Because,
In Seattle Washington, I attended a Nevermind 20th Anniversary exhibit. On display, the Kurt Cobain drawing below, of his band Nirvana in its early incarnation with Chad Channing as the drummer. I remember talking with my friend Mike about this image when we were kids, which we saw in the Nirvana biography, Come As You Are, by Michael Azerrad. We appreciated the artistic license that Cobain took making the drums that funny horn shape. This shape, however, turns out to have been the actual real shape of Chad Channing’s drum set, which was also on display. A nearby plaque explained that the model was intended for playing jazz fusion in live clubs.
I also learned at this exhibit that both Nirvana and and my own band, Kalpana, played the same venue, NYC’s Pyramid Club, albeit about 15 years apart and at extremely different stages of the club’s relevance.
20 minutes after I learned this, I got a phone call from Aaron, guitarist for Kalpana, saying that we had just sold an album to a woman whose sister was the namesake for one of our songs. A total stranger we heard about from television.

You see, the music is folding in on itself.