Glenn Gould recorded Bachs Goldberg Variations
twice, in 1955 at the beginning of his career, and in 1981, just months before he died.
The two versions are as different as, well, day and night. Start with the length. The 1955
version (Sony Classics 38479) takes 44 minutes. The 1981 (Sony Classics 37779) version
takes 51 minutes. All the same notes are struck the same number of times but to vastly
different effect.
One is spring, the other, fall. One is yang, the other, yin. One is youth, the other, age.
Energy and rest. You get the idea.
One day I was listening to the 1981 recording and noticing
the strongly palliative effect the music had. One thought led to another, and another. . .
I found myself thinking about thinking, mucking about in the dim region of pre-history
when thought began. A mental leap and the idea came:
Could it be that the very rate of thinking has accelerated slowly and more or less
continuously over the millennia? Could it be that our first thought patterns, thousands of
years ago, were much slower (and simpler) than now? Youd expect that when we
started, our thinking would be much more attuned to the very rhythms of the body which
gave rise to thinking. As time passed, as language developed, as we became more and more
skilled in manipulating abstract symbols (words and numbers), our mental processing rate
increased steadily (Moores Law applied to humans?). And now, with computers as
extensions of these mental processes, we are sailing along at a pretty fast clip.
What, I wondered, if you made a conscious, controlled, extended effort to slow your
thinking down again? To return to a kind of thinking which was more resonant with the
rhythms of the physical world in which we still have our roots.
And that, my friends, was the origin of Saltlick.
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