/classical/

Stale pasta, not even remotely creative bait to begin with.

As a mathematician and statistician, I must say that the greatest (human) music pieces, whatever they might be, would probably not be too long. Whatever "level" of craft we assume, the longer it would be demanded, the more opportunities there would be for the fallible human to make some suboptimal choices.
Paul McCartney's Yesterday is probably a greater piece of music than Mass in B Minor, Eroica and the like

inb4 l-le art is abstract!

This is cope from people that got filtered by math in childhood, always has been.
The fact that AI is now algorithmically producing better art than 90% of real human beings has BTFO this superstition forever.
I’m sorry if that makes you feel bad but it’s just true. 90% of human beings cannot produce art of any quality or originality whatsoever and an algorithm fed machine has already been invented that can do their job better, this is not to say AI art is the greatest or that the 10% of human creativity isn’t better.
99% of people don't accomplish anything, even if they are technically skilled, smart, or creative. I'm sure there's some selection bias, but the only people I can have interesting conversations about music, literature, or history with are engineers.

In case you still not understand what he said regarding AI: The majority of people are talentless, soulless NPCs. Like you, AI is just a tool

kill yourself immediately.

Vagner was a "christcuck" too

you're a tool.

romanticism is literally l.eddit incarnated

now playing

start of Honegger: Symphony No. 2 for Trumpet and Strings
youtube.com/watch?v=pmrhyUaLavA&list=OLAK5uy_nqXb6Vd8rHSYP6VhMiz-Aaq1am8RGmI4g&index=2

start of Honegger: Symphony No. 3 "Liturgique"
youtube.com/watch?v=0GP1MLqNiH8&list=OLAK5uy_nqXb6Vd8rHSYP6VhMiz-Aaq1am8RGmI4g&index=4

Herbert von Karajan liked to think of himself as the great conductor of the German classical repertoire: Mozart, Beethoven, and Brahms. Perhaps out of insecurity, he recorded and recorded that music incessantly--there are four complete Beethoven symphony cycles, for instance. But he really was at his best in other things, and everyone agrees that these performances of Honegger symphonies are among his finest recordings. Part of their allure lies simply in the quality of the playing, for no one could deny that he cultivated a technical standard with the Berlin Philharmonic that was second to none. But he also seems to respond to the music's savagery, its melancholy, and ultimate message of hope. In short, the music really turned him on, and it'll do the same for you. --David Hurwitz

In sum, what of Karajan? Did he have a way of making everything sound as if it were experienced from the back seat of Mercedes limo?

That's funny.

Hurwitz

please excuse me while I stab my eyes out.