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From:
Arjun Mendiratta
To:
Ben Coffer
Cc:
Date:
Mon, 4 Aug 1997 20:42:02 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Re: (idm) the black dog (spanners)
Msg-Id:
<Pine.HPP.3.95.970804203219.14689A-100000@frappe.ugcs.caltech.edu>
In-Reply-To:
<$jcUpAAUSL5zEwJT@hybridgame.demon.co.uk>
Mbox:
idm.9708.gz
I wrote:
quoted 4 lines I picked up Bytes after (the admittedly brilliant) Spanners and was> >I picked up Bytes after (the admittedly brilliant) Spanners and was > >initially disappointed as well. Bytes doesn't have nearly the rhythmic > >complexity, timbral variety, or compositional develpoment of Spanners. >
and then Ben Coffer replied:
quoted 3 lines Uh? that's obvious isn't it? Bytes came *before* Spanners, an artist> Uh? that's obvious isn't it? Bytes came *before* Spanners, an artist > develops their talent thru time/experience not randomly. >
to which i say: Well of course, except that the jump from Bytes to Spanners seemed to be more of a quantum leap than an artistic progression. Bytes sounds to me like most good techno (for lack of a better word) but much better; i.e. it's simply a matter of finding the right loops to go with the right chord progressions to go with the right timbres, and put the changes in the right places. Much of Spanners, on the other hand, seems to have been made in a completely different manner. Most of the time, it doesn't follow the standard build-it-up, pile on the layers convention of techno. There is ebb and flow, development, and timbral variety within individual tracks. Every note, every choice is deliberate. Unlike Bytes or Parallel or Temple, Spanners could never really be the source of a remix album. Which is a good thing in my book. -arjun http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~arjun