Mike - hope you don't mind a side-bar, as I think/hope it's relevant:
Late in his career, Teddy Wilson (famed jazz pianist) had a nightly gig with his trio at a New York city club. Whenever any of the top singers of the day were in town, they'd invariably come in to listen and then 'sit in' for a couple of songs. So over the years, he ended up playing with all the greats. A reporter once asked him: who was the best? Who was the best singer you played with? Wilson answered: "Frank Sinatra". And then (and for me this is the key point), when the reporter asked him why, Wilson answered "Because he *loved* to sing".
That has always struck me. Think of that: Wilson wasn't talking about run of the mill singers, let alone amateurs. He was talking about the most famous and popular *professionals* of his time. They were all good at their crafts and they all had long careers, and so you'd think (at least, I did) that they *all* loved to sing. But that wasn't the case. Wilson went on to say that all of them *liked* to sing, and that they all worked hard at it, and they all appreciated their careers and knew what it took to stay on top; but that didn't mean that they loved the art of signing. For the majority of them, it had long ago become a job -- a very pleasant and profitable job, but a job nonetheless. In this, Sinatra stood out; he actually just loved to sing.
And you know, I think the casual listener and the untrained musician and the average fan (and I'm all of those) can *tell*. I'd never have thought of it unless Wilson said it, but I can tell that Sinatra loved singing, and that he knew and deeply appreciated the great songs themselves. (When you hear him in live recordings, he is always saying things like: "This is a very beautiful song, a very pretty song, written by the great Cole Porter and arranged by the best young arranger working today, Mr. Quincy Jones"). Whether it was a heart-breaking ballad that he sang unaccompanied or an up-tempo swing number with the Basie band, he threw himself completely into the song. Yes, he had "technique" and yes he had "trained" his voice -- but all that training and technique was in the service of something bigger, ie that love, that joy in singing a great song as well as he possibly could.
In the many courses (by many architects) you've played over the years, do you think you can similarly tell which of those professionals, even among the greats, actually *loved* golf and golf course architecture?
Peter