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Daily Inspiration Quote by Maurice Ravel

"I did my work slowly, drop by drop. I tore it out of me by pieces"

About this Quote

Art, for Ravel, isn’t inspiration arriving on a white horse; it’s extraction. “I did my work slowly, drop by drop” turns composition into a bodily process, closer to bleeding or distillation than to improvisational “genius.” The phrase is almost perversely anti-romantic: no grand flood of emotion, just incremental pressure and release. That matters with Ravel because his music is often misread as cool, polished, even “mechanical” in its precision. He’s telling you the polish is the scar tissue.

The subtext is a quiet rebuke to the culture that confuses elegance with ease. Ravel’s surfaces are immaculate, but the labor behind them is viscous and private. “I tore it out of me by pieces” lands like a correction to the myth of the effortless virtuoso: the cost is internal, and it’s paid in fragments. The violence of “tore” also hints at creative anxiety, the sense that the work isn’t merely made but wrestled into being, sometimes against the maker’s own resistance.

Context sharpens the intent. Ravel was famously meticulous, revising obsessively and producing a relatively small catalogue compared to more prolific peers. He worked in an era intoxicated by larger-than-life artistic personalities, yet he cultivated restraint and craft. This quote reads like a manifesto for that stance: emotion doesn’t have to be sloppy to be real, and discipline doesn’t cancel intimacy. If anything, the discipline is how the intimacy survives.

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TopicMusic
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Ravel: I did my work slowly, drop by drop
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About the Author

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Maurice Ravel (March 7, 1875 - December 28, 1937) was a Composer from France.

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