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From:
Dan Haskovec
To:
N. Graham Worthington
Cc:
Date:
Thu, 31 Jul 2003 12:19:12 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Re: IDM-ish mix
Msg-Id:
<Pine.LNX.4.33.0307311214400.813-100000@charm>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.GSO.4.44L.01.0307301132190.9452-100000@solaris1.gl.umbc.edu>
Mbox:
idm.0307.gz
I bet this kind of debate took place in the realm of music recording as well when studio production started to take off and a "recording" became more than a live capture of what went down in a studio. I can respect that point of view, and "live" tracks can have something special going for them that's hard to invoke in a track which is assembled and manipulated in a studio. That doesn't make the studio method less valid or interesting, just different. On Wed, 30 Jul 2003, N. Graham Worthington wrote:
quoted 31 lines On 28 Jul 2003 dj m <djm_freebeats@yahoo.com> wrote:> On 28 Jul 2003 dj m <djm_freebeats@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > couldn't disagree with you more. i consider a DJ mix > > more than the sum of its parts- it's a live recording > > of a performance. as soon as i find out a mix was > > done on the computer i completely lose interest in it. > > and part of the fun of studio mixes is doing it over > > until you get it the way you want it! :) dave > > "as soon as i find out a mix was done on the computer i completely lose > interest in it." > > Are you implying you are less than perfect at detecting if a mix was done > on a computer through listening alone? If so, what does that say about > your decision-making process? > > Call me old fashioned, but I have always decided what music interested me > by my own subjective emotional and intellectual response to the audio > itself. I have never decided what interested me by evaluating how it got > from the artist's or DJ's head into my ears. > > Maybe, if I heard the best track _ever_ and then found out the sample > material was derived from the sounds of dying children, or some really > cute puppy dogs getting run through a meat grinder, or something else > involving uninvited violence, I might change my mind on that position. > > N. > > PS Whoever has that tagline that says "when dogma enters the brain, all > intellectual activity ceases" (or something like that) -- you're dead on, > mate.
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