Date: |
Wed, 2 Jun 1999 08:42:38 -0700 |
Subject: |
|
From: |
|
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
Ulvi Yurtsever writes:
>Well, there has never been a law against duplicating Bach's
>achievements; despite that, no one has ever come close in the last
>three hundred years. The simplest explanation would be that nobody
>knows how to do it.
Similar remarks apply to about any composer who wrote enough music to
have a discernible style. It may not be the simplest, but the sensible
explanation is that styles change and people move on.
On the other hand, in this specific case, I daresay there have been more
than a few serviceable "Bach fugues" written over the course of the past
few decades of music education. If I weren't banned from the next picnic
for having the audacity to view an 18th century German organist as a man of
the guild class, I might even take bets on who could tell the difference.
>Yup, if Bach doesn't do it for you, nothing else will...
"Go Team!"?
Todd McComb
[log in to unmask]
|
|
|