There is neither the need nor any enjoyment in disassembling someone's post line-by-line, because it's counter-productive to understanding the root context of the subject and detracts from it, rather than adding anything constructive. So this sort of tete-a-tete repartee is a rather fruitless excercise (other than for perhaps ones' strange sense of amusement).
Theory is just that -- theory. It is useful to some, others feel it is a hindrance. I contend that it is an aid in learning and composing -- nothing more and nothing less than a useful set of tools. I want to make that case because I can't stand to see such baseless urban myths perpetuated. Like using a hammer, if you keep smacking your thumb, you should stop using it until you can use it without smacking your thumb. It's really that simple, IMHO.
As far as what Herodotus wrote -- Music theory and the evolution of notation styles is NOT dead -- just ask James Horner or any other composer that composes musical works for orchestras. However, I conceed that some people do think that orchestral pieces and the use of orchestras is passe, but these opinions are usually from digital music composers who are working in a different medium. KVR is a very small place in the scheme of things -- there are thousands of active BBS involving music composers of all types who create and exchange musical scores and experiment with new techniques -- many of who are fantastic commercial successes and are so because a huge number of people like their work, especially in film scoring and accompaniment. That such an activity is irrelevant to most at KVR does not make it an invalid or 'dead art'.
I've done a recent collab here in KVR with a mate who emailed me a jpeg of a score he wrote, I read it and ad libbed over the top. The point was that I understood the musical *feel* he was tryng to achieve from the score. It was neither limiting nor de-imaginative nor inhibiting. It was a quick and handy conveyance of musical thought.
That a lot of music composers now use the covenience of a myriad of virtual instruments and sequencers and store the results of their work in a digital format and do not use any form of notation does not invalidate music theory, because music theory is adjunct to that method, not counter to it.
The *other* debate that pops up inevitably here is much more emotive, with a vast number of proponents on either side -- that which argues what the definition of music is.
Some say that 'sound-scapes' and 'sound design' recordings are not music at all, but a mixture of ambient noises taken from life to invoke various moods and feelings and therefore cannot be scored. They say that this form of sound-making is a different beast alltogether. Some of the sound-design artists even defend this and call their pieces "events" rather than musical compositions.
That's OK, but composers have been scoring ambient sounds for hundreds of years and still do it. To state that they cannot or do not is false. There is Paluskar's notational system, Howard Risatti's 'New Music Vocabulary', Earle Brown's "The notation and performance of new music" and exploratories regularly published in such periodicals as 'The Journal of Musicology' and 'Musician's Quarterly', etc. There are many conventional (and many new) methods of scoring sounds and music -- from the sound of a thunderclap or a fierce wind, to a synth drone in any of it's complex modulations.
Of course, we being who we are here at KVR, we're happy to get on with our DAWS and VSTi and ignore the rest of the musical world, but that doesn't make the rest (and much larger) musical world go away.
The fact that we use orchestral samples and virtual instruments and can save our compositions digitally does not make the fantastic beauty of an orchestra of live human musicians and the scores written for them any less relevant or defunct simply because a heap of home DAW users don't need to/choose not to use notation and choose not to learn or employ any music theory.
Anyway, it is dead wrong to insist that notation and the employment of music theory in creating modern music is defunct or inhibitive. It's not weird voodoo or antiquated garbage at all. It may be for some users here, but not for many, and that is essentially my point.
For me personally, learning ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING about music and it's creation is pure enjoyment and merely adds more to my 'bag of tricks'.
WTF eh?
Cheers,
Alex

