Advice from Miles Davis

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monira444
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Joined: Sat Dec 28, 2024 5:53 am

Advice from Miles Davis

Post by monira444 »

What happened next with Ivan and Alina? It was like this:

The concert was taking place in the Colosseum club on Pushkin Square.
A small hall, romantic lighting. There were no more than thirty spectators. Good acoustics: the sound filled the entire room. Ivan and Alina positioned themselves so that they could see the musicians well. The black elderly guitarist was the frontman. He improvised and maintained contact with the audience.

Ivan immersed himself in the music. Alina quickly sketched portraits of the musicians with a charcoal pencil. She was pleased with the drawings: the musicians’ high-cheekboned faces and sinewy arms, the straight lines of the strings, the copper of the pipe and cigarette smoke.

The concert ended, and the musicians remained on stage bolivia mobile database to chat with the audience.

“Let’s go get acquainted, as I promised,” Ivan suggested, “and at the same time we’ll practice our English.”

Ivan and Alina approached the guitarist. Ivan thanked him for the concert and noted the subtle and graceful sound of his guitar. The elderly musician nodded, smiling with his snow-white teeth:

- Yes, I was lucky with my teachers.

- Do you know Miles Davis?

- Did I know Miles? When I was a child, my father took me to the Minton Club, in our Harlem area. Davis often played there. One day, my father brought me up to him and introduced me as a future jazz musician. I remember Mr. Davis shaking my hand and saying: "Be a good jazzman. Know that it's not the notes that sound, but the ones that don't sound." Miles, his music determined everything we play.

A few minutes later, Ivan and Alina were already trying a mango-lime dessert at a cafe next door.

- Who is Miles Davis? - asked Alina.
- Miles is to jazz what Van Gogh is to painting.
Perfection of simplicity
"It's not the notes that sound, but the ones that don't" - this is the golden rule for creating a perfect design, strong text, a selling page. Simplicity contains enough of the meaningful and lacks empty. A developed taste will help you understand which "notes" should not "sound". If you don't have taste yet, an outside expert will help you.

For example, if the site says: "We are an advanced, actively developing company. We have low prices, a flexible approach to each client, ..." - feel free to delete such cliches from the site, these are not the "notes", their sound does not add anything valuable to the listener. Without such rubbish, your site will only benefit. It's okay if almost nothing remains on the page after cleaning. Over time, meaningful content will appear in the empty space.
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