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| Mr. Rich, your thoughts? In spite of the man oh man vote, I think this is a valuable conversation which those of us who ae interested in such things can take offline as we see fit. But as long as the lord of the manor feels it's fit for the dinner table, I don't see why those who could care less can't delete. I admire the Wiard list for their ability to carry on tangents and we've been civil enough so far. If I pick up a TB303 and a LinnDrumm (or sit right here and use Cakewalk and my modular) and do Bach's "Little Prelude" and you're going to evaluate it as good or bad are you going to say "Gosh that's a nice tonicization of the dominant there" or are you going to say "Sounds like acid, what crap!" If Jack Dangers quoted that piece with a backbeat in a musical context would Ken have picked up on the quote or sniffed at the orchestration? There is a school of thought here that holds up icons ("Synergy", Tomita, etc.) or imitative synthesis as aspirations like we're in art school sketching Monet's haystacks. Those samples are nice and clearly a lot of time and effort went into them, but not one is a complete composition or tells me anything other than "sounds like a recorder". I have plenty of Harmonia Mundi records with recorder that make my butt wiggle all troubadour-style. What the heck do you want me to take away from these? They helped sell me on almost three cabinets' modules, but not because I'm going to one-up some well-sexed French dude in tights. What access to technology has done, and has been doing since valves were added to instruments (pathetic bassoon players can't play a horn without holes and valves by adjusting the embouchure... a real controversy at one time), is broaden the availability to the tools of expression. Can Golijov play any of the miriad instruments for which he composes? If he writes a rough in Cakewalk with the rest of us boys to hear how it comes out, how is the performance I hear changed? Did Ken, sitting down in front samples of Jack Dangers do a Schenkerian analysis, offer a well-thought exposition on the timbre of the samples? No. Your synthesizer does not make me a better artist. It broadens the range of expression and it's my place to utilize that range as best I can. If your parents' paints made the artists I'll happily search out their works and proffer my opinions. Give me the HOW of a piece and we'll take a comparable composition out of what Chicago has to offer, I'll buy your plane ticket, I'll feed you fabulously well for a weekend, and you can expand my artistic horizons. (Time it for AHMW next year and you can debut something brilliant.) As for your last paragraph, let Ken offer one song. Forget a CD. He's bloviated on enough forums, been chastized elsewhere for the same. I'll offer one in return. Let's open it up to everyone, put a deadline on it. We can sit down, do a Schenkerian analysis, we can talk voice leading, analyze timbres, and debate until we're blue in the fingers. And we can discuss whose piece hits you in the gut. And it's good for the business. MOTM, the thinking musicians' modular. I'm more than willing to lose the challenge, teach me something. Ken? Money meet mouth, eric f --- On Thu, 9/11/08, Paul Schreiber <synth1@...> wrote:From: Paul Schreiber <synth1@...> |