are the activities that people most enjoy doing, and often will generate the most results per day or week.  A good plan helps find those valuable resources and applies them in contructive ways - like making money.

Fifth - A plan gives you a track to run on.  A railroad train, racing car, or running athlete moves better, more efficiently, more effectively, when on a track.  All can see where they are, where they are going, and the direction they want to take.  And a track is usually smoother than fields, streams, and woods.  Your route is well laid out.  Now you can concentrate on your own progress, speed, excelling over competitors and winning, rather than getting past every aggravating puddle, rock, and rut in the road.

Sixth - A plan sets priorities.  This can be very important and mighty handy in these days of limited resources and modest budgets.  We simply can’t afford to do everything.  Some things must be postponed.

But other projects are essential.  And even among these preferred projects, not everything can be done at once.  With a plan, you know what to do first and what’s coming next.  It not only saves you from unpleasant surprises, but lets you focus all your skill on each step, so you are more likely to succeed.  And by taking things one at a time, not in one horrendous load, your stress factor is much lower.  Life is hard, by the yard - but life’s a cinch, by the inch.”

He goes on to give “… one of the best and easiest kinds of plans …” which has only four steps.  I’ll post that next week.  Here’s to good planning!!!  Cheers+  

GROW The Modern Woman’s Handbook by Lynne Frank - excerpt

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

white-berries-cover-shot.jpg

This is a great read about “How to Connect with Self, Lovers, and Others”
Here are the first 2 paragraphs in her Introduction:

“Have you ever been telling a story to a group of women, and they begin nodding their heads, saying how similiar things have happened to them?  As each woman begins sharing her experiences, an energy gets created that spreads around the group like wildfire.  Whether the discussions are about our lovers and husbands, our health, our beliefs, our kids, our work, or how we want to create value in our local and global community, we women empathize, connect, and resonate with each other.

GROW - The Modern Woman’s Handbook is aimed at women of all ages who wish to get back in touch with their femine centers, that is, the place where we all remember how to connect; first, with ourselves and the divine; second, with our families and loved ones; and third, with our local and global communities.  I believe that the emergence of femine values in society must be the way forward if we’re to create a positive future for humankind. ”  

Follow The Path of Your True Calling

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

roberta-looking-to-sun.jpg

O ye gifted ones, follow the path of your true calling,
for however various your talents may be, ye can have
but one calling capable of leading ye to eminence and renown;
follow resolutely the one straight path before you,
it is that of your good angel.
Let neither obstacles nor temptations induce ye to leave it;
bound along if you can; or on hands and knees follow it.
Turn into other paths for a momentary advantage or
gratification and ye have sold your inhertance, your immortality.
Ye will never be heard of after death.

George Borrow; Lavengro the Gypsy Scholar

Slang - Cheesecake & Lifted

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

From Contemporary American Slang by Richard A. Spears, Ph.D. -

1. cheesecake= n. a display of the female form, probably wearing little clothing, often in photographs. (Compare to beefcake.) *Women don’t like to see all that cheescake on the walls when they bring their cars in here to be fixed.* 2. n. a good-looking woman; good looking women *Who’s the cheesecake in that low-cut job?*

2. lifted=drunk/high

Wow!!  Have I met a couple lifted cheesecakes in my time!!

Currently reading:
Contemporary American Slang : An Up-to-Date Guide to the Slang of Modern American English
By Richard A. Spears

This is excerpt from the front of Gilda Radner’s book titled “It’s Always Something”

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Buddha told a parable in a sutra

A man traveling across a field encountered a
tiger.  He fled,  the tiger after him.  Coming to a
precipice, he caught hold of the root of a wild
vine and swung himself down over the edge.  The
tiger sniffed at him from above.  Trembling, the
man looked down to where, far below, another
tiger was waiting to eat him.  Only the vine
sustained him.
Two mice, one white and one black, little by
little started to gnaw away the vine.  The man saw
a luscious strawberry near him.  Grasping the
vine with one hand, he plucked the strawberry
with the other.
How sweet it tasted!

Zen Flesh, Zen Bones:
A Collection of Zen and Pre-Zen
Writings, compiled by Paul Reps