![]() ![]() Playing the piano or conducting reanimates Wearing, Sacks writes, and "engages him as a creative person." His performing self is "seemingly untouched by his amnesia, even though his autobiographical self" is virtually lost. ![]() With his characteristic empathy and keen eye for details, Sacks, a neurologist whose literary tales of his patients began appearing in the '80s in the New York Review of Books, and later in the New Yorker, wonders how Wearing managed to "retain his remarkable knowledge of music, his ability to sight-read, to play the piano and organ, sing, conduct a choir, in the masterly way he did before he became ill?" His answers delve into the brain anatomy where our trivial and emotional memories reside, and reveal the transformative power of music. But living in an eternal here-and-now is not Zen bliss for Wearing, it is "a never-ending agony." ![]() ![]() "It was as if every waking moment was the first waking moment," wrote Wearing's wife, Deborah, of her husband. "In the Moment: Music and Amnesia" follows an English musician and musicologist, Clive Wearing, who in his mid-40s suffered a brain infection that wiped out his memory and entire past. One essay in his new collection, "Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain," presents Oliver Sacks at his best, weaving neuroscience through a fascinating personal story, allowing us to think about brain functions and music in a bracing new light. ![]()
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