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From:
Andrew Duke Cognition Audioworks
To:
, IDM list
Date:
Mon, 06 Dec 2004 23:55:10 -0400
Subject:
Re: [idm] Proper venue for IDM listening
Msg-Id:
<41B5299E.60101@cognitionaudioworks.com>
In-Reply-To:
<41B525B4.1050708@ezrpm.com>
Mbox:
idm.0412.gz
On Sun, 5 Dec 2004 12:51:05 -0800 (PST), Ed Colmar <ed@greengraphics.net> wrote:
quoted 18 lines I performed last night at a three room warehouse party in oakland.>> >> >>> I performed last night at a three room warehouse party in oakland. >>> There >>> was a ton of bleed from the other two rooms into the IDM oriented >>> room. I >>> felt this killed a lot of the subtelty of the music, and really >>> discouraged listening. >>> >>> At least with my stuff, there is a lot of work with silence, and >>> crevices... All of which are lost and meaningless when other >>> soundsystems >>> are taking up the aural space.... >>> >>> How do other people feel about this? How do other artists/promoters >>> deal >>> with it? >>
Ed: I'm lucky enough to play out live very often and thus have experience in a variety of situations. I try to suss things out at soundcheck and try to do a set that works with the space (or if you don't get a soundcheck, suss things out when you show up at the venue before going on). ie on a recent tour a couple of the gigs had absolute shit sound systems, so I played less tracks with bass cos I knew they'd sound like shit anyway. And at venues where I planned on doing something quieter, when I saw (in the time before I went on) that the crowd weren't really there for the music (more to socialize/drink), I changed my game plan. At events where it is loud (people talking, drinking, moving about, etc), I'll play more rhythmic/louder stuff, whereas in an art gallery space or a place where people are paying attention to the music and not talking louder than it, I'll take advantage of that and play my quieter/ambient/listening type of stuff. So maybe save your work with silences for the art galleries and listening oriented spaces where those there will appreciate it and for warehouses and parties play more "full" material. Playing quiet music in a noisey space will only lead to frustation on your part and the flip of that can lead to frustration on the crowd's side (though sometimes that is a good thing! :)) Hope this helps. Take care and good luck with the future sets, Ed. Andrew -- Andrew Duke scoring/sound design/source http://andrew-duke.com Cognition Audioworks label [Andrew Duke, Foal, Clinker, Granny'Ark] http://cognitionaudioworks.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org