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November 14, 2003 - Image 98

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2003-11-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

nitric Steaks, Chops & Seafood

Weic me to
i dr
un

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T

ate

11/14

2003

74

Call 313-9652=

Next to the Fox Theatre

Pianist/psychiatrist offers audiences a glimpse
of the mental health of the composers whose
works he performs.

d!d20

R

always this way. If you go back to
the ancient Greek culture, Apollo
was the god of medicine and music.
In many primitive cultures, the roles
of physician and musician were
essentially played by the same per-
sons, who took a more global view
of healing.
"The intensity of the connection is

ichard Kogan doesn't think
of the piano as a particu-
larly sexy instrument, but
he does think of music as
very sexy. His thoughts go beyond the
personal and are based on lots of study
and experience, first as a
concert pianist and second as
a psychiatrist specializing in
human sexuality.
When Kogan takes on
either of his two profes-
sional roles, he doesn't leave
the other far behind. His
concerts include comments
about the mental health of
the composers whose music
is being featured, and his
medical practice is ener-
gized by the encounters he
has when he's away from it.
Kogan soon will bring his
heady performance approach
to the Max M. Fisher Music
Center, where he will play
and discuss the music of
romantic composer Robert
Schumann. Kogan's appear-
ance, at 8 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 15, will open the 77th
season of the Pro Musica
Society and will include
Fantasie, which the musi-
cian-doctor will describe as a
coded love letter to the
woman Schumann would
later marry.
"I would say it's pretty
individual whether people
Dr. Richard Kogan: "In many primitive
Find the piano more sexy
cultures, the roles of physician and musician were
than the saxophone or the
essentially played by the same persons,
double bass more sexy than
who took a more global view of healing."
the violin, but going back
to ancient times, there are
numerous references to the
shown in the development of the
role of music in establishing the
language for these two fields. Words
propr:r mood or enhancement for
such
as 'fantasy,' 'climax,' 'rhythm'
sex," says Kogan, 48, director of the
and 'harmony' are used in the vocab-
Human Sexuality Program at the
ulary of both."
New York Weill Cornell Medical
Mental health vocabulary will be
Center, located on Manhattan's
important to Kogan's performance as
Upper East Side.
he explains that Schumann suffered
"Music and medicine have been
with bipolar disorder, going from
separate in our society, but it wasn't

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