hi

first off - welcome back vince - i tried sending you some mails asking you to 
reconsider, but couldnt get them to you (we've had major e-mail problems lately)


& then ive attached a message i got from someone else on the mishelle shocked list:


And this is from my sister  it touched me.....

 If this doesn't count as some form of music therapy, I don't know what does. -Dawn 
From William in New York ( 18 year old Juilliard student from Sarasota)

 Playing for the Fighting 69th Monday, Sept. 17 Yesterday I had probably the most 
incredible and moving experience of my life. Juilliard organized a quartet to go play 
at the Armory. The Armory is a huge military building where families of people missing 
from Tuesday's disaster go to wait for news of their loved ones. Entering the building 
was very difficult emotionally, because the entire building (the size of a city block) 
was covered with missing posters. Thousands of posters, spread out up to eight feet 
above the ground, each featuring a different, smiling, face.

 I made my way into the huge central room and found my Juilliard buddies. For two 
hours we sightread quartets (with only three people!), and I don't think I will soon 
forget the grief counselor from the Connecticut State Police who listened the entire 
time, or the woman who listened only to "Memory" from Cats, crying the whole time. At 
7, the other two players had to leave; they had been playing at the Armory since 1 and 
simply couldn't play any more.

 I volunteered to stay and play solo, since I had just got there. I soon realized that 
the evening had just begun for me: a man in fatigues who introduced himself as 
Sergeant Major asked me if I'd mind playing for his soldiers as they came back from 
digging through the rubble at Ground Zero.

 Masseuses had volunteered to give his men massages, he said, and he didn't think 
anything would be more soothing than getting a massage and listening to violin music 
at the same time. So at 9:00 p.m., I headed up to the second floor as the first men 
were arriving. From then until 11:30, I played everything I could do for memory: Bach 
B Minor Partita, Tchaik. Concerto, Dvorak Concerto, Paganini Caprices 1 and 17, 
Vivaldi Winter and Spring, Theme from Schindler's List, Tchaik. Melodie, Meditation 
from Thais, Amazing Grace, My Country 'Tis of Thee, Turkey in the Straw, Bile Them 
Cabbages Down. 
Never have I played for a more grateful audience. Somehow it didn't matter that by the 
end, my intonation was shot and I had no bow control. I would have lost any 
competition I was playing in, but it didn't matter.

 The men would come up the stairs in full gear, remove their helmets, look at me, and 
smile. At 11:20, I was introduced to Col. Slack, head of the division.

 After thanking me, he said to his friends, "Boy, today was the toughest day yet. I 
made the mistake of going back into the pit, and I'll never do that again." Eager to 
hear a first-hand account, I asked, "What did you see?" He stopped, swallowed hard, 
and said, "What you'd expect to see." The Colonel stood there as I played a lengthy 
rendition of Amazing Grace which he claimed was the best he'd ever heard. By this time 
it was 11:30, and I didn't think I could play anymore. I asked Sergeant Major if it 
would be appropriate if I played the National Anthem. He shouted above the chaos of 
the milling soldiers to call them to attention, and I played the National Anthem as 
the 300 men of the 69th Division 
saluted an invisible flag. After shaking a few hands and packing up, I was prepared to 
leave when one of the privates accosted me and told me the Colonel wanted to see me 
again. He took me down to the War Room, but we couldn't find the Colonel, so he gave 
me a tour of the War Room. It turns !out that the division I played for is the Famous 
Fighting Sixty-Ninth, the most decorated division in the U.S. Army.

 He pointed out a letter from Abraham Lincoln offering his condolences after the 
Battle of Antietam...the 69th suffered the most casualties of any division at that 
historic battle. Finally, we located the Colonel. After thanking me again, he 
presented me with the coin of the regiment. "We only give these to someone who's done 
something special for the 69th," he informed me. He called over the division's 
historian to tell me the significance of all the symbols on the coin.

 As I rode the taxi back to Juilliard...free, of course, since taxi service is free in 
New York right now...I was numb. Not only was this evening the proudest I've ever felt 
to be an American, it was my most meaningful as a musician and a person as well. At 
Juilliard, kids are hypercritical of each other and very competitive. The teachers 
expect, and in most cases get, technical perfection. But this wasn't about that. The 
soldiers didn't care that I had so many memory slips I lost count. They didn't care 
that when I forgot how the second movement of the Tchaik. went, I had to come up with 
my own insipid improvisation until I somehow (and I still don't know how) got to a 
cadence. I've never seen a more 
appreciative audience, and I've never understood so fully what it means to communicate 
music to other people. And how did it change me as a person?

 Let's just say that, next time I want to get into a petty argument about whether 
Richter or Horowitz was better, I'll remember that when I asked the Colonel to 
describe the pit formed by the tumbling of the Towers, he couldn't. Words only go so 
far, and even music can only go a little further from there.

 Your friend, William

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