Christmas is my time for unapologetic reading. In addition to two books about the fiasco that Iraq has become and one of Italo Calvino essays, I just finished a 1993 non-fiction work by Milan Kundera called 'Testaments Betrayed.' It includes observations about Fuentes' and Rushdie's fiction, a case for eroticism in Kafka's writings, a clear-eyed analysis of Hemingway's 'Hills like White Elephants,' some points on translation and even font size in publications, and, not least, some of Kundera's views about classical music. Music is treated on a par with literature and writing, presumably the forte of this author of 'The Unbearable Lightness of Being,' and with similar familiarity. Most of the attention focuses on Janacek, Beethoven and Stravinsky, with a whole chapter devoted to the "vagabondage" of Stravinsky's music through the ages, Adorno's critique of his music, and Ansermet's harsh repudiation of that music where they had once been good friends. Kundera obviously knows his music, despite an observation that I thought verged on the embarrassing -- viz., that "...at rock concerts people do not applaud," but instead surrender to the euphoria of those events (p 90). When it comes to classical, though, Kundera is insightful and a compelling read. The whole book was of considerable interest, and if I would put it alongside Stephen Vizinczey's 'Truth and Lies in Literature' in the passion that seems to illuminate the author's mulling over his subjects. Anyway, one of Kundera's observations has to do with 19th century Europe's rediscovery of Bach. This apparently gave rise to an awarness of music history: contemporary composers previously got all the 'airplay,' while the dead ones were seldom performed, if at all. But the strength of Bach's music singlehandedly led 19th century music-lovers to heed and perform the music of previous times. As never before, then, concert programmers began mixing works by long-dead composers with those freshly created by the living: Europe saw that Bach was not just any past but rather a past that was radically different from the present; thus musical time was revealed abruptly (and for the first time) not just as a series of works but as a series of changes, of eras, of varying aesthetics. [But this happened] ...to the point that in the twentieth century the balance between the present and the past was reversed: audiences heard the music of earlier times much more than they did contemporary music, and now the latter has virtually disappeared from concert halls. (p 62) In short, Kundera sees the widespread ignorance of contemporary classical music, our era's near complete indifference to it, as rooted in this trend and the shape that it took -- all curiously arising from the strength of Bach's music. Any views on this by those more learned about such historical circumstances? Anyone care to speculate about what may have prompted this loss of faith or confidence in the work of our contemporary composers? Bert Bailey