by davechristiansen » Thu Nov 14, 2002 1:07 pm
punk, classical, dead shows, barbershop quartets... whatever. <P>if people are disturbed by your being "out-of-place" at a concert because of what you wore, then they're the one's whose "dedication" is in question. why should i feel unwelcome at a punk concert cause i didn't have time to spike my hair, or uncomfortable at a dead show cuz' i came from work in my three-piece-suit? how very un-punk of you. <P>these are some of the main reasons i don't go to concerts as much anymore... i don't want to be bothered with feeling like i'm interrupting someone's social event because i don't know their secret handshake. i am one of the most respectful listeners you're likely to encounter, because i _listen_, not because i do or don't dress the part.<P>this controversy is world's apart from holding doors or saying please and thank you. i've met some unbelieveably polite bums, just like i've met (more than) a few @%%holes in three-piece-suits. <P>i can understand the argument about "respect", and i like getting dressed-up occasionally too, but what is it that you're paying respect to? my doctor spent years in medical school to be able to look down my throat, but i'm sure not putting on my Sunday best to sit in his waiting room. Besides, is that really what deserves respect? someone's "training"? sounds like a caste-system to me. again, i know some record store employees that i think deserve more of my respect than the bulk of the symphony players i've met. i think Thoureau said something about being suspicious of anything that requires new clothes. <P>davec :p
dc<P>"The purpose of art is not the release of a momentary ejection of adrenaline but rather the gradual, lifelong construction of a state of wonder and serenity."<BR>-Glenn Gould