I was engaged last week in a great fight online; there are people in the EDM area of music that actually tried to argue that approaching the, erm, production of music from the vantage point of knowing an instrument or instruments in no way guarantees being better at it than only ever sitting in front of a computer at their DAW (a music theory board at an audio plugin forum which will stay nameless). By the same people that rely on people that do know something to answer their questions what someone with a half-assed band class in fifth grade should have a better grasp of, if they were interested.
it's an historical process. the less we can get away with doing, the less we'll do. We'll become weaker and weaker still until, right, no one remembers, no one knows, it will be a regurgitation of old loops - ie., ultimately who'll make the loops?
But there is an extreme that you, errikos constantly represent here that's really not very reasonable. I have been involved with music for over forty years. A lot of it - most of it - was quite outside the classical realm. I make things, as a matter of course I could not notate, in fact the process of notation would just never enter into it. It would be an academic exercise, utter waste of time. There was music over half a century ago that people tried to develop notation for completely beyond regular convention.
I improvise directly onto the timeline. I certainly have the acumen to be able to transcribe as well as can be expected. I learned music first of all by transcribing off of records. I am just not deficient in that area. BUT, not all music is notatable to a meaningful degree. (For one thing I'm not necessarily restricted to 12 equal divisions of the octave.) Notation for me is a middleman in the thought process I don't need or desire. It just isn't the thing in itself. Before DAWS, it's how we recorded the idea we know we'll forget, and beyond that the convenient means for communicating the idea to another musician. It is utterly inadequate insofar as communicating it to the machine, it's just not precise. We learn better ways that precisely describe it, in piano roll editing if we can't nail it on the keyboard.
The constant harping on that aspect doesn't really get you to seem superior to people that have other interests, guy. It's really tiresome to see that same rant. You take every opportunity to trot it out. If it's about 'VSL should make a sequencer for symphonic composers', if there's an opening for this rant you'll detect it it looks like. It just doesn't come off as "I, Elitist" as you want it to. You come off as someone with a daft little axe to grind and that signature really reveals a gaping chasm insofar as an understanding of advanced music, and a crap attitude to forms you don't seem to have even a cursory understanding of. And your lack of comprehension that someone would use prefab materials when they're trying to make a living, have deadlines is also revealed.