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At 03:11 AM 11/26/99 -0200, you wrote: >>technology must always be a servant to music and creativity, not the >other >>way around. >> How could it be otherwise? Not being a smartass here. Please explain. >From reading the discourse on 'effects as crutch' it seems to me that >there are (at least) two major takes on this. The first is that music is something apart from sound -- sound is something you 'do to' music after the fact. Along with this, 'effects' are something apart from a musical instrument, added after the fact. The second take -- and the one I support -- is that music and sound are all of a piece, and everything you use to make sound/music constitutes a musical instrument. Many stompboxes, fx, software packages, or what have you are strong and expressive musical instruments in their own right. Saying that an artist's use of effects constitutes a 'crutch' may just be another way of saying that an artist has a sonic/concrete focus where timbre and texture are dominant rather than pitch and duration. Not a thing wrong with that, IMHO -- in fact, adopting a sonic focus is a choice that has only recently become available for the majority of musicians, and offers considerably more unexplored territory to plumb. rob