T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1976.1 | The universally accepted definition | ANT::JANZEN | T - 500 picoseconds and counting | Wed Apr 26 1989 16:29 | 2 |
| Computer music is music made for computers to listen to.
Tom
|
1976.2 | No need for further discussion. | RAD1::DAVIS | | Wed Apr 26 1989 16:41 | 6 |
| RE: .1
Well, I guess that just about says it all.
Next topic ...
|
1976.3 | see, there *is* a simple answer ... | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 227-3299, 223-3326 | Wed Apr 26 1989 17:05 | 10 |
| No, no, no ...
Computer music is music made with a something that has digital
electronics on board. Ideally, it should not be ideal, 'cause then
it would lack sensitivity. And, it's better if it's an analog
computer with no digital electronics. And, the listener doesn't
*have* to be a computer, but the ability to count on one's fingers
*is* requisite even if it's only one finger ...
Steve
|
1976.4 | Can I use a digital metronome? | DFLAT::DICKSON | twang and toot, not beep or thud | Wed Apr 26 1989 17:26 | 10 |
| Well then, my tape deck has a microprocessor controller inside, and my tuner
does too (LCD readout and everything). I guess anything I produce with them is
"computer music". How about if I write the score on my Mac, does that count
too?
Here's a tricky one, as I plan to do exactly this: what if I use a
sequencer-driven synth to lay down scratch tracks which are one-by-one
replaced with acoustic performances of the same material? The sequencer and
synth sure had a major part in the production, even though you don't hear them
directly in the final product.
|
1976.5 | | TALK::HARRIMAN | You're wierd, Sir. | Wed Apr 26 1989 17:30 | 4 |
|
Re: .-1
Computer-assisted Music Production?
|
1976.6 | | RAD1::DAVIS | | Wed Apr 26 1989 18:01 | 36 |
|
If you'd asked what "electronic music" was, I think I could answer
that one. My definition would be any music that utilizes
electronic instruments/methods, and couldn't be made with
"traditional" instruments. This includes tape manipulation (loops,
musique concrete), and much of the music made with the original
analog synths (Buchla, ARP 2500, early Moogs). Listeners
unfamiliar with this kind of stuff (and probably a lot who are 8^))
Would probably consider much of it "noise". Personally, I like a
lot of the early experimental electronic music. I also tend to
associate a lot of what I would call "space music" (Tangerine Dream,
Kraftwerk) in this general category. Much of what I play and like
to listen to has it's roots (or some kind of connection) here.
Following that line of thought, "computer music" would be anything
that's created with a computer, and couldn't be made any other way. It
seems to me that very little of what's created by the people in this
conference would fit into this definition. Generally what I've heard on
the tapes (and also based on reviews of tapes I haven't heard) uses the
latest/greatest technology to allow a "one-man-band" to realize their
compositions/songs. The technology is very seductive in this way, as I
find myself (and the group I play with) sometimes sounding like a rock
band or a jazz band, or using a lot of preset patches that sound like
standard instruments, even though we consider ourselves progressive,
experimental or whatever.
This is in no way meant as a put-down of this kind of "computer
music". In fact it's become incredibly popular, and I'm sure that
most of the synths, drum machines, and recording equipment that
are sold are used in this way. A friend of mine is a writer, and
is supposedly working on an article about how many people are
using synths computers, etc. in this way. I told him about the
notes file here and maybe we can contribute some of our collective
wisdom. 8^)
Rob
|
1976.7 | Am I the only one that thinks this? | ANT::JANZEN | T - 500 picoseconds and counting | Wed Apr 26 1989 18:14 | 6 |
| Computer Music is music in which a computer is used to do one or
more of the following:
1. calculate the sounds.
2. compose the music.
3. there is no number 3.
Tom
|
1976.8 | Camp it up. chaps | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Apr 27 1989 05:36 | 8 |
|
I like .5 -- Computer Aided Music Production
-- CAMP for short.
Carry on camping.
Richard.
|
1976.9 | I'm a happy camper | TALK::HARRIMAN | You're wierd, Sir. | Thu Apr 27 1989 09:26 | 8 |
|
re: Tom
No, I think that's the major part of it. Which means by definition
most of what gets on our tapes isn't computer music. But much of it is
electronic music.
/pjh
|
1976.10 | I'm always right, so there ;-) | ANT::JANZEN | T - 500 picoseconds and counting | Thu Apr 27 1989 10:18 | 28 |
| Well, harriman, you're confusing the several separate trends of
expressionism, aleatoric music, computer composition, layering
techniques, mass techniques (of thousands of similar by asynchronous
events in scores of tracks) with a realization technique (computer).
It's pointless to exclude computer-made rock from computer-music
just because of a history of listening to academic expressionists.
Computer music is like violin music; music made3 with computer or
with violin, respectively. Violin music can be Baroque, or
expressionistic, or improvised atonal, or jazzy, or noisy.
On the other hand, a computer can play all the same pieces as a
violin; it is then computer music. If you transcribe Bach's G major
cello suite for trombone, it is now trombone music, no longer 'cello
music. For sound realization, the computer is just an instrument.
If the computer is used to compose, that is a separate activity
from the sound realization, even if it is done at the same time.
Sound creation and composition, and compositional style are all
orthogonal.
Now that I have amiga basic accessing midi, I see how I can finallyh
do the theory behind a piano piece I wrote in 1977 correctly; it
was really about computer music problems. I can tell the program
to vary overall volume, pitch, and speed by slowly changing curves
. I had to calculate everything by hand in 1977; now I can automate
the whole thing.
Also, the amiga can play a prime-number frequency scale I am making up.
My definition was correct, but you didn't offer one.
Tom
|
1976.11 | right of Atilla the Hun? | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Apr 27 1989 11:22 | 9 |
|
> On the other hand, a computer can play all the same pieces as a
> violin; it is then computer music.
Hate to disagree, but how do you KNOW they're 'the same pieces'?
I guarantee they won't sound the same.
Richard.
|
1976.12 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | twang and toot, not beep or thud | Thu Apr 27 1989 12:08 | 7 |
| It is often said of Bach's music that it sounds good no matter what instruments
are playing it. Are you saying we can't be sure it is the same music if the
original instrumentation is not used?
Computer composition: If I use a music editor on my Mac as a tool for writing
music, is that "computer composed"? I think not. The "Illiac Suite", now, is
mostly computer composed, for string quartet.
|
1976.13 | nyeah nyeah to you too ;^) | TALK::HARRIMAN | You're wierd, Sir. | Thu Apr 27 1989 12:44 | 22 |
|
Yo, Janzen, who (other than you) said I was confused?
I was just trying to get you to come out and actually make a
statement on what computer music is.
I don't disagree with your statements, except this:
> Computer music is like violin music; music made3 with computer or
> with violin, respectively. Violin music can be Baroque, or
> expressionistic, or improvised atonal, or jazzy, or noisy.
> On the other hand, a computer can play all the same pieces as a
> violin; it is then computer music. If you transcribe Bach's G major
> cello suite for trombone, it is now trombone music, no longer 'cello
> music. For sound realization, the computer is just an instrument.
But define a computer here. If my sampler plays a violin, is it
sampler music, computer music, or violin music?
just being difficult
/pjh
|
1976.14 | is it multi-timbral yet? | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Life + Times of Wurlow Tondings III | Thu Apr 27 1989 15:28 | 30 |
|
May this almighty Rathole get settled here. I get a 'bit
disturbed reading reviews which say "this is not computer music"
or any comment even relatively close since no one (other than tom)
has a firm definition.
Also, and I believe this was raised already, quite a bit of
discussion takes place here about recording techniques, computer
aided or otherwise. Music engineering almost seems a more appropriate
conference title.
I also believe the notion serves no real purpose. I believe
Dan Eaton may deserve a big gold star on the forehead, just by
the virtue of having a review of material done so well, you can't
hear the computer. Sort of like not leaving hammer marks in the
woodwork - an indication of skill.
Computer assisted is as close as you can come to what goes on here.
Otherwise, Tom's original definition - music for computers is
the only one that makes sense.
At anyrate, those of you who are real hung up on the issue,
I hope you'll conduct the debate here, and keep it from the
reviews. The reviews i think are quite important to the contributers.
I'd love to have some of my own reviewed, but i already know there
is so little computer in my music that I'd be deprived of getting
inputs on my engineering and my art.
bs
|
1976.15 | It's..... | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Thu Apr 27 1989 16:24 | 28 |
| I know what computer music sounds like. It's simple, take a Computer
CD (like one of the ones that DEC puts out for software) throw it in
your CD player & turn it up full blast & listen to it.
So far (I haven't got my COMMUSIC tape copy yet either), from what I've
been able to tell, if you are using any form of computerized gear while
generating your music (be it a simple drum machine or a MIDI synth
set up), you qualify as a COMMUSIC Computer Music submitter. Even if
you don't use it on every song that you do. I accept this as a good
way to express what you are doing musically. I find that all of us have
different approaches to what we are doing & in a sense, all of us are
doing the the right thing.
My original version of my submission was once done with all 'real live
people', and was re-done with only a Drum Machine, and me playing the
rest of the instruments, the next stpe was the one on the Current
Commusic tape. It's already been re-worked (has been over the last 3
months) on my Sequencer further. It's getting further and further from
real Live performances, but, I want it to sound more like a Live one.
To me the goal is to sound the way you want to, using the tools
available. It just happens that some of the gear is computerized in some
manner. The more live or real it sounds, the better. Eventually, you
won't be able to tell the sequenced stuff from the live in most cases.
In fact, many people already can't.
Jens
|
1976.16 | ya want computer music ... I gots computer music! | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 227-3299, 223-3326 | Thu Apr 27 1989 18:05 | 12 |
| If in doubt, just move a MicroVAX into your studio and be sure to
record the cooling fan in the mix ... An', if you *really* want
to get high-tech, have it do a dump to tape and record the disks
and tape drive sounds. An alternative might be to dial in to a
big computer and have the scream of the phone lines eminate from
a speaker phone. Broadcast some trivial message to everybody on
a cluster. Then, you could put something on the credits like:
Recorded using the raw computing power of 4 clustered VAX 8800s,
8 clustered VAXstations, and 2 clustered VAX 11/780s.
Steve
|
1976.17 | Computer diddling is something else... | ANT::JANZEN | T - 500 picoseconds and counting | Thu Apr 27 1989 18:55 | 7 |
| For me, the use of computers in the COMMUSIC tapes is completely
irrelevant. It is a tape of music. The classical conference doesn't
exchange recordings. We're showing each other our music.
Yes, if you play a sound on a computer-controlled sampling synth
it is computer music, if it is music and not diddling.
Tom
|
1976.18 | him too | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Fri Apr 28 1989 05:49 | 11 |
|
Dan Eaton may deserve a big gold star on the forehead, just by
the virtue of having a review of material done so well, you can't
hear the computer. Sort of like not leaving hammer marks in the
woodwork - an indication of skill.
Tom also deserves a peanut for the complimentary reason, i.e. his
music constantly reminds you that it IS produced by a computer (running
software by Bach et al).
Richard.
|
1976.19 | use tact, poise and reason, then gently squeeze 'emeem | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Life + Times of Wurlow Tondings III | Fri Apr 28 1989 10:24 | 23 |
|
re: -2 - Gee, i could just leave the waxmate on all night and
tape the meltdown in the morning :-)
The only prejudice I have against using more computers in music
these days is purely financial. I kind of casually mentioned to
my wife last night if i stumble across 800 bucks or so i just might
buy a "real synth". I got a not so casual, "do what you'd like".
So, doing my best William Bendix i said, "But alissa(daughter) would
love to have a better playing piano!". (Let's avoid the synth <>
piano rathole). I think i'm gonna have to work this angle with
a bit more finesse...
The other misfortunate incident was we went to a bar where a
midi-duet were entertaining. I enthusiatically pointed out all the
neat advantages etc (see a sequencer bla bla bla...). Regretfully,
she was most unimpressed with the band and issued a "You ain't
spending our bucks to make crap like that!". So for now it looks
as if the odds are slightly better playing mega-bucks, but we'll
keep tryin...
bs
|
1976.20 | digital recording by 780 | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Fri Apr 28 1989 10:27 | 9 |
|
An aside: I read once in a conference that at some announcement they
had a TU78 hooked upt to an DAC and into an amplifier and played Wagner
or something similar that had previously been digitally recorded off of
magtape all controlled by 780 power.
Chad
I wonder what it sounded like on error when the tape backed up and reread :-)?
|
1976.21 | a proposition (or maybe just another rathole) | MIDI::DAN | All things are possible | Fri Apr 28 1989 10:27 | 18 |
| re. the last 18 or so replies,
I've been a reader and infrequent contributer of the notes conference
for the last year or so. The one thing that has always bothered me
is the name: COMMUSIC, short for 'Computer Music'.
Based on what I've seen in here for the last year, I'd have to say that
'Electronic Music' or 'MIDI' better describes what is being discussed.
To me, 'Computer Music' means strictly having a particular computer
generating audio signals.
If the conference were renamed to 'Electronic Music' or 'MIDI' (since
99% of the participants use MIDI) then I think a lot of these
digressions such as 'What is Computer Music' would be avoided.
Just my HO,
Dan (formerly ZEKE::GOSSELIN)
|
1976.22 | What's in a name? | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Fri Apr 28 1989 12:05 | 13 |
| ...much as I enjoy this conference (and I've been here since note
146), -.1 touched on the only thing that has ever aggravated me
in this file. The "it's not the right name" argument comes up like
flowers in the spring; dependably. Frankly, and with all due respect
to those who may disagree, who cares what it's called? It was orignally
named COMMUSIC and evolved into the place where the technical aspects
of music are discussed. Those looking for this type of discussion
always get pointed in this direction from other conferences and
once they get here, the point is moot.
For the life of me, I can't see what the issue is over the name.
Edd
|
1976.23 | ;^) | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 227-3299, 223-3326 | Fri Apr 28 1989 13:15 | 18 |
| Keep the name, just change what it stands for:
commie music?
commando music?
cr** or my music? (as in, 'Would you rather listen to ...')
copies of my music? (as in, 'I would sure like to become rich
selling ...')
commercial music? (unless I can think of something that takes
more than 30 seconds ...)
check out my music?
check our message music? (for those who have to explain the
lyrics or make other excuses before you
hear it)
credit over maximum music? (needs no explanation)
crazy over MIDI music?
computers ousting musicians music?
Steve
|
1976.24 | Ho Hum, Who Care? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed May 03 1989 10:12 | 11 |
| re .22 - right on Edd, what I was gonna say if you hadn't beat me
to it.
re .17 - right on Tom, what this conference is really about is music
technology (in all its forms) and how we use it.
re .13 - how about "computer-sampled violin music"?
len.
|