Common, your signature looks little bit ridiculous and judgemental, clearly without knowing what you are talking about, whatsoever. May I take a liberty to suggest removing it just for sheer reason not to show yourself as a fool.
Haha, it is indeed getting old, and I think people got the point.
To everybody else, I never really put jazz on the same level as pop, but I don't think I could rationally quite put it at the same level of classical. I don't think it's trash, far from it, from an objective point of view, but from a subjective one, I really quite hate most of it, and not the improvisatory side of it, simply the ''jazzy'' style (I don't have much more to say on the topic, that's just me). Tough, the long, mean messages were quite a lot of fun

! Something that is, and will allways stay a fact tough, is that all the jazz musicians who played classical stuff were barely decent at it. Nobody's going to tell me keith jarrett can be compared to richter, michelangeli or somebody like that. NEVER. Jazz is another world that can be great I guess but jazz musicians can't touch classical music. Not in the way a classical musician can anyways. To jazzyprof, revolutionnary etude is an easy piece and quite simple musically. I am talking about the technical/theorical side of it. Does it end there? It seems like it does for you. It actually begins there, and that's what makes the difference between a classical and jazz musician (I am generalising of course). As Marik pointed out, you might be surprised to find out things about music you couldn't see before. If you have to ask the question you asked about the revolutionnary study, and then restate it seriously to Marik, then it shows it is not me but you that is ignorant. That is not meant as an insult, but if you have to ask it is clearly because you do not know the answer, which is quite evident to classical musicians. I will have to add (to indutrial) that I am myself fond of some popular music bands, but I don't think that makes them comparable to classical music. As I have allready stated, I put jazz higher (objectively) than pop, but not quite up there with classical, I am sorry to say. Of course, art is a vast subject and there is much inspiration that can be taken in the jazz musical world, as there is in everything in life. But if the "list of composers who clearly saw creative value in jazz/improvisation" would have tought it was at the same level, they would simply have written many things in that idiom or for pianists have played some of it and dedicate some of their time to it. True, there is much creativity in jazz, but it can't be compared to writting/interpreting classical music (and not in the meaning that it is too different).