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Fri, 8 Sep 2000 18:19:22 +0100 (GMT+01:00)
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Re: [idm] who sounds like whom
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Except that you?ll have to change "she" to "he" in 99 cases of 100.... -----Original Message----- From : Josh Davison <yoshi@enteract.com> To : idm@hyperreal.org Date : 08 September 2000 16:42:15 Subject : Re: [idm] who sounds like whom On Fri, 8 Sep 2000, cranket . wrote:
quoted 49 lines point is they all resemble autechre in some way, much like a rock band>> point is they all resemble autechre in some way, much like a rock band >> resembles other rock bands in some way, what differences can be found is who >> is creating good songs. > >exactly. > >the thing that you people jumping all over these bands for ?sounding like >autechre? have to realize is that what you are picking up on in many cases >is just the fact that they use the same tools and techniques to create the >music. every guitar player that uses a Big Muff pedal on a solo ?sounds >like Hendrix? > >of course any band as influential as autechre are going to have other >musicians take away some of that influence. it's called evolution. some >of you on this list might have heard of it. the first cro-magnon who >figured out how to make a spear probably showed it to another cro-magnon, >who recognized it as a good technique and *GASP* copied it. perhaps you >noticed how much influence mozart took from bach. or how much Georges >Braques and Picasso's early works resemble eachother. Or how Microsoft >Windows copied MacOS who copied some experimental Xerox UI. Or how every >major auto manufacturer copied Henry Ford's assembly line production >model. > >now consider a young upstart electronic musician. she has been listening >to ?IDM? for a while and now she wants to make some. Now she's got some >gear and she's read the instruction manuals but still has no idea how to >use it artistically. So she sets about trying to come up with something >that sounds familiar to her. Derivative or not, she is now making music >that sounds good to her. Eventually, as her skills evolve the music starts >sounding less and less like that of other artists and more and more like >her own personal style. > >This is a regular part of the process of artistic evolution and should be >recognized as such. > >-Josh > >-- >String Theory : Digital Music for Humans >http://www.enteract.com/~yoshi/index.cgi > > > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > >
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