Several times in the last several months, I have been asked the question "how come you don't do photography anymore?". Though I tried to search for an answer, my mind could never come up with something adequate. This week, being buried underneath a musical avalanche, which, at most times, is the only kind of avalanche I'd like to be buried under, I realized something: music is my photography.
Before, when music and I had been only briefly acquainted and were still getting to know each other, I felt as if music was something that I needed to play. It was an expression of myself, a way to let out how I felt, something I wanted to remember, something I wanted others to remember. It was just a means to record thoughts and feelings. It was a fun, but only a means to an end.
Now that music and I have gotten to know each other a little better, my thoughts on it are completely different. Music is no longer an expression, it is a necessary side effect of everything I do. I can't walk without rhythm, I can't speak without a melody line, I can't listen to someone speak without hearing it in the midst of the worlds song. Tapping feet, notes in class, chalkboards, sighs, credit cards, scooting chairs, cars, construction work; this is the song I hear every day. I don't play music to express myself, I live and it is forced into music. I cannot help it. It is my fifth limb, a part of my body. It is not something on the outside; no, not even something on the inside; rather it IS my outside and my inside. It is my throat, it is my ears, it is my water, my mind's photograph. It is the way that I survive. It is my deepest conversation with God, and His deepest conversation with me.
I didn't stop photographing because I didn't like it, or even because I had a choice between it and music. I stop photography because the click of the shutter, the sound of the wind, the gadgets moving and beeps of the camera; these were more about music to me, about musical value, than they were about the picture itself.
Music is my photography.
Better to be excellent at something than mediocre at everything.
ReplyDeletei have to admit that when i first saw this, i got super excited and thought "david started photography again!"
ReplyDeleteand got really excited.
then as i read, it made sense. i will never love music, see music the way you do.
i love it. i see it.
just not how do you. and i respect that. :)
i'm glad we're friends.
(and commenting on something of yours like this reminds me of the beginning of our friendship when i was still in ecuador and we would write long messages through myspace, and i wanted to be cool so bad, and so did you, and we were pretty miserable, hahaha)