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From:
Dr. Gozra Von Peebles
To:
Sprek , Michael Morris ,
Date:
Thu, 21 Mar 2002 18:13:53 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] hey.... this song is great ++ [shifted about 67 degrees from its origin]]
Msg-Id:
<20020322021353.30938.qmail@web12504.mail.yahoo.com>
In-Reply-To:
<002501c1d115$52d195b0$6501a8c0@1sk>
Mbox:
idm.0203.gz
The only thing wrong with fruityloops is its name. I've torn across just about every piece of software and none come close to what fruityloops can do for certain aspects of creating music. Of course I don't have my own studio, but I consider my work to be much better than most "professional" releases. I'm not at all full of myself when I say this, but rather direct in what I want in composition. I think that's why many many followers of this genre make their own music. It is more or less set to a certain level of "specific taste" and thus attracts a following of listeners who know exactly what they want from music. Couple this with the availability of a slew of music making tools available to the average computer user [of this nature] and anyone can really become involved in their own music collection. Rebuild the music of others they find so appealing, and, with the help of a good sound editor, with the same quality. This of it this way: if a group of people are trying to model, say, Black Sabbath, what are the odds that their garage demo will hold the same "sound" of the real band? With the technology that is most often necessary to construct this 'idm', the 'sound' is already lived up to, by default, and the attention can be entirely focused on technique and exploring what the composer individually desires out of their music. I find it to be a very personal genre. Which brings me [finally] to my point: Why do people bother to set up "official" labels to release this sort of music on? Doesn't it seem like a tremendous amount of money goes into making everything official *looking* when the genre, lets face it, isn't about making money or about image at all? Shit, this isn't hip-hop here. Big Pimpin? Now I haven't heard every single one of Fennesz's tracks, but I highly doubt he ever gives props to his "high rollers" and "bitches" in between the clicks and bleeps of his composition. Well, Cex does, but thats really beside the point. And I read interviews with countless composers who basically say: "Share it, burn it, mix it, sample it, enjoy it........just don't claim it as your own [unless you contribute to it] or profit from it." Cdrs, as far as I can tell, contain the same audio quality as official cd's from a factory ordered by [insert indie idm label name here] in "250 pressing" amounts. Does anyone really give a damn if the next planet mu cd they order has a blue image or a silver image on its back? Pressed or burned? I don't want the next electric company release to look pretty or be packaged like nine inch nails 57th album...ahem, excuse me, "halo". In the age of cdrs, music releases can cost about $.50 to create. Sell them for $5.00 or even $10 at shows, as long as its a solid work, and make a much more deserved profit. Cover art? Go release a book. All I really care about are the names of the tracks on the release. Thanks for reading. gzvp --- Sprek <sprek@soundmangle.com> wrote:
quoted 13 lines "I'm gonna be changing my garage into a studio soon> "I'm gonna be changing my garage into a studio soon > so I'll be able to work > properly and get rid of shit like Fruityloops." > > wuts wrong with fruityloops? and if its "shit liek > fruityloops", why do you > use it? obvioulsy, there is sometihng you like about > it, if you use it. Dont > let the hype bring you down, fruityloops is the > shit. > > sprek:keith > http://spit.to/onesick
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