Coinkydink
Holy water sprinkled on coinkydink: Pair o Dice
Pay attention to coincidences.
"Be more alert to anomalies," Klein says, "rather than quickly explaining them away and staying in your comfort zone."
We tend to ignore coincidences or not think much of them, because they're often meaningless, says Klein. But looking for coincidences is a powerful way to make surprising connections.
"There's a belief that correlation doesn't imply causality, which is true. People see all sorts of correlations in coincides that turn out to be spurious, so they get a bad reputation," Klein says. "But in my work I find that a lot of insights are fed by people spotting coincidences and making assumptions, and instead of just saying 'It must be true,' doing to follow-up work to find out if it's true."
(You would have to work mighty hard as a music historian/pop psychologist/theorist to determine the causality in any of Frank's use of coinkydink in his music or influences upon composition or performance. The evidence can be slight.)