Can you imagine a world built on the gospel according to Dude Where's My Car?
They may or may have discovered it, but it doesn't mean their way of putting it is the best way it was ever done.If I use classical music in Sci-Fi within the films logic (not as a score) and it plays some dozens or hundred years in the future that would mean that between Mozart and that time is no better/other music.Nowadays the classical music is one genre amongst many others. People listen to all kind of music. Why should that be any different in the future? But who are the people that listen to classical music these days. Most of them belong to the upper middle class and higher. They are well educated and seldom poor.
No, I stand by my point, if someone in Sci-Fi listens to classic music or reads Shakespeare then only because the writers wanted to point out what a well-cultured character that is.
Everybody has a basic understanding of classical music and we all hear it every day. Not because we've been over-exposed, but because it's the only truly reliable form.
There have always been alternatives to classical, but it is the only generic form of music.
Techno uses notes and arrangements, just the same, but it forces an opinion. And play it to someone from a hundred years ago if you could and you wouldn't like that opinion! They'd think they were on an alien planet.
Btw, I like some classical in small doses. I am certainly not upper class and well educated. How dare you suggest such a thing! I'm a proud geek!
I think we're coming at this from different angles. I am in complete agreement with that point and it isn't just sci-fi. A typical stereotype is the wealthy gent listening to classical music. But on the other hand, that's a restriction of modern society, that the upper classes try to present it as exclusive. The great unwashed are just as capable of enjoying this stuff, but it isn't marketed to them at all. Kind of like Julia Roberts going to the Opera in Pretty Woman!
Anyway, yes, you're quite right there. Picard springs to mind as an example.
However, I'm specifically saying, lets say you know the end of the world if coming. What would you leave as a monument to human artistic achievement, to be found by someone with absolutely no knowledge or access to history? After the end of Planet of the Apes, imagine Charlton Heston found a pile of records. What should he choose to play to the mute, animal like girl he rescued? I say Mozart, rather than West Life. Certainly not bloody Techno! Actually, scrub that, I'd find a quiet cave and teach her a different sort of rhythm...
Zefram Cochrane played Rock for the Vulcans at the end of Star Trek 8.