Great post there, and congrats on your new degree! (I'm a soon-to-be graduate of Music of our local conservatory).
I like rachmaninoff_forever's no-nonsense approach to explaining music. It's a refreshing alternative to the usual intellectual hocus pocus that is sometimes overly detailed when the points expressed tend to be simpler IMHO.
I especially enjoyed your rant about those "idiots" who try to discourage you from doing music.

In any case, I'm having a few questions to rachmaninoff_forever:
1. Seeing as you are into popular music, why do you think there are only a few ragtime enthusiasts amongst African Americans? Do you think it's because they "evolved" their music to modern hip hop and funk while the whites study ragtime as something of a "classical" music?
2. Why does there seem to be an under-representation of Africans or African Americans in classical music? I mean actually there are hardly any non-Caucasian/East Asian piano virtuosos after all, come to think of it. But I've always wondered why there seem to be so few of them classical black players.
3. Do you think it would be cool to have a new musical approach combining elements of "traditional" classical teaching combined with more "popular music style" methods, i.e. improvisation & chord reading stuff? I mean, heck this was the way it was actually done before the advent of the musical conservatory. I always thought the old approach to Western music had a lot of interesting elements that modern classical training somehow does away with (improvisation, mixture of performance with composition, incorporation of popular music into piano performance, etc.).
4. Why do you hate Kapustin etudes?
With all that aside, I also wonder why most classical players don't include jazz or popular music-style repertoire in recitals. I mean, we have Gershwin, Kapustin, and on rare occasions Gottschalk (and Stravinsky and Poulenc and co. where "somewhat" influenced by jazz but that's not jazz), but there's hardly stuff like that in most standard piano repertoire.
There's that famous stereotype of classical players being "unable to swing". Which should be unjustified. Take an Art Tatum transcription, master it note-for-note, add a swing feel - boom. A classical interpretation complete with swing. It shouldn't be impossible!
It might have something to do with classical music being primarily more of a European thing. Maybe.
BTW FYI I'm Southeast Asian.
Also to outin: I also don't particularly dig crossover, I think a lot of it is generally entertaining on the surface but tends to get corny.
And I'm so annoyed at those classical parodies where they get some famous pop tune and pretend to play it in the style of a classical composer when they just get popular pieces by that classical composer and weave it into that pop tune's chord progression.
