Maurice Ravel's "Bolero" and our educational complex: To evaluate means to create

In this article, I tried to compare Maurice Ravel's immortal work, Bolero, with our educational complex.
The Grand Opera House in Paris was packed on November 22, 1928. That day was the premiere of Maurice Ravel’s “Bolero,” which captivated and hypnotized the audience with the same melody repeating continuously for 15 minutes through its simplicity and directness, and simultaneously heralding the increasing and overwhelming pace of science and technology in the 20th century. At the end, when everyone was applauding vigorously and shouting “bravo,” a woman screamed in a much higher and shrill voice: “He’s mad, he’s mad!” Maurice Ravel responded to this outcry: “How correctly she understood my music. More on Yura Ganjalyan's blog.