Steve Schwartz, nixing, and nixing, and nixing the canon: >...knowing as wide a range of music as you can is nice. But as we have >seen from the testimony of several posters, people don't necessarily need >it for understanding, in the sense of enjoyment. ... If the criterion's enjoyment, period, then, to be sure, any kind of music, anti-music, and even non-music will do. One thing to be said for this theory is that it has a long, if marginal, history. If memory serves, it dates back to the 5th century BC, as personified by the philosopher Aristippus who speculated that the supreme good was to be found in the pleasure of the moment, and though he did not recommend seeking it in music, he at least associated it with something close to it, the "the smooth motion of the flesh." In our own age this wisdom was impressively personified by the American sage, Satchel Paige, who counselled that attainment of the supreme good lay in "keepin' the juices janglin'." Denis Fodor