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Shane Ward
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Member Since: Feb, 2003

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Books
• Stop Smoking: Diary of a Quitter

• Numerology:Making it Work for You

• Walking the Path

• The Philosophy of the Tarot for the 21st Century

• Numerology. Making it Work for You

• The Philosophy of the Tarot for the 21st Century


Short Stories
• The File

• Garry Quitter and the Philosophers Drone

• Publish and be Damned (Chapter 33 of Walking the Path)

• Phantoms and Ghosts (Chapter 24 of Walking the Path)

• Magic and Mayhem (Chapter 20 of Walking the Path)

• The Devil. From The Philosophy of the Tarot

• The Grunt National (From A-Z of Farts)

• Towers and Terrors (Chapter 10 of Walking the Path)

• Altars and Altercations (Chapter 6 of Walking the Path)

• Shattered Bones and Egos (Chapter 5 of Walking the Path)


Articles
• The Barbault Warnings

• Credit Crunch 2009: The Eventual Outcome of Capitalism.

• The Barbault Scale

• Neptune Ingress into Pisces 2012

• Dyslexia: The Wrong Impression

• Pluto Ingress into Capricorn

• The Owl and The Pussycat: a Conspiracy Theory

• Pretty Girl: From Pop Song to Symphony

• Mundane Astrology: a Jupiter / Uranus Cycle

• Stop the Drug Market: Letter to the European Commission


Poetry
• Parrots of the Caribbean

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Recent stories by Shane Ward
Phantoms and Ghosts (Chapter 24 of Walking the Path)
Magic and Mayhem (Chapter 20 of Walking the Path)
Towers and Terrors (Chapter 10 of Walking the Path)
Altars and Altercations (Chapter 6 of Walking the Path)
Shattered Bones and Egos (Chapter 5 of Walking the Path)
If I Were a Rich Man (Chapter 4 of Walking the Path)
Nightmares and Nomenclatures (Chapter 3 of Walking the Path)
Brithday Boys Don't Cry. Chapter 2 of Walking the Path
Boiled Bacon and Peas Pudding Chapter 1 of Walking the Path
Publish and be Damned (Chapter 33 of Walking the Path)
The File
Garry Quitter and the Philosophers Drone
The Devil. From The Philosophy of the Tarot
The Grunt National (From A-Z of Farts)
           >> View all 16
When music was mightier than the pen
By Shane Ward
Last edited: Saturday, February 16, 2008
Posted: Sunday, December 12, 2004
This short story is rated "G" by the Author.

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Sometimes the language of music is better than a thousand words.



When music was mightier than the pen

The hollow pit in my stomach convinced me that somehow I was grieving over my father's death. There were no words to describe the lack of feeling or emotion that I felt. Not a single tear welled up in my eyes. There was no lump in the throat or even a small inclination of sudden loss. All I could translate from the hidden depths of my repressed emotions was a sense of emptiness.

I knew my father had been terminally ill. We had expected, perhaps, a sudden decline in his health followed by a period of incapacity before he died. It did not happen this way. It was sudden and unexpected.

In the weeks that followed I could not understand why I could not bring my emotions out into the open. Somewhere, I knew, buried deep within myself there was a part of me that screamed to get out. There was anger and loss so deep within that it was as if it were trapped in a cavern several miles underground.

A thousand words could not describe the feeling, the loss or the battle that I had raging within me to release the inner torment. Nothing that I could say, or feel, expressed adequately the need that I felt to find an outlet for my emotions. Nothing, that is, except music.

My father had been a musician all his life. He could not read a note but in his head he knew over a thousand songs. At the age of 14 he played the accordion in public houses and only stopped when his fingers became too arthritic to move. As I was born into a musical family it seemed inevitable that I too became a musician.

I was classically trained on the violin and the piano but what is more I learned how to write music. I composed my first piece of music at the age of 14. Creating music was a passion but it was slow going with a pencil and manuscript. My efforts were limited to what I could play rather than what I dearly wished to compose. And then the age of the computer arrived. Before me I discovered new possibilities and ultimately the opportunity to compose the kind of music that I really wanted to write.

I was ambitious and loaded with potential. When my father could not express his feelings he turned to music. I suppose I followed his footsteps in this manner and I could do no less. I sat in front of my computer and started to compose my first full orchestral symphony.

Where mere words failed to express how I felt, I took my rage and my sense of loss and channelled it into the very heart of my symphony. With each note I purged myself, so it felt, to the very depths of my being. Where words would not come, where my feelings would not show, the music flowed until finally 'The Magic Symphony' was born.

I hope you enjoy the music that accompanies this short story. Also you will find the whole of my autobiography here on Authors Den. Please go to my book section and click on "Walking the Path". The entire book is contained within the "Download free preview" button.
 
 
 
 
 

Web Site: Shane Ward  

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Reviewed by Jack Kuperman 1/28/2009
It's fantastic music. After some 14 years of studying classics on Piano, i believe I can that. It's really speaking your heart.
I'm sorry that i write just now, but it's for the first time i heard your symphony.

Hope you will continue to write (both ways you know so good)
Reviewed by Judy Lloyd (Reader) 12/12/2004
Although I was born in the country classical music was always my favorite and the violin speaks so clearly. You have your father's music as a comfort when times are rough.
Reviewed by Sherry Heim 12/12/2004
This is nothing short of magnificient, Shane. I love classical music and yours is spectacular. This story tore at my heart as I could feel your need to expell your grief. There is a part in this piece where it sounded as though there was the breathing of an accordian somewhere in the background. Thank you for this wonderful page.
Take care,
Sherry



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