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Re: Popularity/influence/etc.



altruist@earthlink.net writes:

>One big problem with "popularizing" looping is that there really needs
>to be a visual and/or sonic representation of the process itself, in
>order for the real-time aspect to be fully understood.
in part, this explains my (long-spoken) desire for some kinda controller 
that 
is more visceral than  a ft-pedal/midi-ctrlr, both from the performer's 
and 
the audience's perpective.....
  
>Torn playing on
>a Bowie or Tori album is great, but if people are just listening to the
>end result, are they going to appreciate that the sounds they're hearing
>were done (at least in part) in real time? 
(99.99% realtime)
quick answer: no.
 
>And if they do, will it make
>them want to buy a $600 hardware box with a fundamental learning curve,
>rather than a $200 copy of Ableton Live or ACID?  
well..... if the reality of the process is *known*, they'd then likely be 
aware that said process ---at the moment --- precludes a pure-software 
solution, eh?

>In other words, is there anything about the actual sonic result that
>will offer something that can be substantially distinct from what can be
>done in a standard step-time studio assembly manner?  
personally: i cannot recreate this (chimerical/mercurial/evolutionary) 
process in sw, thus far, so.....

>This to me is one of the fundamental challenges - not just in a
>promotion/advertising sense, but in a purely creative and aesthetic one.
> Can you actually accomplish a MUSICAL or PERFORMATIVE result with these
>tools that WOULDN'T be possible by just playing a pre-recorded backing
>track or spending a few days splicing and dicing on a computer?
just to muddle thisall a bit further:
'a few days splicing and dicing'.....
what we can do in (almost) real-time can take hours/days/weeks/etc to 
recreate in a sw-solution.....
add'ly, there's the very key factor of the musicality and manipulation of 
the 
input-instruments.....
  
>Just
>because you CAN do this stuff in real time, is there any intrinsic
>musical result that truly TAKES ADVANTAGE of the real-time angle?
i think that there is no intrinsic musical result, but for the performer's 
ability to interact w/the instrument.....
  
>Can
>you inspire people to WANT to take the time to learn the physical and
>mental technique of using a real-time looper, when they could just
>endlessly manipulate pre-packaged drum loops in a software sequencer 
>instead?
..... and up pops the specter of player-dom:
what is the depth of interactivity 'tween player/input 
instrument(s)/looping 
instrument?

>Influence/popularity/etc... I understand where everyone's coming from,
>and I think everybody's right in a way.  There's no age limit in terms
>of when any person can start or stop being influenced by another artist,
oh, good! 'cause i'm ageing faster and faster, these days.....

>but that isn't really what Kim's talking about.  What he's describing is
>a certain social/cultural/commercial critical mass that occurs when a
>particular idea is delivered in a sufficiently appealing way to make a
>large number of people want to emulate that idea.
right.

>So you have Jimi Hendrix playing the Stratocaster, which prior to his
>break was a pretty unpopular guitar on the verge of being discontinued.
untrue!

>Then Jimi comes along and it becomes what is probably the most popular
>electric guitar of all time.
true!
  
>Or you have the Beatles come along, and
>suddenly everybody who was at a certain age in 1964 wants to start a
>band.  Or Van Halen gets big, and then you've got ten years of
>pointy-shaped guitars with flashy graphics, ten humbuckers, and Floyd
>Rose Whammy bars.  
eek.

>Then Nirvana is huge, and instrument makers start going for neo-retro
>kitsh designs to reel in kids who are embarassed by the pointy shred
>machines and want to play pawnshop Jaguars instead.  And then nu-metal
>bands start playing seven string Ibanez guitars which had been passe'
>just a few years ago (much as Kurt Cobain's Fenders were considered
>hopelessly unhip during the years when the Ibanez 7-strings were first
>shipping), and now lots of kids are buying 7-strings so they can play
>nu-metal tunes in their bedroom.  
oh.

>But here again, in each case there's both a musical and a visual
>signifier to each of these movements that people can latch onto.  The
>pawn-shop Jaguar is an apt metaphor for where a lot of the grunge guys
>were coming from musically, just like the pointy Jackson guitar with the
>graphic of the chick in the bikini on the front made sense being played
>by a hair-metal band singing songs about the virtues of 17-year-old
>girls.  
wow.

>I'm already boring myself, so I'll continue this in another post....
please do!
'i'm upstairs, listenin' to my will smith'.....
best,
dt / s-c