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Charles in San Francisco's avatar

Great column. First, you are right that men experience this too, and often channel it a little differently. But I want to offer another possibility for why we fall in love with artists or their music, and maybe this comes from growing up with classical music. I never did care whether an artist made me feel understood, or held a mirror up to my trauma (it sounds as though you and I could have a long discussion about parental weirdness!) For me, music meant the most when it opened the heavens up and let me connect with something greater than my own little world. It's ironic because I'm a confirmed atheist, but I understand why Händel, Brahms and Beethoven wrote the way they did. I sang in church choirs so I could feel that feeling.

I know that it is the fashionable thing today to say "audiences only respond to art if they see themselves in it". Even Bruce Springsteen said that, in his interview with Terry Gross. But I don't buy it. Sometimes that may be true, and for pop music it probably is true most of the time, but there are huge genres of art where it's hard to see that paradigm applying. I love "MacBeth" and Wagner's "Ring", but the day I begin to identify with those characters I should probably be locked up!

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adrienneep's avatar

Ha! This photo reminds me of the astoundingly great movie School of Rock, especially the final concert where the dowdy school principal is being ogled by the musician named Spider…he with naked chest guitar gyrations. It’s all good.

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