I see music on the golf course as more of a "respect issue". If when playing you are thinking only of yourself and your own experience, you'll see no problem in playing music...not even understanding how it might affect the experience of others on the golf course. If you are thinking respectfully of others, you wouldn't ever do that, surmising (correctly) that many would rather enjoy a walk in nature without noise pollution (and that a respectful person would not want to impose their will on others and steal that experience from them). To me, it is about respect...for the game, and especially for others.
This is Bay Hill week and it brings me back to all that Arnie did for the game and for the tour. I remember hearing stories from past Bay Hill Invitationals where during the practice round days, Arnie would walk up and down the range and pull some tour pros aside and ask them to shave their faces for his event. Arnie reasoned that tour pros had in important image to represent as members of the PGA Tour (and the "P" stands for professional). Arnie (and others) invested heavily into making the PGA Tour something they could all be proud of. Arnie would remind these young pros that some fan might be seeing that pro play for the first and only time in their life...and he wanted the fan to walk away impressed with the entire experience.
During the event at Riviera, I noticed a young tour pro wearing sweat pants, no socks and an untucked shirt. I wondered who decided "couch wear" was now acceptable on the PGA tour (Arnie would not pleased, that is for sure). Seems to me that more tour players than not choose not to shave their face during the event (and I'm not talking about the guys with beards, but rather the guys who just don't choose to shave for a few days). Arnie has lost this battle, that is for sure. I had some young people I respect tell me that we need to allow "couch wear" and the no shave look, as it is a means to "grow the game". I have a hard time with this (and with music on the golf course). If growing the game means bringing people into the game who don't respect others, and specifically those who have given much to the game, is that the kind of "growth" we truly need?
TS