It's also highly unlikely that you would be exposed to no music at all before the age of six. Music exposure generally starts at age zero. Thus by the time you developed those preferences you had 6+ years of experience in music listening behind you, plus 6+ years in developing sapience and an individual personality.
I liked Brahms when I was six, as well as Beethoven and Schubert and lots of other old people music (whereas I didn't like, say, Madonna or Michael Jackson or whatever else was generally popular at the time). How could that be?! Apart from that the radio was usually tuned to a classical music station, my father liked to play Bach and Mozart and Beethoven and Chopin on the piano, and my parents got me a cassette player when I was two. (and most of the cassettes we had in the house, at the time, were either classical music, folk music or books on tape.) And we had friends who would take us to classical concerts. Et cetera. If my dad had played in a rock band instead, or the radio was tuned to the local glitch/noise/underground station or my parents had had no interest in music whatsoever etc, things would have turned out differently.
As for why I developed particular preferences within that limited field of music that I was exposed to (e.g. liked Beethoven, disliked Tchaikovsky...) I suppose that's down to the development of a personality, which in turn is basically internalised habits and judgments influenced by one's immediate environment within the first seven years of one's life (+ the womb environment + genetics).
I liked Brahms when I was six, as well as Beethoven and Schubert and lots of other old people music (whereas I didn't like, say, Madonna or Michael Jackson or whatever else was generally popular at the time). How could that be?! Apart from that the radio was usually tuned to a classical music station, my father liked to play Bach and Mozart and Beethoven and Chopin on the piano, and my parents got me a cassette player when I was two. (and most of the cassettes we had in the house, at the time, were either classical music, folk music or books on tape.) And we had friends who would take us to classical concerts. Et cetera. If my dad had played in a rock band instead, or the radio was tuned to the local glitch/noise/underground station or my parents had had no interest in music whatsoever etc, things would have turned out differently.
As for why I developed particular preferences within that limited field of music that I was exposed to (e.g. liked Beethoven, disliked Tchaikovsky...) I suppose that's down to the development of a personality, which in turn is basically internalised habits and judgments influenced by one's immediate environment within the first seven years of one's life (+ the womb environment + genetics).
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