As always, a beautiful musical composition, Shingo. Once again I would like to know the genesis of this work, as it would allow me to feel more deeply the emotions it conveys. However, I know that I am asking too much, and that it is not possible to satisfy my wish. What emotions does this piece convey to me? The most powerful feeling that comes to me is that of "uncertainty", "unease" and "emotional grief", which is not incompatible with the title you have given to your work. But the most important thing is its beauty, whatever the emotions it conveys, which for different people and different moments, can vary. As always, very grateful to be able to enjoy these wonders that you create.
Thanks for always listening to my work, Emilio. Your deep interpretation of my work makes me very pleased and warm with your deep love for my work. Like everyone, I have many emotions, and they are not all beautiful. Sometimes I am mad, occasionally sad, and sometimes despairing about life. But when I try to represent them in the sense of art or music, they become curiously beautiful. This may be the power that inspires me to live.
@@shingomimura_official What a wonderful description you make of your life and of the role that music plays in your life. And this reaffirms the great admiration I feel for you as a person and as a musician. I have often asked myself how it is possible that something that is not joy and happiness can be beautiful. I came to the conclusion that what is important is not the situation that a person lives in, nor the feeling that it produces, but the reaction that he has to what he lives, whatever it is that he lives. I call it "the greatness of the epic," because any human being has to face numerous difficulties and has to overcome very difficult moments (a few weeks ago I revealed to you what was surely the most painful moment of my life), but in the capacity to overcome, adapt and recover joy and the capacity to create beauty, I find a greatness, an admiration and an admirable beauty. And surely your music is so wonderfully beautiful because of all those circumstances that you have had to live, and that you have described, which you have overcome. There is a book by Susan Cain that was born because she asked herself the question that you and I have asked ourselves. And she asks it in relation to music. Specifically, at one point in her life she asked herself why Leonard Cohen's sad songs are, at the same time, so beautiful. The book is called "Bittersweet. The power of melancholy in a world that shuns sadness." Although I would not say that the main emotion that emerges from your music is not melancholy, but tenderness. A wonderful tenderness, which the world is so in need of. I asked myself that question listening to sad songs, but also reading sad poems, because I recognize that in both I find the greatest beauty. I feel very grateful for the explanations you have given me, for showing me the human being behind the music I listen to. Your music. And, of course, I am very grateful for the fortune of being able to feel the greatness and beauty of life through your compositions. Thank you!!! And I'm sorry for leaving you such a long comment!!! Sorry...
Nicely woven together - and good video editing. 🥰
Thanks fot watching!
Amazing
Thanks for listening!
always bringing magic into the world!
Thank you✨🙏
As always, a beautiful musical composition, Shingo.
Once again I would like to know the genesis of this work, as it would allow me to feel more deeply the emotions it conveys. However, I know that I am asking too much, and that it is not possible to satisfy my wish.
What emotions does this piece convey to me? The most powerful feeling that comes to me is that of "uncertainty", "unease" and "emotional grief", which is not incompatible with the title you have given to your work.
But the most important thing is its beauty, whatever the emotions it conveys, which for different people and different moments, can vary.
As always, very grateful to be able to enjoy these wonders that you create.
Thanks for always listening to my work, Emilio.
Your deep interpretation of my work makes me very pleased and warm with your deep love for my work.
Like everyone, I have many emotions, and they are not all beautiful.
Sometimes I am mad, occasionally sad, and sometimes despairing about life.
But when I try to represent them in the sense of art or music, they become curiously beautiful.
This may be the power that inspires me to live.
@@shingomimura_official What a wonderful description you make of your life and of the role that music plays in your life. And this reaffirms the great admiration I feel for you as a person and as a musician.
I have often asked myself how it is possible that something that is not joy and happiness can be beautiful. I came to the conclusion that what is important is not the situation that a person lives in, nor the feeling that it produces, but the reaction that he has to what he lives, whatever it is that he lives. I call it "the greatness of the epic," because any human being has to face numerous difficulties and has to overcome very difficult moments (a few weeks ago I revealed to you what was surely the most painful moment of my life), but in the capacity to overcome, adapt and recover joy and the capacity to create beauty, I find a greatness, an admiration and an admirable beauty.
And surely your music is so wonderfully beautiful because of all those circumstances that you have had to live, and that you have described, which you have overcome.
There is a book by Susan Cain that was born because she asked herself the question that you and I have asked ourselves. And she asks it in relation to music. Specifically, at one point in her life she asked herself why Leonard Cohen's sad songs are, at the same time, so beautiful. The book is called "Bittersweet. The power of melancholy in a world that shuns sadness." Although I would not say that the main emotion that emerges from your music is not melancholy, but tenderness. A wonderful tenderness, which the world is so in need of.
I asked myself that question listening to sad songs, but also reading sad poems, because I recognize that in both I find the greatest beauty.
I feel very grateful for the explanations you have given me, for showing me the human being behind the music I listen to. Your music. And, of course, I am very grateful for the fortune of being able to feel the greatness and beauty of life through your compositions. Thank you!!!
And I'm sorry for leaving you such a long comment!!! Sorry...