There's at least one other here

I'm off at the other end of the classical spectrum though. I'm mostly into renaissance and medieval music, but I do enjoy some more modern stuff occasionally. I play your cello's old cousin - viola da gamba.
Music is music and if you can play things you enjoy, you are where you need to be. Classical requires rapid sight reading! That's something I gave up years ago. There weren't any scores that captured what was being played on guitar in the Top 40 charts. Tab came along and I will use one occasionally, but I pick it up by ear these days pretty easily. After all, there's only 12 notes in a scale. How hard can it be to copy?
My interest in early music started with Jethro Tull's 'Bouree' (Bach)... that and, around that time, a friend gave me a John Renbourn tape. I love how bands were mixing genres back then. I was about to start complaining about how new stuff lacks that kind of creativity... but then I realized it's still happening plenty; just not in the top 40 crap.
The Allman Brothers made me start using all the notes in the scale, introduced me to chords I had never heard, and taught me how to improvise in a new way. I credit Duane and Dickie for that ... and Carlos Santana ... and Jimi Hendrix ... heck, I could go on all night. We are all continuations of what went before. Bach and Beethoven still live.
Last night I was playing a medieval piece on viol (one of the Cantigas de Santa Maria), and the whole family eventually joined in... my wife got out her violin, 6 yr. old son picked up a frame drum, and 20 month son ran around squeaking on a recorder. We kept it going for quite a while. Afterward our 6 yr. old son said that from now on, every night after dinner, Dad will play viola da gamba, Mom will play violin, and he will play drum.