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Andre sent this in for our consideration: -------------------- "Software instruments never stop changing, never stop offering up more of those infinite possibilities we're always hearing about. Compare the situation with, say, playing an acoustic guitar. Years of practice are necessary before you really begin to discover the hidden potential inside that rounded box with six metal strings and a hole. But right off the bat, software instruments - especially modular ones like Max/MSP and Reaktor - provide a dizzying number of powerful effects. This makes it easy to endlessly tweak your material rather than to accept the constraints that partly define the act of composition. And this is particularly true when you can tinker not only with the sound but with the virtual machine that makes the sound. "There are two approaches you can take with your music software," says Gerhard Behles, who quit Monolake in order to run Ableton full-time. "One is to consider your tools as fixed. The other is to control the tools themselves. That gives you a much bigger lever. But it can keep you from ever doing music again." Joshua Clayton programs for Cycling '74 and remains captivated by the nitty-gritty processing available in environments like Max/MSP. Clayton also has concerns about the aesthetic attitude that such programs can produce. "I find that people who use Max and similar programs often aspire to be the god behind the universe, to come up with a formal system that's completely under their control. Some people can't wait to get everything inside the computer so they can generate some kind of utopian music that's all contained within the machine." ************************************************** This is fascinating stuff to ponder and I can see the dangers in living in the software environment and , indeed, no many artists, who never even produce any music for people because they are trying to stay on top of the expansion of software that is continual. I, however, also sense a wierd sense of deja vu recalling the judgemental response of many 'old school' acoustic guitarists when encountering Les Paul's first experiments with that new fangled 'gimmicky' technology called the magnetic pickup. Thank God, Dre' (for your fascinating music) that you went with the instrument innovator's approach. If you decide that you never want to do anything but keep exploring a non-processed guitar through an EDP or two, more power to you. I know you'll create really cool music with your approach. It doesn't have to negate an artist who just can't wait to get and master the latest mangling plugin software. Two different instruments. Two different musicians...............Viva la difference! Peace, Rick