Student Stories
Vienna has been odd. Last night I went to McDonalds for dinner, and today I had a coffee at Starbucks. I guess our whole group, after hitting the one month mark of our trip, has been craving a little taste of the U.S., a little taste of home ... So home tastes like Chicken McNuggets, I suppose.
But Austria is delightful, minus the global chains that feature golden arches and green mermaids. Tonight I will be going to the symphony for the second time this week. It is what I like to call a spiritual experience. It is a taste of how beautiful heaven will be. The wonderful paradox of the symphony is that it is both a communal and personal experience. We paid for the standing room, six Euros, so I was in the very back with a perfect view of my fellow standers. Each person was listening so intently to the Wagner and the Strauss pieces, as if they were being told the greatest of all secrets. I felt so connected to my fellow human beings because we were all there for this one, beautiful purpose: Just to listen.
Still, I could close my eyes, and the people around me would all disappear... It was only me and the music. And my mind was free to conjure up any images I liked — from birds and spring brought on by fluttering flutes, to an epic battle between good and evil, as drums and symbols thundered and clashed away.
Reader, I will leave you with a little food for thought: "We must listen to Beethoven or we will destroy ourselves." Leonard Bernstein said this, and it does not have to be Beethoven specifically (Tonight, for me, it’s Mozart). It is any music that transcends the ordinary and points to beauty and to eternity.
Allie Fraley ’08, EQ 2007
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