A message about real art. What is real art? The impact of music on humans

20.06.2020

What is real art? I believe that real art is something created by a person, something that inspires us, makes us enjoy life and look at the world differently. To prove my thoughts, I propose to turn to the text of M. Moskvina.

This passage tells about how one boy, along with his dog named Keith, "created" jazz. The boy actually realized that "jazz is not music, but a state of mind." For a little boy, the most important thing was not money and popularity, but precisely the state that he felt while creating this music. For him, it was a real art.

As a second argument that could confirm my conjectures, I want to cite Astafiev's work "Tchaikovsky's Melody" as an example. This story tells about how one guy sat for a long time on the phone during wartime, he was so bad that he even wanted, roughly speaking, to commit suicide.

Well, after some time, a friend called him, who, having learned about the bad mood of his friend, decided to exclude him a beautiful melody. This melody gave strength to the guy, inspired him and drove away bad thoughts. As it turned out later, this melody was from Tchaikovsky's collection. It was she who saved the life of a young guy.

Thus, real art is art that looks like a mighty force that can touch the deepest corners of the human soul.

Updated: 2017-07-01

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1. The heroine of A. Kuprin's story "Garnet Bracelet" Vera Nikolaevna, having heard Beethoven's Second Sonata, experiences the awakening of a new spiritual mood, she understands that a great love has passed her by, which is repeated only once in a thousand years. The sonata is consonant with the mood of the heroine, through music her soul connects with the soul of the deceased Zheltkov.

2. The last scene of K. Paustovsky's story "The Old Chef" shows how omnipotent real art is. The music played by the stranger on the harpsichord had a magical effect on all listeners: the musician was pale, the dog got out of his booth and quietly shook his ears, and the blind old man suddenly saw a young, laughing Martha. He remembered that winter day in the mountains when they first met. K. Paustovsky managed to convey the feelings of a dying person who no longer expects anything from life, who unexpectedly came into contact with beautiful music and his past.

3. The main character of A.P. Chekhov's work "Rothschild's Violin" - Yakov Matveyevich - the melody he found, amazing in beauty, touching and sad, makes him make philosophical generalizations of a humane nature: if there were no hatred and anger between people, the world would become beautiful, no one would interfere with each other. For the first time, he was ashamed of hurting others.

4. The great composer, the hero of K. Paustovsky's story "Basket with fir cones", presented his music to the forester's daughter. When Dagny heard it, she discovered a new, amazingly bright, colorful, inspiring world. Feelings and emotions that were previously unfamiliar to her stirred up her whole soul and opened her eyes to still unknown beauty. This music showed Dagny not only the greatness of the surrounding world, but also the value of human life, because by that time the composer was no longer alive.

5. The hero of the book by V. Korolenko "The Blind Musician" - the boy Petrus - was born blind. But thanks to art, namely music, he not only did not drown in his grief, but also found his place in life, becoming a famous musician.

6. The hero of A. Kuprin's story "Taper" - a thin and poorly dressed thirteen-year-old boy - accidentally ended up in a noble family as a musician. It was difficult to imagine musical abilities in this modest guest, but when he began to play, it became clear to everyone that in front of them was a talented musician. Among the guests, by a lucky chance, was the famous pianist Anton Grigorievich Rubinshtein. He noticed the boy's talent and subsequently became his mentor.

7. The protagonist of L. Tolstoy's story "Albert" is a brilliant musician. He charmingly plays the violin, and it seems to the listeners that they are again reliving forever lost, that their souls are warmed.

8. The hero of Ray Bradbury's story "Smile" boy Tom during another "cultural revolution", risking his life, takes away and hides the canvas, which depicts the Mona Lisa. He wants to keep it in order to return it to people later: Tom believes that real art can ennoble even a wild crowd.

9. George Clooney's Treasure Hunters is about an organization known as the Monuments, Art and Archives Rescue Unit. The employees of this organization, created in 1943 by US President Franklin Roosevelt, returned to their rightful owners and museums a lot of cultural property stolen by the Nazis. The salvaged works of art have not lost their value over the centuries.

10. Actress Vera Alentova recalls such a case. One day she received a letter from an unknown woman who said that when she was left alone, she did not want to live. But, after watching the film “Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears”, she became a different person: “You won’t believe it, I suddenly saw that people are smiling and they are not so bad as it seemed to me all these years. And the grass, it turns out, is green, and the sun is shining ... I have recovered, for which I thank you very much.

11. Russian nature inspired not only composers, but also many poets, one of which is Sergei Yesenin. Not a single poem by the master of the word is complete without pictures of nature: she shares joy and sorrow with the poet, warns, inspires hope in him, cries over his unfulfilled dreams. Nature is not only the "cradle" and poetic school of S. Yesenin, it is the soul of Yesenin's poems, the source that nourishes the poet's lyrical feelings.

12. An amazing woman, artist Evfrosinya Antonovna Kersnovskaya spent 12 years in a Stalinist camp. After leaving it, she began to sketch this period of her life in order to free herself from those difficult memories. As many as twelve common notebooks were painted by her in the 60s of the last century. In 1991, they came out as a separate book called "Rock Painting". Looking at these drawings that were born so long ago, somewhere deep inside you feel how much art helped this amazing artist and just a noble woman to survive.

13. The artist Boris Sveshnikov was also imprisoned for a long time. His albums were drawn in captivity, but they were not about the camp, not about the life he lived then - they were fantastic. He depicted some fictional reality and extraordinary cities. With a thin feather, he created a parallel, mysterious life in his albums. And later these albums became evidence that his inner world, fantasy, creativity saved his life in this camp. He survived thanks to real art.

14. Another extraordinary artist, Mikhail Sokolov, being imprisoned for his extravagant appearance, also tried to seek freedom and salvation in his work. He drew little pictures with colored pencils, and sometimes with pencil stubs, and hid them under his pillow. And these small fantastic drawings by Sokolov are in a sense grander than some of the huge paintings painted by another artist in a bright and comfortable studio. You can portray reality, or you can depict fantasy. In both cases, what you transfer from your head, from your soul, from your heart, from memory to paper, frees you, sets you free, even if there are prison bars around you.

15. Many front-line soldiers talk about the fact that soldiers exchanged smoke and bread for clippings from a front-line newspaper, where chapters from A. Tvardovsky's poem "Vasily Terkin" were published. This means that an encouraging word was sometimes more important for the fighters than food. This is the power of literature as an art form.

16. When the Nazis laid siege to Leningrad, the 7th symphony of Dmitry Shostakovich had a huge impact on the inhabitants of the city. She, as eyewitnesses testify, gave people new strength to fight the enemy.

17. In the history of literature, a lot of evidence has been preserved related to the stage history of D. Fonvizin's comedy "Undergrowth". They say that many noble children, recognizing themselves in the image of the loafer Mitrofanushka, experienced a complete rebirth: they began to study diligently, read a lot and grew up as worthy sons of their homeland.

18. People believed in the truly magical power of art. So, some cultural figures offered the French during the First World War to defend Verdun - their strongest fortress - not with forts and cannons, but with the treasures of the Louvre. "Put the Gioconda or the Madonna and Child with Saint Anna by the great Leonardo da Vinci in front of the besiegers - and the Germans will not dare to shoot!" they claimed.

19. One day, the American inventor Nikola Tesla fell seriously ill. His life was in danger. Recovery, according to Tesla's own story, came quite unexpectedly: during his illness, he began to read "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" by Mark Twain. The cheerful book aroused in him such a desire to live that by an effort of will he forced himself to overcome the disease and soon, to the surprise of the doctors who treated him, he recovered.

20. Hearing the legendary Alexandrov choir, which with its songs aroused courage in people, gave them strength to fight, the English Prime Minister W. Churchill called the musical group "a secret singing weapon."

21. The outstanding Russian writer of the 20th century M. Prishvin in his diaries recalls such a case: in the mournful days of the First World War, people gathered in front of his house and the orator began to tell people that Russia would soon turn into a German colony. Then one poor peasant woman in a white headscarf made her way to the speaker through the crowd and stopped his speech, turning to the people: "Do not believe him, comrades! As long as Leo Tolstoy, Pushkin and Dostoevsky are with us, Russia will not perish!"

22. The Musical Theater named after K. S. Stanislavsky and Vl. I. Nemirovich-Danchenko. At the request of a group of artists from the Bolshoi Theater who remained in Moscow, a branch of the Bolshoi Theater was opened. With bated breath, forgetting about the war for a while, the auditorium plunged into the wonderful world of music by Tchaikovsky, A. S. Dargomyzhsky, G. Verdi, G. Puccini.

23. The legendary ataman Yermak conquered Siberia in the company of songwriters with a set of folk instruments, which were specially ordered by him to raise the morale of his Cossacks ... Peter I, understanding the importance of military songs as a moral factor and the fighting spirit of the troops, issued an order in 1722 for each regiment to have their own orchestra ... Suvorov's miraculous heroes went to storm Ishmael to the Cossack song "The nights are dark, the clouds are menacing ...".

24. There are cases when military songs saved hundreds of soldiers' lives. So, in 1904, during the battle with the Japanese near Mukden, the musicians of the Moksha Infantry Regiment launched an attack, demoralized by huge losses and the death of the regiment commander, soldiers who broke through the encirclement. The first to go into battle with wind instruments was the 25-year-old regimental bandmaster Ilya Shatrov (the future author of the composition "The Mokshan Regiment on the Hills of Manchuria", which was later remade into the legendary waltz "On the Hills of Manchuria"), in the company of seven musicians - flutists and trumpeters.

25. During the Great Patriotic War, the song was the most widespread genre of Soviet music. The war time in all its fullness and strength showed its mobility, close proximity to the daily life of society. The song becomes the spiritual weapon of the front and rear. She calls to battle, inspires with the memory of peaceful days and inspires confidence in victory in human hearts.

Text 9.3

What is real art?

What is real art? These are not pitiful, meaningless songs composed in the name of glory, not paintings that can be used to hang a hole in the wallpaper, and not poems where the rhyme can still be seen, but the meaning is not. By real art we will refer those works in which the author has invested himself and which excite the souls and minds of people.

One of the arts is music. However, not all musical works we call real art. The main distinguishing feature of authenticity is the positive impact of a work of art on the human soul. For evidence, we turn to the proposed text of Marina Lvovna Moskvina and life experience.

First, sentences 1-6 talk about how much music, namely jazz, means to the boy and his dog. They love to perform musical compositions with a guitar duet, and the main thing is what feelings they experience. After all, art lies in the ability to give emotions to people. And the boy's uncle was right: jazz is not music, jazz is a state of mind. (38)

Secondly, music can change a person, life and the world as a whole, but only if it is real. Personally, the work of contemporary musician Lady Gaga greatly influences me and my worldview. For example, in the work "Born this way" she says that we are all unique, that there is no extra person on the planet. In the composition “Marry the night”, the singer talks about the pain that she had to feel because of her, as it seemed to her, unrealized creativity, and this pain is easy to feel together with the performer, listening to her song.

Having considered two arguments, we were convinced that art can be real only when people perceive musical compositions with their heart and soul.

(1) For me, music is everything. (2) I love jazz like Uncle Zhenya. (3) What did Uncle Zhenya do at a concert in the House of Culture! (4) He whistled, shouted, applauded! (5) And the musician kept blowing recklessly into his saxophone! ..

Essay-reasoning at the OGE (According to the text 9.4.)

Real art, in my opinion, is the depiction of reality in artistic images. These are those works of painting, literature, architecture, which reflect the inner world of man. Real art is not created for the sake of fame and money, it's just a way to express your thoughts and feelings. I will give examples to support what has been said.

T. Tolstoy's text raises the problem of choosing between two types of art. The heroine from childhood tried to fall in love with the theater, as she was "told". She understood that the theater was a temple, but not for her. She, like most people, enjoyed the cinema, because everything is perfect on the screen, and the theater does not hide imperfections. The author wanted to express her opinion about contemporary art: "The theater is for adults, cinema is for children."



Since I did not manage to visit the audience in the theater, I prefer cinema. A lot of both old and modern films have influenced my worldview, my life. Another advantage of cinema is that you can watch it at any time. One such film that made a deep impression on me is The Green Mile. This is a film about humanity, it makes you think a lot. At the heart of this work is love for the world and all living things. The film really teaches to see the soul of a person, not to judge people by external impressions, superficially.

Thus, I proved that, whatever art, it should bring people pleasure, morally educate. Real art plays an important role in the life of every person, because it introduces us to everything beautiful.

Kozhanova Polina, student of S.N. Mishchenko

Block 9 REAL ART

15.3 How do you understand the meaning of the phraseREAL ART ? Formulate and comment on your definition. Write an essay-reasoning on the topic"What is true art?"

Text 9.1

(1) Dinka looked around. (2) Nearby, the hut, cozy whitening in greenery, turned out to be old, grown into the ground, flaky with rain and wind. (3) On one side, the hut stood on the edge of a cliff, and a crooked path, running down, led to an abandoned well.

(4) Yakov was sitting at the open window on a low bench in front of a table cut with a shoe knife and, bending down, stitched his boots. (5) Ioska, waving his arms, was telling something cheerfully to his father, a sly dimple jumped on his cheek. (6) Father and son were sitting in a single, but very spacious room with a huge Russian stove.

(7) Carefully entering the hallway and looking into the room, Dinka stopped in surprise. (8) Right in front of her, in the wall between two windows, where there was a shoe table and it was lighter, there was a portrait of a young woman with a stern smile, in a city dress, with a black lace scarf. (9) She was depicted in full growth and as if in a hurry somewhere, throwing on her light scarf.

(10) But most of all Dinka was struck by her eyes. (11) Huge, full of some kind of internal anxiety, pleading and demanding. (12) Stopping on the threshold, Dinka could not take her eyes off this portrait. (13) It seemed that she had already seen these eyes, a smile and a dimple on her cheek somewhere.

(14) Having forgotten, she silently looked from the portrait of her mother to her son ...

(15) Ioska fell silent and looked warily at the uninvited guest. (16) Yakov also raised his eyes, and an expression of concentrated severity already familiar to Dinka appeared on his face.

(17) Hello, young lady! he said, rising towards her.

(18) Hello, Yakov Ilyich! - Dinka whispered, bowing low.

(19) The portrait of Katri, her lively, burning eyes, the silent double of the portrait, Ioska, and the unfortunate violinist himself, who retired here after the death of his wife - all this terrified her. (20) Her legs seemed to be rooted to the threshold, and, not knowing what to do, she pitifully asked:

(21) Play, Yakov Ilyich.

(22) Ioska readily handed the violin to his father. (23) Yakov nodded to his son and, turning to the portrait, raised the bow, touched the strings ...

(24) As soon as the sounds of the violin poured out, Dinky's fear passed. (25) While playing, Jacob looked at the portrait and, moving his eyebrows to the beat of the music, smiled. (26) And Katya answered him with a gentle, stern smile. (27) And Ioska was sitting on a shoe stool and, folding his hands on his knees, looked first at his father, then at his mother. (According to V.A. Oseeva)*

* Oseeva-Khmeleva Valentina Alexandrovna (1902-1969) - children's writer. Her most famous works were the stories "Dinka", "Dinka Says Goodbye to Childhood".

15.1 Write an essay-reasoning, revealing the meaning of the statement of the famous modern linguist N.S. Valgina, who believes that punctuation marks“help the writer make very subtle semantic highlights, focus on important details, show their significance”.

Commentary on the quote. One of the functions of punctuation marks is the selection function. The distinguishing characters are paired commas, dashes, brackets and quotation marks. With their help, the writer shows the reader the importance of isolated and clarifying members of the sentence, introductory words, appeals and interjections.

15.2 Write an essay-reasoning. Explain how you understand the meaning of the final text:"As soon as the sounds of the violin poured out, Dinky's fear passed" .

Text 9.2

(1) At dawn, Lenka and I drank tea and went to the mshary to look for capercaillie. (2) It was boring to go.

(3) Would you, Lenya, tell something more fun.

(4) What to tell? Lenka answered. - (5) Is it about the old women in our village. (6) These old women are the daughters of the famous artist Pozhalostin. (7) He was an academician, but he came out of our shepherds, from snotty ones. (8) His engravings hang in museums in Paris, London and here in Ryazan. (9) I suppose you saw?

(10) I remembered the beautiful, slightly yellowed from time to time engravings on the walls of my room in the house of two troublesome old women. (11) I also remembered the first, very strange feeling from the engravings. (12) Those were portraits of old-fashioned people, and I could not get rid of their views. (13) A crowd of ladies and men in tightly buttoned frock coats, a crowd of the seventies of the nineteenth century, looked at me from the walls with deep attention.

(14) Somehow the blacksmith Yegor comes to the village council, - Lenya continued. - (15) There is nothing, he says, to repair what is required, so let's shoot the bells.

(16) Fedosya, a woman from P, intervenes hereý coldness: (17) "At the Pozhalostins
in the old woman's house they walk on copper boards. (18) Something is scrawled on those boards - I don’t understand. (19) These boards will come in handy.

(20) I came to the Pozhalostins, said what was the matter, and asked to show these boards. (21) The old woman takes out boards wrapped in a clean towel. (22) I looked and froze. (23) Mother is honest, what a delicate work, what a solid carving! (24) Especially the portrait of Pugachev - you can’t look for a long time: it seems you are talking to him yourself. (25) “Give me the boards for storage, otherwise they will melt them into nails,” I tell her.

(26) 3 she cried and said: (27) “What are you! (28) This is a national value, I will not give them away for anything.

(29) In general, we saved these boards - sent them to Ryazan, to the museum.

(30) Then they called a meeting to judge me for hiding the boards. (31) I went out and said: (32) “Not you, but your children will understand the value of these engravings, but someone else’s work must be respected. (33) A man came out of the shepherds, studied for decades on black bread and water, so much work was invested in each board, sleepless nights, human torment, talent ... "

(34) Talent! – repeated Lenya louder. - (35) You need to understand this! (36) It is necessary to cherish and appreciate! (37) Is it true? (According to K.G. Paustovsky)*

* Paustovsky Konstantin Georgievich (1892-1968) - Russian Soviet writer and publicist, master of lyrical and romantic prose, author of works about nature, historical stories, artistic memoirs.

Text 9.3

(1) For me, music is everything. (2) I love jazz like Uncle Zhenya. (3) What did Uncle Zhenya do at a concert in the House of Culture! (4) He whistled, shouted, applauded! (5) And the musician kept blowing recklessly into his saxophone! ..

(6) Everything is about me, in this music. (7) That is, about me and about my dog. (8) I have a dachshund, the name is Keith ...

(9) Can you imagine? Uncle Zhenya said. - (10) He composes this music right on the go.

(11) That's for me. (12) The most interesting thing is when you play and don't know what will happen next. (13) Keith and I too: I strum the guitar and sing, he barks and howls. (14) Of course, without words - why do we need words with Keith?

(15) Andryukha, it's decided! cried Uncle Zhenya. - (16) Learn jazz! (17) 3here, in the House of Culture, there is such a studio.

(18) Jazz, of course, is great, but here's the catch: I can't sing alone. (19) Only with Keith. (20) For Keith, singing is everything, so I took him with me to the audition.

(21) Keith, having eaten boiled sausage from the refrigerator, walked in a wonderful mood. (22) How many songs raged in us with him, how many hopes!

(23) But my joy disappeared when it turned out that it was impossible to enter the House of Culture with dogs.

(24) I entered the audition room without Keith, took the guitar, but could not start, even if you crack! ..

(25) You are not suitable, they told me. - (26) There is no rumor. (27) Keith almost died of joy when I went out.

(28) "Well?!! (29) Jazz? (30) Yes?!” - he said with all his appearance, and his tail beat the rhythm along the sidewalk. (31) At home, I called Uncle Zhenya.

(32) I have no hearing, I say. - (33) I don't fit.

(34) Rumor is nothing, said Uncle Zhenya with contempt. - (35) Just think, you can’t repeat someone else’s melody. (36) You sing like no one has ever sung before you. (37) This is jazz! (38) Jazz is not music; jazz is a state of mind.

(39) Putting down the phone, I made a croaking sound from the guitar. (40) Whale howled. (41) Against this background, I depicted the ticking of the clock and the cries of seagulls, and Keith - the whistle of a locomotive and the whistle of a steamer. (42) He knew how to raise my weakened spirit. (43) And I remembered how terrible it was when Kit and I chose each other at the Bird Market ...

(44) And the song went ... (According to M.L. Moskvina) *

* Moskvina Marina Lvovna (born in 1954) is a modern writer, journalist, radio host. For the book "My dog ​​loves jazz" was awarded the International Diploma G.-H. Andersen.

Text 9.4

(1) As a child, I tried very, very hard to love the theater, as I was told: after all, this is Great Art, the Temple. (2) And I, as expected, should feel awe, but at the same time remember that there are theatrical conventions in the theater. (3) I remembered, but when an elderly uncle in a camisole with puffy sleeves, with a large velvet belly swaying over thin legs, menacingly, like a class teacher, asked: “Tell me, Laura, what year are you?” - and the overweight aunt barked in response: "Eighteen years old!" - terrible confusion and shame crushed me, and all my efforts to love the theater were finally crossed out.

(4) Meanwhile, it was warm in the theater, the hall smelled pleasant and complex, smart people walked in the lobby, the windows were wrapped in parachute silk curtains, like cumulus clouds. (5) Yes, the temple. (6) Probably. (7) But this is not my temple, and the gods in it are not mine.

(8) But it’s a completely different matter - the Ars cinema, an inferior shed on the square. (9) There are uncomfortable wooden seats, they sit there in coats, there is garbage on the floor. (10) There you will not meet “inveterate theater-goers”, dressed-up ladies, offended in advance by the fact that they, decent people, are forced to spend three hours in the company of ignorant profane people. (11) There the crowd tumbles in and sits down, rattling their seats and spreading the sour smell of damp coats. (12) Now they will begin. (13) This is happiness. (14) This is a movie.

(15) Slowly extinguish the light. (16) The chirping of the projector, the impact of the beam - and that's it, it started. (17) The line has been crossed, this elusive moment has passed, when the flat and dull screen dissolved, disappeared, became space, the world, flight. (18) Dream, mirage, dream. (19) Transformation.

(20) Yes, I am certainly a simple and primitive moviegoer, like most people. (21) It is precisely from the cinema that I expect a complete transformation, a final deception - "so as not to think why, so as not to remember when." (22) The theater is not capable of this, and does not pretend to be.

(23) A theater for those who love live actors and graciously forgives them for their imperfections in exchange for art. (24) Cinema for those who love dreams and miracles. (25) The theater does not hide that everything you see is a pretense. (26) Cinema pretends that everything you see is true. (27) Theater - for adults; cinema is for children. (According to T. Tolstoy)*

* Tolsta I Tatyana Nikitichna (born in 1951) - a modern writer, TV presenter, philologist.

What do we mean by real art? These are amazing masterpieces created by talented craftsmen: artists, musicians. Things that inspire, delight, surprise, make you feel and empathize, cause a storm of emotions, make you think.

Music is one of the art forms that evokes the strongest emotions and feelings. But not all music is able to influence perception and evoke positive feelings.

Let's try to refer to the text of M.L. Moskvina and, for example, from her own life, in order to prove the correctness, they thought about the great power of real art.

At the very beginning, in sentences 1 to 6, the author describes the influence of jazz music on Uncle Zheka, who, listening to the performances of jazzmen, "whistled, shouted and applauded." The man experienced an incredible upsurge of emotions, complete delight. The boy experiences the same feelings, strumming the guitar and singing unpretentious songs. Influenced by music and dachshund Kit. “Jazz is not music; jazz is a state of mind,” says the boy’s uncle in sentence 38. And he is certainly right.

Music, and not only music, but also a talentedly written book, a picture can turn the usual course of life, make you take a fresh look at familiar things. I was so impressed by the visit to the Opera and Ballet Theatre. I watched the ballet "Swan Lake". The performance is amazing. I really liked the main characters, the grace and ease with which they performed their parts. Everything was clear: timid love, hopes, tenderness and softness, all this was clearly read in the dance of Erika and Sergey. And the music simply fascinated and called for itself, prompting to something bright. I wanted to cry, just like that, about nothing... These emotions remain with me to this day.

Thus, based on two arguments, we can conclude that art will only be real when it penetrates deep into the soul, touches the heart, and causes a storm of different feelings.

Teacher's comment:

When starting to write an essay-reasoning 15.3 from the OGE in Russian, first carefully read the proposed text. It is better to start with the formulation of the answer to the main question of the essay. And then justify your answer. Do not get carried away with a detailed retelling of the work. It's good if you use one or two quotes to back up your answer. It is very good to use personal experience to substantiate the answer. If there is none, remember some important moments in your life when you experienced positive emotions and draw a parallel with art. At the end of the essay-reasoning, draw a general conclusion.

*Source text for analysis:

(1) For me, music is everything. (2) I love jazz like Uncle Zhenya. (3) What did Uncle Zhenya do at a concert in the House of Culture! (4) He whistled, shouted, applauded! (5) And the musician kept blowing recklessly into his saxophone! ..

(6) Everything is about me, in this music. (7) That is, about me and about my dog. (8) I have a dachshund, the name is Keith ...

- (9) Can you imagine? Uncle Zhenya said. - (10) He composes this music right on the go.

(11) That's for me. (12) The most interesting thing is when you play and don't know what will happen next. (13) Keith and I too: I strum the guitar and sing, he barks and howls. (14) Of course, without words - why do we need words with Keith?

- (15) Andryukha, it's decided! cried Uncle Zhenya. - (16) Learn jazz! (17) 3here, in the House of Culture, there is such a studio.

(18) Jazz, of course, is great, but here's the catch: I can't sing alone. (19) Only with Keith. (20) For Keith, singing is everything, so I took him with me to the audition.

(21) Keith, having eaten boiled sausage from the refrigerator, walked in a wonderful mood. (22) How many songs raged in us with him, how many hopes!

(23) But my joy disappeared when it turned out that it was impossible to enter the House of Culture with dogs.

(24) I entered the audition room without Keith, took the guitar, but could not start, even if you crack! ..

- (25) You are not suitable, - they told me. - (26) There is no rumor. (27) Keith almost died of joy when I went out.

(28) "Well?!! (29) Jazz? (30) Yes?!” - he said with all his appearance, and his tail beat the rhythm along the sidewalk. (31) At home, I called Uncle Zhenya.

- (32) I have no hearing, - I say. - (33) I don't fit.

- (34) Rumor is nothing, - said Uncle Zhenya with contempt. - (35) Just think, you can’t repeat someone else’s melody. (36) You sing like no one has ever sung before you. (37) This is jazz! (38) Jazz is not music; jazz is a state of mind.

(39) Putting down the phone, I made a croaking sound from the guitar. (40) Whale howled. (41) Against this background, I depicted the ticking of the clock and the cries of seagulls, and Keith - the whistle of a locomotive and the whistle of a steamer. (42) He knew how to raise my weakened spirit. (43) And I remembered how terrible it was when Kit and I chose each other at the Bird Market ...

(44) And the song went ...

Moskvina Marina Lvovna (born in 1954) is a modern writer, journalist, radio host. For the book "My dog ​​loves jazz" was awarded the International Diploma G.-H. Andersen.(from FIPI Open Bank)

The material was prepared by Dovgomelya Larisa Gennadievna



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