This fellow is in his teens and you are saying, [...] What are you, the Oracle of Piano Forum? I've never seen such a pessimistic Oracle: [...] Then again, sometimes they turn out to be Mozart.
Walter Ramsey
Haha, I know that sounded a bit harsh. But 1) I'm always skeptical of prodigies, and 2) I really like Mozart. Anyway, Walter, I find it is often the case that songs that are very popular last year are completely forgotten this year. Even months, in some cases. Besides, given the fact that symphonies are not "popular music" like they were in the time of Mozart, I wonder how many people his music would really reach. One of the reasons Bach, Beethoven, and Mozart are so well-known even now is bbecause of their students. How many people play Salieri these days? Not as many as Mozart.
My goodness, you sure are putting a lot of pressure on this person.
I think CBS news is putting more pressure on him by making him a national media story.
Are we witnessing another victim of the "Masterpiece Syndrome," one who cannot enjoy music for the sake of music but must have it ratified by the eroding sandstorm of time, and declarations of pompous authorities!
Not at all. I hardly care what people two hundred years from now think, since I'll have been scattered to the many winds long before that. I just think that we should decide who is a prodigy and whose music is worth listening to based on what we hear and our own intuition, rather than based on what CBS news wants us to think.