Having nothing new to contribute to your points about corporate effect,I'd like to consider the end of the Cold War.
As the most abstract art,music is the most difficult art to censor. A totalitarian government would rather have its free thinking,creative people making music that writing pamphlets and making trouble,so it steers many persons into music.(Kodaly's music curricula that were used throughout the eastern block are now catching on in the west.)
With the end of the Cold War,with freedon to travel,a generation of great players is more visible that it was a decade ago.
There are more great players out there than perhaps any time in history. Cuban jazz is blazing new paths that more will travel when that government changes.
The modern composers don't get commercial airplay but many orchestras slip some of their works onto their programs.
Many cross over to work in the studios for hourly pay but art musicians pushing forward their art outside of the commercial mainstream is nothing new.
As the most abstract art,music is the most difficult art to censor. A totalitarian government would rather have its free thinking,creative people making music that writing pamphlets and making trouble,so it steers many persons into music.(Kodaly's music curricula that were used throughout the eastern block are now catching on in the west.)
With the end of the Cold War,with freedon to travel,a generation of great players is more visible that it was a decade ago.
There are more great players out there than perhaps any time in history. Cuban jazz is blazing new paths that more will travel when that government changes.
The modern composers don't get commercial airplay but many orchestras slip some of their works onto their programs.
Many cross over to work in the studios for hourly pay but art musicians pushing forward their art outside of the commercial mainstream is nothing new.