2010s, 2018, September
Source: Trump Says Hurricane Florence Is 'Tremendously Big And Tremendously Wet' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqHwQhZC8jQ
“"Mashups […] nobody's going to listen to mashups in another ten years. Mashups are novelty music. They're like "The Monster Mash." They have no musical staying power. You're pursuing a phantom there. It's bad music, I mean, it's not bad— it's a pastiche, it's like magazine collage— which can be good for what it is. But to pretend that that's like tremendous creative work— No! It's a tremendous creative power— and it can have a tremendous audience, but it's not tremendously good. And we need a little bit of aesthetic honesty in confronting things like this. Just because it's new, and people with laptops can do it, and get away with it, and find an audience for it, does not make it a real cultural advance. It's an epiphenomenon."”
in SXSW 2007 <!-- 18:24 http://2007.sxsw.com/blogs/podcasts.php/2007/03/14/bruce_sterling_s_sxsw_rant --> Bruce Sterling Rant (2007).
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Bruce Sterling 13
American writer, speaker, futurist, and design instructor 1954Related quotes
2010s, 2016, November, New York Times Interview (November 23, 2016)
Interview with Max Delbruck (1978), p. 87. Oral History Project, California Institute of Technology Archives, Pasadena, California.
Source: The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks & Win Your Inner Creative Battles
The Mexican-American and the Church (1968)
“If one plays good music, people don't listen, and if one plays bad music people don't talk.”
Algernon, Act I.
Source: The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)
Context: Of course the music is a great difficulty. You see, if one plays good music, people don't listen, and if one plays bad music people don't talk.
“It’s better to be good than evil, but one achieves goodness at a tremendous cost.”
Reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 34.
Source: Vedânta philosophy : Lectures by the Swâmi Vivekânanda on Râja Yoga (1899), Ch. VI : Pratyâhâra and Dhâraṇâm