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"Lessons" - Picard in love!

Does anyone know the chord(s) that she played in the arpeggio in the Jeffries tube? I'm kinda a music nerd, but i never learned piano.

Also, hello everybody. :lol:
It's from Beethoven's "Moonlight" Sonata no. 14 for Piano, Adagio sostenuto.

Hi and welcome to the BBS. :bolian:
 
Perhaps I should have phrased the question differently; I meant the one she plays right when she rolls out her keyboard, not the song that they play.
 
Ok ok, after looking it up on youtube, I actually mean when she shows up at Picard's quarters with her piano roll. D'oh!
 
OK, I've reviewed that scene on YouTube, and well, apart from a snippet of Bach's Brandenburg Concerto no. 3 (1st movement) and the famous and uplifting Frère Jacques canon (lol, Picard's camera angles :lol:), it seemed just like a generic warm-up arpeggio - not specific, but probably something Rachmaninoff would have approved of in his time.... :)
 
Although, somehow I wish she would have died in the storm. The way it ended was just a little sour, you know...would have been more romantic, more sad the other way. It would have made her more of a hero.


What do you think?

I was delighted with the ending the way it was. I love Lessons, and more so for the ending.

On first run viewing, I was sure the writers would kill her off and give Picard a moving, but ultimately fairly meaningless, final mourning scene. That ending would have just confirmed Picard's feelings about romance, the crew, his role, etc, etc.

Instead, we got a MUCH more challenging ending for Picard - he had to actively choose between romance and his role and come face to face with the consequence of his choice to always put his career first. At the same time, it reminded him that alternative IS possible and doesn't always end in death/sorrow. Great ending in my opinion, and I'm glad the writers didn't take the easy cop-out ending of killing her off.
 
Saw this episode recently and my affinity for it was reaffirmed.

The only thing I would've changed is the ending. Nothing major, but once Nella walked out of Picard's cabin, it would've been particularly impactful if the hurting Picard walked over to his desk and attempted to throw himself into his work. Lots of tapping on the computer console as he went over reports and such. There would be no music, just the sound of Picard tapping away at his computer. The camera would start to slowly pull back from the scene. Cut to a standard shot of the Enterprise exterior as it flies off to another mission, the sound of Picard's computer and the familiar droan of the vessel being the only things audible. Fade to black.

Throwing himself into his work would've been an appropriate emotional response for Picard, I think. Here's someone who is not used to opening themselves up... and as a result of doing so, Picard ended up getting hurt. I don't think Picard, though eminently wise, would know how to properly deal with that. I think his response, indeed, would've been to throw himself into his work... desperately trying to dull his pain in the only way he knew how.

I think there would've been a profound sadness in an ending like that -- really pounding home the point that the greatest love of Picard's life, for better or for worse, is his ship, his crew, his work. For such a solitary figure, it would've been clear that, at the end of the day, those things are all he really has.

I'm sure Picard appreciates his job 99% of the time. But this would've been that 1% where he didn't. The entire episode operates from this premise, and I think the above ending would only help to augment that point even more.
 
An excellent episode, I liked it a lot. Although I found myself less interested with the 'action' final act of the episode. Everything before the mission was very, very well done.

Mind you, I'm VERY glad they didn't kill her off in the storm. That really would have completely ruined the episode.
 
Perhaps I should have phrased the question differently; I meant the one she plays right when she rolls out her keyboard, not the song that they play.
Yes, her solo piece in that scene is from the Moonlight sonata. The song they play together later in the scene was original music taken from the episode "The Inner Light".

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=10qe8Qun9iA
I really like this episode. But the music they played wasn't that original, to me at least. My first impression (and current impression) is that it's derivative of "The Skye Boat Song" -- a beautiful piece of music, but it's jarring to hear so much of it in this episode and be told that it's "original."
 
Saw this episode recently and my affinity for it was reaffirmed.

The only thing I would've changed is the ending. Nothing major, but once Nella walked out of Picard's cabin, it would've been particularly impactful if the hurting Picard walked over to his desk and attempted to throw himself into his work. Lots of tapping on the computer console as he went over reports and such. There would be no music, just the sound of Picard tapping away at his computer. The camera would start to slowly pull back from the scene. Cut to a standard shot of the Enterprise exterior as it flies off to another mission, the sound of Picard's computer and the familiar droan of the vessel being the only things audible. Fade to black.

Throwing himself into his work would've been an appropriate emotional response for Picard, I think. Here's someone who is not used to opening themselves up... and as a result of doing so, Picard ended up getting hurt. I don't think Picard, though eminently wise, would know how to properly deal with that. I think his response, indeed, would've been to throw himself into his work... desperately trying to dull his pain in the only way he knew how.

I think there would've been a profound sadness in an ending like that -- really pounding home the point that the greatest love of Picard's life, for better or for worse, is his ship, his crew, his work. For such a solitary figure, it would've been clear that, at the end of the day, those things are all he really has.

I'm sure Picard appreciates his job 99% of the time. But this would've been that 1% where he didn't. The entire episode operates from this premise, and I think the above ending would only help to augment that point even more.


Ooh, I think that would have been a nice ending, too.

I love this episode and count it among my top 10 TNG favorites. This is why I watch Star Trek. The strong character development and interactions. This is great television, in my not so humble opinion.

J.
 
Lovely episode. It made a good Valentine's Day double feature with "Qpid". I think this episode, "Captain's Holiday", and "Qpid" comprise a very sweet and enjoyable trilogy of Picard love stories. "The Perfect Mate" is a bit of a love story too, but a more tragic and less uplifting one.
 
I'm guessing it's a pair of stunt hands. They often use musician hands for certain shots, most gratuitously in some close-ups of Data playing the violin. (The angles on the arms make Data look too hunched-up for a virtuoso.)

Still, Patrick looks hilarious in that first pic. :lol:
 
I just watched this again and had to comment on it. At this point I've re-watched TNG so many times I've lost count, and after watching it so many times, I figure once I've made up my mind about which episodes are my favourites, my choices aren't likely to change. That's not the case this time. I've always liked this episode, but this time I appreciated more than I ever have and after going through the first six seasons again, I can't think of many more I like as much as this one.

What caught me off guard and impressed me most this time is how masterfully the tone shifts right towards the end. If you pay attention to the act breaks in this episode, almost every single moment right before a commercial break consists of Picard smiling. Then there's one where he and Nella kiss, and even the act that ends with Worf telling them they'll have to go on a dangerous mission has Picard smiling at the bad timing as he was about to make Nella a nice dessert. So all the smiling and positive feel sort of lulled me into a false sense of security thinking of this as just a light-hearted episode that didn't feel like it would ever have any stakes. I knew what was coming since I'd seen this episode before, but the pleasant tone of the first half still made the sudden danger at the end really powerful.

I really hate that Nella had to leave in the end. I guess it was inevitable since Wendy Hughes was just a guest star and the rationalization that Picard and Nella agree on for why they should split makes complete sense, but it seems like such a waste. They really embodied that old formula of people falling in love by 'making beautiful music together' wonderfully and of all the women Picard got involved with, I felt this one was the most perfect for him.

He and Vash had delightful chemistry and obviously always had a blast together, but she was too reckless, uninhibited, and impulsive for him. He and Crusher had too much history and were just too comfortable as friends, and while I was really sad to see him give up Kamala in "The Perfect Mate", her nature ultimately gave her chemistry with him a bit of a forced and fake quality. Nella was just so mature, thoughtful, talented, and charming with Picard. You can see that in how she not only can always maintain intelligent conversation with him, but also make him smile constantly with her flirtatious remarks.

A few little things I noticed that made this episode more interesting than in the past:

- Wendy Hughes has the most unique Australian accent I've ever heard. The reason I didn't realize she's Australian the first few times I watched this episode is because she seems to slip in and out of the accent.

Instead of saying all of her words the way a person with a strong Australian accent does, it sounds like certain words within each of her sentences are said with that accent, and then she sounds more American the rest of the time. I think you have to listen really hard and look for it to hear her Australian accent. I wonder if she's consciously trying to conceal it or if that's just the way it talks.

- I think I was remembering this thread, because when Picard was playing "Frère Jacques", I could totally tell that the hands didn't belong to Patrick Stewart and I found that REALLY distracting. I'm also pretty sure it was someone else's hands when Wendy Hughes was playing the piano too. I couldn't help but wonder why the hand substitution was done for "Frère Jacques", but not the Ressikan folk tune. I'd imagine "Frère Jacques" to be easier, but maybe it's all the little improvisations they did around it that made it hard.

Anyway, back to the general topic at hand...I think this episode has just about everything I love about "Star Trek" (aside from some good sci-fi and/or alien stuff, oddly enough), so I now consider it a personal favourite. It had some strong character development, philosophy, romance, humour, good conversation, and a suspenseful dangerous situation. I don't read Star Trek novels, but I think if there was one stating that Picard and Nella eventually reunited and lived happily ever someday, I'd have to pick it up because I loved them together that much. :adore:
 
Too Much Fun has summed up my feelings for this one perfectly. It's a lovely episode.

I hate this episode, it's on my "will never watch again" list. It's virtually non-canon as far as I'm concerned.

Ughh? I thought the very definition of "canon" was something that had been shown on-screen? How can you make such an arbitrary statement, without even a sentence to explain your thoughts more clearly?
 
Goes with Sub Rosa and many others on my list of episodes to never watch again.
 
To quote Roger Ebert, "How can your heart be so cold?". :p I'm tempted not to ask, but curiosity is getting the better of me. So far, the people against this episode have only said they don't like it, without explaining why. What exactly bothers you guys about this episode? Too mushy?
 
To quote Roger Ebert, "How can your heart be so cold?". :p I'm tempted not to ask, but curiosity is getting the better of me. So far, the people against this episode have only said they don't like it, without explaining why. What exactly bothers you guys about this episode? Too mushy?

I just don't think this 'relationship' fits with the Picard character at this point in his life. He's watched too many friends and colleagues die in the line of duty to get attracted to a fellow officer under his command. YMMV.
 
To quote Roger Ebert, "How can your heart be so cold?". :p I'm tempted not to ask, but curiosity is getting the better of me. So far, the people against this episode have only said they don't like it, without explaining why. What exactly bothers you guys about this episode? Too mushy?

I just don't think this 'relationship' fits with the Picard character at this point in his life. He's watched too many friends and colleagues die in the line of duty to get attracted to a fellow officer under his command. YMMV.

Yeah. But she made him tea. And I'm pretty sure she hates children, that always brings light into picard's heart
 
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