Rccc,
What makes your limits (or mine) the ultimate arbiter of the possible? There may be one being who could claim that, but you're not Him/Her.
Let's test your hypotheses with a few questions, taken straight from the musical casebooks:
Do you have perfect pitch? If I hit a random key on a piano can you tell me which note it was? If your answer is no, do you therefore argue that no one else has perfect pitch either? Tell it to my mother, she'll laugh in your face. Test her, she'll prove you wrong.
If I play any two consecutive bars from one of 600 long, complex pieces of music that you've heard, can you infallibly tell me:
a) which one of those 600 pieces the two bars came from?
b) what movement they came from?
c) which instruments carry the melody and harmony?
d) what happened in the bars immediately preceding, and what comes next?
You can't do that? Well, neither can I. But Toscanini could. Fritz Reiner could. Vladimir Ashkenazy can.
Can you go to a concert, hear a Mozart symphony for the very first time, then go home and write it out - note for note? You can't do that? Tchaikovsky could and did, when he was 12 years old.
Could you travel to another city to jam with a famous string quartet, and after 10 seconds announce to the first violinist that his instrument was tuned 1/4 tone higher than your piano back home (though you hadn't been home in a week)? Max Reger did that. He was 10 years old.
Can you tune your piano for any chosen key so it's correct out to five harmonics above the fundamental? Debussy could. Did it nearly every day of his life.
I prefer to expand my horizons by being amazed at what is possible, not limit them by deciding what isn't. To each his own of course.
What makes your limits (or mine) the ultimate arbiter of the possible? There may be one being who could claim that, but you're not Him/Her.
Let's test your hypotheses with a few questions, taken straight from the musical casebooks:
Do you have perfect pitch? If I hit a random key on a piano can you tell me which note it was? If your answer is no, do you therefore argue that no one else has perfect pitch either? Tell it to my mother, she'll laugh in your face. Test her, she'll prove you wrong.
If I play any two consecutive bars from one of 600 long, complex pieces of music that you've heard, can you infallibly tell me:
a) which one of those 600 pieces the two bars came from?
b) what movement they came from?
c) which instruments carry the melody and harmony?
d) what happened in the bars immediately preceding, and what comes next?
You can't do that? Well, neither can I. But Toscanini could. Fritz Reiner could. Vladimir Ashkenazy can.
Can you go to a concert, hear a Mozart symphony for the very first time, then go home and write it out - note for note? You can't do that? Tchaikovsky could and did, when he was 12 years old.
Could you travel to another city to jam with a famous string quartet, and after 10 seconds announce to the first violinist that his instrument was tuned 1/4 tone higher than your piano back home (though you hadn't been home in a week)? Max Reger did that. He was 10 years old.
Can you tune your piano for any chosen key so it's correct out to five harmonics above the fundamental? Debussy could. Did it nearly every day of his life.
I prefer to expand my horizons by being amazed at what is possible, not limit them by deciding what isn't. To each his own of course.