Disagree.
Music is not inherently 'intellectual', we just think that way because it can be complex and architectural in scope.
Painting is different, if it is supposed to be a very literal and simply pretty image, then it's purely sensual, but to paint something thought provoking, indeed - something intellectual must go into it.
If we are to attach any intellectual importance to music, we are dealing with extramusical associations.
They can end up focussing an intepretation to tell a 'story', or something more literal than the intentionally vague traditional art of music.
My passion for speed does in no way negate my passion for music, I just consider them seperate issues in many ways(though not all...).
Anyway, my statement about teachers was based on my idea that music cannot be taught in any traditional sense.
Technique and the mechanics of reading and playing music are essential, and these are skills which must be learnt in a more traditional way, either by discovery or teaching.
My idea about learning music, is that everyone who listens to music is learning it.
The experience of listening reveals everything we would ever need to know about music.
If we decide to be a musician, we must learn to either dictate our own imagination, or learn to play it on an instrument.
I mean, there are 2 things that piano teachers seem to teach - music and piano playing.
The former is absolutely uneccesary.
