Regarding MM hoarders who collect pieces based on price and never
change the roll, and people who babble cretinously when the music starts
(actually, they just talk louder) or take the start of music as a cue to
interrupt your listening with vacuous nonsense (usually about how they
love *all* kinds of music) --
This is from Sinclair Lewis' "Babbit" (1922). It is from the speech he
gives to the Rotary club.
"In politics and religion [the] Sane Citizen is the canniest man on
earth; and in the arts he invariably has a natural taste which makes
him pick out the best, every time. In no country in the world will
you find so many reproductions of the Old Masters and of well-known
paintings on parlor walls as in these United States. No country has
anything like our number of phonographs, with not only dance records
and comic but also the best operas, such as Verdi, rendered by the
world's highest-paid singers.
"In other countries, art and literature are left to a lot of shabby
bums living in attics and feeding on booze and spaghetti, but in
America the successful writer or picture-painter is indistinguishable
from any other decent business man; and I, for one, am only too glad
that the man who has the rare skill to season his message with inter-
esting reading matter and who shows both purpose and pep in handling
his literary wares has a chance to drag down his fifty thousand bucks
a year, to mingle with the biggest executives on terms of perfect
equality, and to show as big a house and as swell a car as any Captain
of Industry!"
George Bogatko
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