Topic: Samurge

Report of a day spent in the emergency room last week (a cardiological alert that turned out not to be serious).
I was hooked up to a monitor that squealed on these three notes every time I tried to sleep while waiting for the doctor.

https://hearthis.at/xnwdv7yv/samurge/6Nx/

Re: Samurge

Hello Gaston! I am so glad to read that it turned out not to be serious,
the day spent in the emergency room.

Interesting how those three notes from the monitor gave you idea to this music Samurge. Like poetry/painting that allow us to express ourselves with words/pictures, music (and Pianoteq !) offers many possibilities to express feelings. Things happen every day. We can see, hear, feel, be in the emergency room….and we can make music/express our feelings, about it.
Listening to Samurge, I can feel the monitor and anxiety in the music before the doctor came. And the relief when not serious. This I can hear from 2,27 and till the end, these fantastic harmonic positive  flavours, sounds, timbres. Well, this is how I experience the music.
Samurge, very nice. Thanks, Gaston is back!

Best wishes

Re: Samurge

I have the same impression at 2'30"  well done

take care of you

Re: Samurge

bernard wrote:

I have the same impression at 2'30"  well done

take care of you

Ah yes, indeed, one suddenly breathes in peace after 2:30

Re: Samurge

The doctor comes in at 2'00
At 2'27" it is my wife who is finally allowed to join me, she had been languishing for three hours in the waiting room.

Last edited by Gaston (12-12-2018 20:26)

Re: Samurge

Glad that you are not too unwell.  If you had written an orthopaedic inspiration, it would have certainly have to have had hammers and drills!

Last edited by dklein (13-12-2018 02:56)
- David

Re: Samurge

Gaston wrote:

The doctor comes in at 2'00
At 2'27" it is my wife who is finally allowed to join me, she had been languishing for three hours in the waiting room.

Ha, that was the reason, excellent

Re: Samurge

This is brilliant! 

Happy everything turned ouf fine.

Re: Samurge

dklein wrote:

Glad that you are not too unwell.  If you had written an orthopaedic inspiration, it would have certainly have to have had hammers and drills!

I know what you mean !
When I had my first hip replacement, it was under local anesthesia and I heard everything. Drill, saw, hammer !
But Pianoteq did not exist...