Three Wishes
Upon receiving the question of three wishes from the Baroness, Frank Rehak responded with:
“Improvement of the caliber of recorded music. In general, the public has been exposed – via radio, TV, disc-jockeys, etc. – to bad sounds for many years, which in turn has caused a yardstick of poor music to measure by. If, on the other hand, good music had been given the same exploitation, the taste of John Q. Public would have been made vastly more musical, if by nothing more than the repeated playing and hearing of music worthwhile. I.e.: If any person is exposed to any sound continuously, and for a long period of enough time, it will begin to sound musical to him.
Classic example: The audience hisses, booed, and left the auditorium when Bach first used the sixth in addition to a triad-which of course is now one of the most common sounds used in any type of music. Ditto the dominant seventh which, when first employed, was considered completely distasteful, dissonant, and disgusting to the uneducated ear.
To sum this rambling up, I wish that more good music could be brought across to the general public via any medium. It would make we musicians’ jobs so much more fun and educational.”
*Excerpt from Three Wishes: An Intimate Look at Jazz Greats ~ Compiled and Photographed by Pannonica de Koenigswarter
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