Excerpt from Musical Creation: A Lecture
Among these various aids, of course, the piano is the most natural, the one most frequently required. Many composers use it not only to check on their harmonies but also as a source of inspiration. We are told that Wagner, deprived of a piano, for one month during his first stay in Paris, was radically stopped in his work: for that entire period; and when he succeeded in renting an instrument, he expressed to a friend his joy in discovering that (i quote his own words) the ability to compose was not dead. It was then, in fact, that he com pleted The Flying Dutchman.
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