T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1362.1 | getting your act together and putting on diskette | PLDVAX::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Mon May 09 1988 10:06 | 26 |
| Yeah, my brother told me last week. I don't know why he knew.
What's so interesting is that this still won't help amatuer singers
sing better.
In short, MIDI doesn't replace musical knowledge and skill, any
more
than having a VAX replaces knowledge of structured design or
particular languages.
(if you want to do developement, which is what composers do).
MIDI can be an orchestra, but it can't make the arrangements for
you; and you need extensive knowledge to make good arrangements.
Digital audio media such as compact disks and DAT can
help you distribute high-fidelity recordings of your off-key singing.
Electronics can do only part of the job, and in my opinion many
of the amatuer midi-ists spend too much time programming patches
and too little time studying counterpoint.
On the other hand, those with musical knowledge and skill and money
(an unlikely combination, since keeping up your chops and developing
as a musician is a full-time job, and no money, whereas a job that
pays money keeps you away from music) will be able to make dynamite
audition tapes and small recording companies (provided they get
distribution). Computers can also help with distribution in typing
nice press kits, press releases, resumes, introductory letters,
and with graphics, posters, programs, and cassette covers.
But you still sing off-key, so so what?
Tom
|
1362.2 | I don't think it's evil... | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Since when do electrons carry charge? | Mon May 09 1988 10:55 | 25 |
| > still sing off key. So what?
So buy one of the Eventide boxes that pitch-shifts the singing to
be ON-key. Then you'll be on-key and digital-clean. So of course
it'll be a cinch to sell a million copies of your garage band playing
on-key 60's acid rock, right? :-)
------------
I don't view this commonization of music-making as necessarily bad.
The number of people who can perform live versus step-time sequence and
multitrack will decrease; but overall you'll have more people thinking
_about_ what's good musically, rather than simply accepting X because
that's the way Beethoven/Chuck Berry/Buck Dharma happened to record it
once.
I expect you'll see more people reading books on music theory (can't
break the rules till you know the rules, eh?). Maybe we'll even
see how-to videos like "Jane Fonda's Harmonic Workout". :-)
Maybe somebody will even (can I say this here?) take music _lessons_??
:-) :-) :-)
-Bill
|
1362.3 | Trad ways of composition | HEART::MACHIN | | Mon May 09 1988 11:12 | 6 |
| RE: steptime vs 'real time' debate
Mahler used to write in step-time, using a pencil, a piece of paper
and a metronome.
Richard.
|
1362.4 | Back to the subject | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Let's keep sax and violins on TV | Mon May 09 1988 12:29 | 26 |
|
re: .0
Yes, I heard that too. Given the state of the DAT market in the
U.S. (virtually non-existent), I find it difficult to believe that
the record industry is going to take this lying down. Whether or
not Tandy gets the box out (I had heard of technical troubles -
BTW an article was in U.S. News and World Report a.k.a U.S.Spews)
in the near future, there are going to be lots of impacted industries,
not just the home recording and computing "industry".
I believe a special CD disk is required too, and it lets you erase
them as well.
I also have heard that more and more CD players are going to make
use of the subcode standard and provide interfacing (and probably
copy protection) via the subcodes. Any comments?
Re: .1
So true, but then again, it's their choice. If you want to spend
kilobucks to make high-quality garbage, it's a free country, right?
And you don't need to listen to it.
/pjh
|
1362.5 | Thermal recording | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | Zeitgeist Zoology | Mon May 09 1988 12:40 | 11 |
| The new CD's work using a thermal layer that distorts. You write
to it from the top, this creates a dimple on the surface. The read
laser is scattered by the dimple, thus acting much like the pits
on regular CD's. You erase by heating the disk. It is only bulk
erasable. The record companies are not scared of this technology,
because the disks are expected to cost about $25 each, about twice
what it costs to go out and buy the regular CD.
DAT may just bite the dust before ever getting off the ground.
John.
|
1362.6 | Price?? | NEXUS::J_MOLLER | | Mon May 09 1988 13:32 | 12 |
| I remember when 5 1/4 inch floppies were $4.50 each (they can be
had for under a doller these days), so the initial $25.00 a pop
may not last long. I'm sure once some enterprising cut-throat
marketing group jumps in, they'll be down to $5.00 a piece (tho
this may take a few years). Sounds like these will be useful in
generating your own digital masters & they will work fine on the
current crop of CD players. $500.00 is a reasonable price for starting
your own record company. I'll bet that with the proper lobbying
in congress, we can all get subsidized to make our own CD (thus
thwarting the Japanese owned Record companies).
Jens
|
1362.7 | Sound Quality is very important to me! | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Tue May 10 1988 10:02 | 13 |
| I'm sure the projected price is $25 just to keep the record companies off
their back. Once it is out, they'll drop the price.
re: .1
No, it won't help you sing in tune. But what about those who can?
Look, the message is a function of the media. When I sit down and play
my guitar through a 5-dollar amplifier, it sounds like crapola, and my
motivation dwindles. Play through a powerful, clear, crisp amp and the
compositions just start flowing.
Now, who's going into the CD sleeve printing business?
Todd.
|