In High School marching band I once demonstrated the Marimba to a 4 year old. I let him hit the keys a little with a mallet, then I played for him the melody from Bach's minuet in G. He said, "Wow, that really rocks!" I smiled and jokingly said, "maybe, but I think it's a little more baroque." He then looked at me and said, "it's not broke, I fix it."

I'm not sure what the situation is in other countries, although I generally believe you guys in Europe and Australia etc are more in touch with the higher arts. Here in the USA the problem will get worse before it gets any better. Due to persistant school budget cuts, especially in New York and other East Coast states, our fine arts programs in schools have been dwindeling since the mid-1990s.
This is the last thing we need as there is already gerneral social-economic pressure to ingore classical music in the first place. It's difficult for me to describe, but I think you know what I'm talking about when I say it's looked down upon by your peers to enjoy music other than what is popular. Here's a good example:
Years ago I was driving my Dad and 2-3 year old sister somewhere in my car, I turned on some Mendelssohn or something, and my little sister says, "change it, this sucks!" Hilarious, but at the same time it kinda broke my heart as you can imagine. How does someone this young recognize a genre they're supposed to hate?!
So without at least having some access to the classics in school, all these kids have left is the heavily producer driven music (pop) constantly being marketed to them, which they are already extremely good at even with communities with proper public music education.
Well, there's not a whole lot one can do to reverse such a huge trend, but I do try to influence those around me to appreciate the arts as much as I can just by talking about it, performing in public with community chamber groups and orchestras, and I even used to organize and conduct monthly meetings to discuss classical music at our local Barnes and Noble book stores here in Dallas when I had the time. If you've been lucky/brave enough to persue a career in music, you can do much more than that.
Anyway, I like the story of kid who played 'Rachmaninov's' Flight of the Bumble Bee, but I'd don't think we'd been even so lucky as to have people even mentioning that Flight of the Bumble Bee was by Rachmaninov in the first place.
