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From:
For Our Stenographer
To:
Michael Upton
Cc:
,
Date:
Sat, 9 Sep 1995 15:57:47 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Re: Autechre's complexity
Msg-Id:
<Pine.SUN.3.91.950909154639.9240C-100000@nethost.multnomah.lib.or.us>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.B44.3.91.950907171804.23809A-100000@tao.sans.vuw.ac.nz>
Mbox:
idm.9509.gz
On Thu, 7 Sep 1995, Michael Upton wrote:
quoted 1 line On 6 Sep 1995, Edward Pond wrote (on IDM, but I'm copying this to ambient):> On 6 Sep 1995, Edward Pond wrote (on IDM, but I'm copying this to ambient):
quoted 4 lines groups at the mo', but I get the impression very little is going on in a> groups at the mo', but I get the impression very little is going on in a > lot of their tracks. > That last track just seems to get brighter and duller, in terms of > timbre, and that's all.
Michael, that's the great thing about a techno, the new thing about it in a musical sense is that there is a developing aesthetic for music that has "timbral progression" instead of just melodic or harmonic or narrative. Part of that timbral change is done through rhymthic changes and part of it is done over actual mutation of the sounds ('brighter and duller' as you said). This is the thing we should embrace about techno as a truely new proclamation in the world of music. The lack of melody-changes and harmony-changes are intended to lock the repetitive elements of the music so you notice the timbral changes. I don't think that many techno programmers think of it this way, but that is basically what is happenning; they are tripping out on the repetitiveness of the music and (because of the instruments they use) are tweaking the timbral nature of the music. A lot of synths (old analog) have key-transposition buttons and tempo knobs, which would allow the programmers to make key changes easily enough, but there are often 10-50 other parameters (all timbrality) that are much more fun. Autechre tends to repeat patterns over 16 bars and make a series of basic chord progressions across them, and often on the '1' of each bar (listen to the pads), so there is 4/4 and 3-8 chords under there... They use mixes of 4/4 and 3/4 in the same bars, too. David Chandler - chandler@nethost.multnomah.lib.or.us (503)301-3011 grep -i casio goodwillbins >> mystudio ; grep -i atari goodwillbins >> mystudio ;