i remember solor's music being more immediate.
could you use more descriptive adjectives bernie?
you often infuriate me 
then i look in the mirror - and cry.
Most people would agree that grass is green.
However this is not true. Grass is not green. Green is the name we give to a visual sensation we experience when we look at grass. As such, “green” is not a quality of grass, but rather a description of one’s internal experience. It has nothing to do with grass and it has everything to do with one’s inner sensations.
Incidentally, a deep consequence of the above, is that there is no way to check that what everyone calls green, is indeed green, or even the same colour. By the way this has little to do with daltonism. If you find difficult to follow, I will elaborate.
The point of this apparent digression is that adjectives are never descriptive of the noun to which they are attached. Adjectives are labels for our inner experiences when faced with the realities nouns label.
Therefore, to say that a piece of music is beautiful says absolutely nothing about the music, and says everything about my reaction to it: On hearing that piece of music I experience an internal sensation that I learned to call beautiful. Adjectives are not about the thing being qualified, they are about the person doing the qualification.
So to apply adjectives to the composers above would be to talk about myself (a most uninteresting subject), not about the music. Besides there is no guarantee that my description of my reaction to the music would be accurate, or that you would experience the same sensations as I may describe.
If you now look at most of the threads dealing with favourite pieces, composers, religious matters, etc. you may be amazed that no one is really talking about these subjects. They are mostly talking about themselves and their reactions to these subjects. In fact you can learn quite a lot about each member of the forum by looking at their adjective usage. Once you become aware of this fact, you may wish to be very careful with the words you use. I am. (And if you could see me now, you would perhaps detect a sinister air about myself he he

)
Best wishes,
Bernhard.