As I recall and maybe incorrectly, the madrigals and other secular forms that were highly popular (as performed and popularized by the troubadours) did in effect create a dramatic shift from the sacred to the secular that became a large part of what we term as classical music of the 18th and 19th Centuries. They are, in my opinion, a part of the overall equation; one influences the other and vice versa.
With regards to Peter's point, maybe I misunderstood, but I felt that he was saying that the concept that the dead masters are listened to now by more than listen to the living composers (not referring to popular music this time) gives a qualitative criteria to the music under scrutiny. (That goes along, as well, with the connectivity issue.)
My question is how do you define quality with regards to this curve that you propose? As an avid fan of 20th and 21st Century music, as well as pretty much any other period, I do not see this curve in the same way that others may perceive it. Does modern music reflect a degradation of art or is it simply another form, an evolution?
With regards to Peter's point, maybe I misunderstood, but I felt that he was saying that the concept that the dead masters are listened to now by more than listen to the living composers (not referring to popular music this time) gives a qualitative criteria to the music under scrutiny. (That goes along, as well, with the connectivity issue.)
My question is how do you define quality with regards to this curve that you propose? As an avid fan of 20th and 21st Century music, as well as pretty much any other period, I do not see this curve in the same way that others may perceive it. Does modern music reflect a degradation of art or is it simply another form, an evolution?
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