Why has golf course architecture had so few striking transitions / markedly different eras?
Jazz was born in America at about the same time that golf was (say, roughly around 1900), and since then it's had original/New Orleans Jazz, then Armstrong, then Big Bands and Swing, then Bop, then Cool/west coast jazz (and at about the same time, Latin/Cuban jazz), then hard Bop, then Free/modal jazz, then jazz-rock fusion etc.
I'm probably simplifying too much, missing things and getting some of it flat-out wrong; but my point is that there has been constant change/transition in jazz, and of a kind that means that no one confuses Bop with Dixieland, for example, or hard Bop with Cool jazz.
Meanwhile, in golf course architecture, there seems to have been only the "Golden Age" and then everything else, with maybe Robert Trent Jones thrown into the mix.
And while for good or ill the transition periods in jazz came with some big and often acrimonious debates amongst the proponents of the various schools, the only fundamental and acrimonious debate about golf course architecture I know of is the Crane-Behr debate.
Does that get it pretty much right? If so, what explains that? Why has one century-old form of art and entertainment had so many transitions while another century-old form or art and entertainment had so few?
Is there just that much less to 'debate' about golf course architecture? Are its principles so basically fixed that it can't change often or quickly or dramatically?
(And I think it's worth noting that for a big chunk of its history, jazz was music that also served the dancers who danced to it, just like golf architecture is an art that also serves the golfers who golf on it)
Thoughts? Groundless speculations?
Peter