I’m glad you asked. And though ever since I discovered the EF (which saved my faith, I might add) I’ve been of the mind that it should be offered far more frequently, I would not consider myself a foe of the OF. After all, if I did, I wouldn’t be in the situation I am in today.
Music that I’d consider inappropriate, after all, is not intrinsic to the Ordinary Form of the Mass. Chant can be used, as can polyphony, as can the classic hymnody of past centuries. Yes, the OF allows much more discretion to choir directors (who really seem to have more control over the music than the priests do), but that does not mean the sublime and prayerful music of our tradition should disappear. Alas it has in many areas, and often the resources to hire cantors or organists (if they can even be found) or to train a volunteer choir aren’t there. That said, though, OF shouldn’t necessarily mean a sandwich of four Haugen or Haas ditties; I can’t really bring myself to call them hymns.
As for homilies, they’re at the celebrant’s discretion in both forms of the rite. I’ve heard erudite rhetoric in the homily at an Ordinary Form Mass. I’ve heard tired platitudes at an Extraordinary Form Mass. Now I’ve heard the latter far less often than the former, but homiletics doesn’t necessarily depend on the rite; it depends on the priest.