

I guess good music (or art in general) is only good based on how pop culture sees it. I like how you present your statements above as if they are facts and absolutes, as if you're the gold standard on what is beautiful and not boring. The most difficult thing to do musically is to write a great pop song. Including golfer prodigy Michelle Wie, disabled musical prodigy Rex Clack, musical prodigy Jay Greenberg, prodigies with Williams Syndrom, the Brown children musical prodigies, soccer prodigy Freddy Apu, and the child prodigies Greg Smith and Sho Yano. Show me a child prodigy that writes his own symphonies? Yawn. Child Prodigies Rate 60 Minutes looks at child prodigies. Listen to a song like Love Can Make You Happy by Mercy, a work so beautiful that they did it only once. This is the highest point of musical achievement. The most difficult thing to do in music is to write a simple, heartbreakingly beautiful song. I guarantee that he and those within his small circle will feel that a three minute pop song is beneath him. Ask the prodigy to take some time out from writing symphonies and write a three minute gorgeous pop song like these. Play this 13 year old prodigy some breathtakingly beautiful pop songs like Walk Away Renee by The Left Banke, Traces Of Love by the Classics IV, or Love Grows Where My Rosemary Goes by Edison Lighthouse. I say big deal writing a boring symphony that no one outside of a very small audience will hear is not the true test of real musical talent. Deutscher composed her first piano sonata. He could play the piano at 3, attended Julliard at 11, and at 13, has already written 5 symphonies. Alma Elizabeth Deutscher (born 19 February 2005) is a British composer, pianist, violinist, and musical prodigy. "I don't know how she did this is just blew me away! Everyone said, 'who's the new Bob Ross!?'" laughs her father, Jonathan Leong.On 60 Minutes last night a 13 year old musical child prodigy was profiled.

Just finger paintings on a kitchen counter, but by age 3, her art suddenly and dramatically improved.

Her parents said they started as scribbles at the tender age of 8-months. "Why did the dinosaur cross the road? Because the chicken wasn't born yet!" Juliette giggles.īut it's her paintings, which impresses us the most. A twelve-year-old piano prodigy who suffocates from his parent's big dreams for him decides to make his escape-and with the aid of his grandfather-chase his own dreams instead. This mini-member of MENSA (yes, she tested and her family even provides her MENSA card as proof!) has a lot of hobbies like swimming, martial arts, rock climbing and telling jokes. With Fabrizio Borsani, Teo Gheorghiu, Julika Jenkins, Urs Jucker. She is bold and talkative and converses almost like an adult, but with a child-like voice and playfulness. RELATED: NYC 11-year-old writes book about self-love to help lift children's spirits during pandemic A kid prodigy out of California is kicking off 2021 by showcasing her artwork, which has raised thousands for a non-profit which helps patients with life-threatening diseases.įrom the moment you meet Juliette Leong at her family's California home, surrounded by her nature-inspired artwork, it's apparent she is not your average 4-and-a-half-years-old. An East Bay kid prodigy is kicking off 2021 by showcasing her artwork, which has raised thousands for a non-profit which helps patients with life-threatening diseases.
