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From:
GamePrg.
To:
H James Harkins
Cc:
IDM
Date:
Sun, 01 Feb 1998 15:31:34 EST4EDT
Subject:
Re: (idm) guitars
Msg-Id:
<yam7336.1736.127534904@mail.clark.net>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.SOL.3.91.980201132208.2033A-100000@wduke7.acpub.duke.edu>
Mbox:
idm.9802.gz
On Sunday, 01-Feb-98, H James Harkins wrote [about (idm) guitars]:
quoted 3 lines Why is it that guitars and electronic music just don't go together?>> Why is it that guitars and electronic music just don't go together? >> For some reason whenever a guitar comes in on an electronic track >> it just sounds pretty cheesy...
quoted 10 lines In addition to the other reasons mentioned, guitars are a code for some>In addition to the other reasons mentioned, guitars are a code for some >ideas that are very difficult to integrate into an electronic aesthetic >(if they're not 100% incompatible)--such as, good old-fashioned >authenticity, defiant working-class hero kind of stuff (or the much >cheesier sort of overblown, insecure "masculinity" found in hair-metal >bands of the 80's). This might be part of why Kent suggested that the most >successful uses of guitar in electronic music depend on the avoidance of >standard guitar formulas--b/c the formulas themselves become part of that >"image," which has no place in this kind of music (except maybe an ironic >one).
well here's my .02 on the whole guitars debate.. I think it's most definitely possible, because under certain types of effects, a guitar can sound wicked as fuck. That's my .02 in a one-sentence form :) Also if you've heard the Cloudwatch CD, there's a track on there (track #8) by DJ Who and PJ Dorsey (of Modern Music).. and that's got quite a few guitar samples there, and the track rules IMO. __ __\ \ / /_\ \ \_____/ www.freq-div.home.ml.org