chopin and schubert
I'm 60 years old. When I was 15-30 years old I had no love, nor interest in Schubert or Schumann. What I was taught to play just didn't interest me at
the time I was in my state of maturity. We can grow!
I believe I'm older than the average person here, and I'm making no special claims of "superior maturity", but some of the composers, and their subsequent works have revealed their "inner beauty" over time. And I fought hard against them for many years!
But it was my unique opportunity to be hired as a music librarian/recording technician in a small college that exposed me (along with further courses in piano, theory and music history, etc.) to all sorts of music.
Eventually "I Got it!", and eventually
you doubters of specific composers, or specific works, or the general product of a specific period might eventually learn to appreciate these works. And maybe not! All it takes is deeper exploration. "If the cavern is empty we might as well leave!"
I still don't care for much of Schumann ((some works I like very much) in general) but like many other composers, with the help of the Web, it doesn't take long for one to gain a more personal understanding of what the composer in question was experiencing during various stages of life. And that is the deepest part of Music History that is rarely taught prior to graduate school, unfortunately.
So open your Baker's Dictionary, or "The New Grove History of Music et. al." and look up some
true grit that drove the many composers during their time, and understand when, where and how they evolved, rather than wasting time taking lethal shots at them with (possible) youthful arrows of indignation!
Today anyone with a few connections can become an overnight sensation, with all the inspiration and integrity of the Simpson Sisters, of whatever the Kardassions appear to be (along with a long, and disturbingly growing list of vacuous, "empty holes" of contemporary "SuperStars") , but these are the latest distillations of what was once a great
"integration of a musical nation". It seems that becoming a Pop Star involves the parental motivation at least as much as the inherent musical ability of the prodigy.
RIP: Michael Jackson, as conflicted and complex as any of the most disturbed popular stars in all of musical history. I once hated him, but now I can begin to accept him for what made him the icon he became, and begin to let go the suspicions of his possible personal indignities with children. It is especially difficult for me.
Lontano