"Only a spiritual being has awareness"
About this Quote
Corea’s line lands like a jazz voicing: spare on the surface, loaded underneath. “Only a spiritual being has awareness” isn’t a metaphysics lecture so much as a musician’s creed disguised as a mantra. In the studio and onstage, awareness is the whole job: hearing the drummer’s micro-delays, sensing a harmony before it’s played, feeling when a solo is about to tip from storytelling into showing off. Corea frames that sensitivity as “spiritual,” which quietly elevates listening from technique to ethics. You don’t just play well; you become the kind of person who can perceive.
The subtext is also defensive, even combative, in a way that makes sense given Corea’s long, public association with Scientology. Spiritual language can be a shield against reductionism: if awareness is spiritual, then it can’t be fully accounted for by muscle memory, dopamine, or the marketplace. That’s an appealing move for an artist who spent decades watching “creativity” get flattened into content and “virtuosity” turned into a flex.
There’s a tension baked into the absolutism of “only.” It risks sounding exclusionary or guru-ish, but it also reflects improvisation’s hard truth: autopilot is the enemy. In jazz, the moment you stop being awake, you’re just reciting. Corea’s intent, finally, is practical: make spirituality less about belief and more about attention. Awareness isn’t a mood; it’s a discipline, and the music is the proof.
The subtext is also defensive, even combative, in a way that makes sense given Corea’s long, public association with Scientology. Spiritual language can be a shield against reductionism: if awareness is spiritual, then it can’t be fully accounted for by muscle memory, dopamine, or the marketplace. That’s an appealing move for an artist who spent decades watching “creativity” get flattened into content and “virtuosity” turned into a flex.
There’s a tension baked into the absolutism of “only.” It risks sounding exclusionary or guru-ish, but it also reflects improvisation’s hard truth: autopilot is the enemy. In jazz, the moment you stop being awake, you’re just reciting. Corea’s intent, finally, is practical: make spirituality less about belief and more about attention. Awareness isn’t a mood; it’s a discipline, and the music is the proof.
Quote Details
| Topic | Faith |
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