in the 16th through 19th centuries (and even a little in 20th century) classical music has been produced and circulated. But did that kind of style die away 50 years ago? Is it possible to still write classical music and it be enjoyed and accepted today as it was back then?
For instance, if i wrote a Nocturne persay, in the old style that Chopin used, would it be popular? Or is it time for bigger and better things? What other barrier besides time separates us from the great classicalists?
Academic music didn't die at all, the festivals of contemporary music are always full of audience.Ithink now is even better than in the past because you don't have to be a prince and live in a palace for listening to the best music available. A composer of our time has the possibility of being listened by millions because of the video and audiorecords. And now exists such a thing as copyright,so this composer will be paid as well. Maybe I didn't understand well, but I think you mean also that if you composed something like a romantic nocturne, would it have success? It depends. You can write that way, and it would be appreciated if it's written with quality and if restates the musical form, in this case the nocturne. Actually, that could be a start in composing: you can even write a nocturne "a la Chopin". But you live in the 20th century, you have listened Prokofieff, Bartok, The Beatles, whatever happened since Chopin's death, so even if you intended to write exactly like then,you just couldn't, but that's the good thing: if the music is good will be interesting for someone to listen a 20th century nocturne"a-la-19th". So did the great 20th century composers: they composed sonatas, concerti, simphonies,preludes and fugues, they used the old music forms but filled them in with a new content. So, I think just time separates us from them.