Subtle Counterpoint
A careful listener finds more than one sound within each tone—a subtle interplay of intervals that suggests an echo of past attention. This isn’t simply about acoustics, but how focus itself leaves a trace, with each note refracting the qualities of what came before. Note this interwoven history carries ethical weight; perception costs something lost as present coherence subtly alters previous states. All form, then, illustrates a negotiation between presence and memory—a continuous pattern symmetry unfolding in time.