Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!uwm.edu!linac!att!princeton!phoenix!eliot From: eliot@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Eliot Handelman) Newsgroups: comp.music Subject: Re: hyperinstruments, VALIS, _Omni_ magazine Message-ID: <7601@idunno.Princeton.EDU> Date: 28 Mar 91 02:23:22 GMT References: <9103180007.AA26001@en.ecn.purdue.edu> <5333@archive.BBN.COM> Sender: news@idunno.Princeton.EDU Organization: Cognitive Science Lab, Princeton University Lines: 8 In article <5333@archive.BBN.COM> eneumann@bbn.com (Eric Neumann) writes: ; Too much of today's music is (at best) ;intellectually stimulating, but leaves you emotionally dead If it were intellectually stimulating, that would be alright. The current scene is anything but intellectually stimulating. It is intellectually dead.