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The audience's recognition and appreciation of the difficulty of presenting something worthwhile happens in a mostly subconscious manner. The "difficulty" being measured and appreciated is not necessarily tied to the physical complexity being employed, but rather whatever efforts are required to produce a desirable experience for the audience. Now, if you're at a performance of Rachmaninoff's Fifth Piano Concerto, it's going to require a lot of notes played quickly and precisely. Other musics may not. If audience members are actively considering the difficulty of the performer's action, you're probably at a musical contest. Some people find them enjoyable. On 9/13/07, Per Boysen <perboysen@gmail.com> wrote: > When someone comes backstage after a gig to say "your show was so > impressing" my immediate reaction is distrust. But I try to not to > show this reaction, because it may very well be that this person does > really feel impressed. And I just don't know how to handle that, > because according to my understanding there must be something wrong > with a person that experiences music as "being impressed".