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Without getting too esoteric, I hear all music as having a story. Instrumental music is a more loosely defined story than music with words, and it's much more subjective, but it's there. It's why I've always found it easy to name instrumental pieces; I just listen for a bit and I hear the story develop, which is often both visual and emotional, then it's just a matter of choosing the best title to describe it, same as if I had written a novel. In music there are conflicts, resolutions, climaxes, denouements, even characters and plot development to my mind. I've found this to be true even when listening to someone improvise a solo, if they know what they're doing. Pat Metheny, Bill Evans and Keith Jarrett come to mind as some players who are especially descriptive storytellers in improvisation. Daryl Shawn www.swanwelder.com www.chinapaintingmusic.com > But what do we mean when we say that an abstract instrumental peice of > music tells a STORY!! It can't really, can it? Can there be meaning in > an improvisation?? Is there meaning in a composition? What is the > meaning with "green onions" or Bethovens 5th or Kind of blue. A story > needs meaning, doesn't it??