Yeah, it's a bit aggravating how some of these artists bad mouth analog all the time. I realize that they were at the vanguard, fighting with the older equipment, tuning all the time & splicing tape, and maybe that left a bad taste in their mouths. But in "Secrets of Synthesis," Wendy seemed to just take a swipe at analog every 6 or 8 minutes, sometimes as a complete break from what she's talking about. She'll be making one point and then seemingly just do a right-angle turn to slap analog for a line or two. (She also presents "unfair" comparisons: "This is a rhythm track with a technology I *don't* like..." <<crappy samba setting on a bad drum machine>> "And here it is when I do it MY way..." <<cool timbres hopping around in a stereophonic rhythm>>.) In restoring some of her old albums, she seems continually surprised at how good they sound after decades of not even listening to them. You want to just say, "*YES*, Wendy! It was good music! We LIKED it! We LIKED those sawtooth waves going through that old reverb!" In a recent interview, Tomita was bad mouthing the old technolgy until the interviewer asked what he thought about the resurgence of interest in analog synthesis, of which Tomita seemed unaware. Then he did a 360 and started saying how he feels that he can't express himself now the way he used to with his old analog modular. ---Original--- ... the booklet contains a long paean to how much _better_ all this new digital gear is than the bad old analog ... I guess if she was trying to make real orchestral music with drifty Moog oscillators it must have gotten frustrating :)
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Yesterday Stunk; Today is Cool (was: Microtonal)
1999-11-04 by Tkacs, Ken
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