« Right Brain Workouts

Foreigners

By Peter Lloyd

The great German conductor, Michael Gielen, wrote a letter to his season subscribers that offers very helpful advice to those of us who are turned off by modern music, or for that matter, anything foreign.

As an avant-garde innovator, Gielen knew his audience would be reluctant to approach, much less appreciate, the modern music he was about to serve up that season. So in his letter he conjured up a picture of "a guard standing at the threshold of perception," who would not allow modern music to enter because it was foreign.

The Maestro pointed out that most music lovers appreciate a Beethoven symphony because the form is familiar. And because it is familiar, the guards allow the music to enter. He went on to explain that we often reject modern music because our guards don't recognize the form and immediately turn away the music.

Gielen warned, "Unless the guardian... is given the evening off... listeners might well miss the... deepest emotional experiences offered by vital parts of the musical literature."

But you don't even have to listen to music to know that the unfamiliar can always be surprisingly rewarding. If you want to be more creative or just a more interesting person, fire the guards, establish an open-door policy in your brain, welcome the foreigners, and enjoy many more idea connections.

Peter Lloyd is co-creator with Stephen Grossman of Animal Crackers, the breakthrough problem-solving tool designed to crack your toughest problems.
Next Workout »
Newsletter Sign Up

Join 40,000+ subscribers who receive our Open Innovation Newsletter every other week.

Subscribe