Even within epochal specialty, the magisterial interpretations of, say, the fifties, will seem pitifully dated and not up to current scholarship's snuff.
,,,which would not be shared by more enlightened societies and folk.
Except that merely living contemporaneously to a great musical figure, say, Franck, does not necessarily translate into authoritative interpretations of such a figure. Humble little me can trace my tutorial lineage back to said Franck, [...] which makes any of us a greater interpreter of his music.
Only in music could someone propose a theory, most musicians jump on it and proclaim it gospel, and in 50 years someone else proclaim it crazy and that anyone who accepted it is an unlearned fool.
Only in music could someone....
Dead.
I can't really see most musicians doing this for psychology, biology, physics, history, or most any other field of endeavor.
We should all play OUR best, not aspire to be THE best. Vanity.
Too bad Florence Foster Jenkins didn't play the organ.
The wild and wooly world of organ performance truly does border on idolatry.
In some ways, Fox was the renegade that could not resist the temptation to cross the line to entertain. Was it ego? Desire for fame and fortune or a desire to expose the world to the great eds of Bach?
zackly!Frankly, much of it is no longer applicable to current rites, while some of it never fit within the mass, to begin with.
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.