The 730 was designed for you, then, Greg! It's all about rhythms,
ploy and otherwise...
--- In motm@yahoogroups.com, Greg Amann <greg.amann@s...> wrote:
> Unlike Paul H, I am primarily interested in rhythm (which makes sense
> since I am a drummer). I do not confuse rhythm with the 4/4 thumping we
> hear on the radio (and I am not implying that Paul H does). Music does
> not generally translate into words very easily, but I think of
rhythm as
> "forward motion" or "momentum". A sense of the inevitable.
>
> I love "un-pitched" sounds. I have a cymbal collection including two
> gongs.
>
> I disagree that music in hardwired. It seems that way to us because it
> means so much to us. There are plenty of people for whom music is like
> wallpaper. Music may be cultural.
>
> I am interested in music that I am interested in and I try not to judge
> other things going on in the world but I am almost never successful and
> find that I judge Britney et al. constantly. I am learning to live
with
> this character defect. I would guess that I am interested in aboot
> 0.0001% of the music produced. To get a general idea of where my
> beauty/pain threshold lies, listen to recent King Crimson or early
Magma.
>
> I have no desire to challenge anyone other than myself.
>
> I love the internet since it allows me to engage in learned debate with
> people of similar ilk and thereby rise above the primitive beasties.
>
> I am selling a lot of stuff on eBay to pay for my MOTM. Boy, do I need
> a power supply!
>
> PLL, BFG
> (Peace, light and love, Big Fat Greg)
>
> Mike Marsh wrote:
>
> > Thank you thank you thank you! This is what I was hoping would come
> > of my earlier post. I am intensely interested in why/how/what other
> > people do in synthesis, and this is a keen insight indeed.
> >
> > I think we are after the same thing, ultimately: beautiful music. I
> > also think that there is a very large social/cultural component to
> > people's response to music and what is beautiful or not. Some of it
> > is indeed hard-wired, some of it not. I want to, um, "challenge" the
> > ear sometimes, although I grant you that I'm rearely successful in
> > passing it off as 'beautiful" :> even though I sincerely believe it
> > myself.
> >
> > What about it folks? How/why/what do the rest of you do?
> >
> > Mike
> >
> > --- In motm@yahoogroups.com, "paulhaneberg" <phaneber@o...> wrote:
> > > That was a great post by Mike. I thought maybe I would explain as
> > > well what I am after with my synth, since it is somewhat different
> > > than what Mike does.
> > >
> > > My long term goal is to produce albums of synthesized music. The
> > > type of synthesis that I am interested in is the antithesis of
> > > techno or industrial type music. I am not particularly interested
> > > in rhythm. I love sounds that are pleasing to the ear, or to put it
> > > another way are aesthetic.
> > >
> > > I have spent a good deal of time studying what exactly makes a sound
> > > fall into this category. Its not just consonance, it can also
> > > involve resolving dissonance. It's about combinations of harmonics
> > > and patterns of notes and how they relate to each other.
> > >
> > > I am terribly interested in the synthesis of traditional
> > > instruments, not so much because I want to replicate them, but
> > > because I want to understand why their sound is pleasing. If
> > > traditional instruments were not pleasant sounding they would never
> > > have lasted for hundreds of years. The synthesizer is still very
> > > young, but it is certainly very capable. This is not to say that I
> > > don't like or appreciate other styles and other directions. But I
> > > have always been attrracted to music that involves building
> > > sonorities and that involves symmetry.
> > >
> > > I believe that music is something that is hardwired into the brain,
> > > and that there are certain sounds and combinations of sounds that
> > > can impart specific emotions.
> > >
> > > So, my goal when I play around with my synth is to create sounds
> > > that I can combine to produce an emotional response in the listener.
> > >
> > > Paul Haneberg
> >
> >
> >
> >
------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > ∗Yahoo! Groups Links∗
> >
> > ∗ To visit your group on the web, go to:
> > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/motm/
> >
> > ∗ To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
> > motm-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
> > <mailto:motm-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com?subject=Unsubscribe>
> >
> > ∗ Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
> > Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/>.
> >
> >