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Another Great Musician Dies
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Actually Michael, perhaps this is a good post because I am always annoyed how society and the media always honour people immediately after their death. Here, in Montreal for example, they are making a huge deal for the death of Celine Dion's husband and manager René Angelil. We will learn more about him now than he is dead than when he was alive. I wish we would spend more time exploring the value of artists when they are still alive and retired than after they leave. Perhaps that way, people would appreciate their influence better. After death, I fear people say: Really, he or she was that great? Too bad, if I had known before, perhaps I would have shown interest. Just a thought!
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I was reading my last reply and I realized the meaning may not have come across as I meant it. I think it is important to honour exceptionally creative and influential people after they pass. However, I often wish the media would make a bigger deal of the life work of an artist when that person is still alive. Now I think I got it!
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Well said Michael! In fact, I suggest we should write our own eulogy so that people get it right!
Joke aside, Mozart got the worst of it it seems. Haydn and Beethoven got a better treatment. I think Mozart was the last musical genius to die and be ignored that way. After them, most influential composers got the proper recognition (I think).
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Originally posted by Joy View PostThat was a very odd article.
My thread title didn't help. Mea culpa.
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