ity. As the glut of electronic product continues, do you think
> in the
> next few years the preferred sound might be a "live" one once again?
>
in my opinion...
i believe the connection between the digital artist and the analog
artist will blossom beyond our wildest dreams.
we're finally getting to the point where you can produce quality
sounding music at an affordable price. alteast more affordable than
studio rental. even if this means taking out a loan that costs $20 a
week for 3 years you'll get more time in the studio to progress as a
sound engineer/musician/producer than you would renting $30 per hour
studio time. (if you don't get side tracked by all the "toys" )
rushed studio sessions have spawned alot of great things, and i think
with peoples tendancy to procrastinate we'll still find deadlines to
meet.
the only thing i have a hard time with is you have to make a sound
booth, drum baffles, etc...
i could have taken this thread a different direction than it was
intended.
the electronic music i've been working on is imn my computer totally.
it takes alot of work to cut and paste an original track together that
isn't based on slapping together loops. ever tryed to write a melody
with a mouse? it sucks. the keyboard or trigger need to be there. or
a MPC or something. i briong this up beacause at that point you're
playing an instument.
i think one thing to think about is making the electronic live P.A.
work...
my thoughs. any one care to comment?
brad
=====
"easy now, mr. chicken"
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Thu Aug 16 2001 - 05:10:53 CEST