Is all this power helping us make better music?
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
I think this kind of endless tweaking of sounds for many people is a way to distract themselves from the main problem: That the main musical idea is missing.
Just as irrelevant as to tweak a certain sound to death is the question of how super realistic a specific analog synth emulation VSTi sounds or not - because in the context of a full mix it most of the times simply doesn't matter and nobody (rightfully) cares anyway as most music nowadays is mainly consumed on mobiles, desktop speakers etc.
Long story short: You either have a strong musical idea or you don't.If you have one, you can express that idea with ANY sounds.If you don't, then all the sound tweaking in the world won't help you.
Simple as that.
Just as irrelevant as to tweak a certain sound to death is the question of how super realistic a specific analog synth emulation VSTi sounds or not - because in the context of a full mix it most of the times simply doesn't matter and nobody (rightfully) cares anyway as most music nowadays is mainly consumed on mobiles, desktop speakers etc.
Long story short: You either have a strong musical idea or you don't.If you have one, you can express that idea with ANY sounds.If you don't, then all the sound tweaking in the world won't help you.
Simple as that.
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
decades ago we went down this path with guitar pedals and fancy multi-effects boxes. all those tones and crazy effects, fun to tie one on and have run but as you say here:[/quote]The Finn wrote:Cool and impressive as the pad I eventually generated sounds, it is going to be hard as hell to make any actual music with it, it is so complicated and layered. And a lot of the stuff that was going on - noise generators, frequency shifters, whatnot, were actually making differences so small that my tin ears could hardly hear them. I spent the best part of twenty minutes tweaking the settings on the comb filter before realising that it was basically making very difference.
was ultimately true. pick up the acoustic and play. with an electric put on your dialed in distortion tone, set the reverb to the same old level and play.It struck me that one of my favourite pieces of music that I made in the last while was a simple piece in which I play one chord over and over, modulated by a simple low pass filter and some bit reduction.
this is why I harp on the notion that people need to play instruments and put the f-ing mouse down. there are definitely Live users that are just dorks that download software, then there are musicians that actually make music. it's usually the former that talks the most about how awesome they are (esp. DJs!) while the latter are more humble, they stfu and keep towing the line, practicing, learning new tunes, occasionally writing their own.I wonder what the experience is of other people on this forum about the balance between technical innovation and music making. How much of all the new capabilities of all this software is actually making a difference to the music we make? And when does it make a difference? When and under what conditions does all the money and expertise we are spending on the technical side of things pay off in better, different, more interesting or more fun music making?
if you had fun then hell yeah it's worthwhile. beyond that, actually playing music on a piano keyboard, guitar, wind instrument, whatever is really good for your brain and IMO a life skill that's very much worth pursuing. you only have yourself to answer to, and whatever hype/excitement you spread to others (walk the talk!)Or is what I have been doing all evening - making skronking sounds on my computer, none of which will ever figure in a piece of music -- somehow an end in itself?
In my life
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
-Moz
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
-Moz
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
True except for one thing. When something isn't working then it doesn't matter. For me personally, tech has made the diff between getting something working and spending time googling solutions. I'm personally not a really good musician but I appreciate good tools.mr.ergonomics wrote:no. I was one of the GAS driven people... but when I have learned something in the last 10 years it's that it makes no difference if you have the highend stuff or not. It's just your skill that matters.Is all this power helping us make better music?
with other words.... music technology is fun, but it's only slightly related to making good music.
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Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
Indeed I did.oblique strategies wrote:It can be easy to get lost, & not be able to see the forest through the trees.
My question to you: did you have fun on your sonic journey?
And I also learned something:
If someone tells me to put a noise generator on as the fourth oscillator on a track, set the volume at 5 percent, and put it through a phase shifting filter set at 90% dry, I will ignore him.
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Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
stringtapper wrote:Were those sounds music?The Finn wrote:Or is what I have been doing all evening - making skronking sounds on my computer, none of which will ever figure in a piece of music -- somehow an end in itself?
Just wondering
It depends. Are you a a resident of the criminal state of Amerika?
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Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
Now you have got me thinkingstringtapper wrote:
Playing live music with other humans on instruments has to be a part of my musical equation or it's over.
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Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
I guess it is a bit like learning scales and music theory. It can take a lot of time, but with luck and effort I am expending my musical vocabulary. Which would enable me to be more confident and 'in the flow' about what I want to do and where i want to go.
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
Well said. Being a good musician or producer is about being able to get good results no matter what you have to work with.beatz01 wrote:I think this kind of endless tweaking of sounds for many people is a way to distract themselves from the main problem: That the main musical idea is missing.
Just as irrelevant as to tweak a certain sound to death is the question of how super realistic a specific analog synth emulation VSTi sounds or not - because in the context of a full mix it most of the times simply doesn't matter and nobody (rightfully) cares anyway as most music nowadays is mainly consumed on mobiles, desktop speakers etc.
Long story short: You either have a strong musical idea or you don't.If you have one, you can express that idea with ANY sounds.If you don't, then all the sound tweaking in the world won't help you.
Simple as that.
I hear you on the emulation thing too, that always bugs me. Older things aren't better. Analog isn't better. Tape isn't better. They're all different, that's it. Different ways of making different sounds. People get too hung up on trying to make things like they used to be, instead of realizing how much more potential we have at our disposal now.
tarekith
https://tarekith.com
https://tarekith.com
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
I disagree. Considering what I mostly hear from "musicians" I'd hardly think that "they" are the only thing that inspires. Inspiration comes from a variety of things. In the end, we all have our paths, just because it doesn't fit the mold of "x" doesn't mean it's not valid.Tarekith wrote:Well said. Being a good musician or producer is about being able to get good results no matter what you have to work with.beatz01 wrote:I think this kind of endless tweaking of sounds for many people is a way to distract themselves from the main problem: That the main musical idea is missing.
Just as irrelevant as to tweak a certain sound to death is the question of how super realistic a specific analog synth emulation VSTi sounds or not - because in the context of a full mix it most of the times simply doesn't matter and nobody (rightfully) cares anyway as most music nowadays is mainly consumed on mobiles, desktop speakers etc.
Long story short: You either have a strong musical idea or you don't.If you have one, you can express that idea with ANY sounds.If you don't, then all the sound tweaking in the world won't help you.
Simple as that.
I hear you on the emulation thing too, that always bugs me. Older things aren't better. Analog isn't better. Tape isn't better. They're all different, that's it. Different ways of making different sounds. People get too hung up on trying to make things like they used to be, instead of realizing how much more potential we have at our disposal now.
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Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
The Finn wrote:stringtapper wrote:Were those sounds music?The Finn wrote:Or is what I have been doing all evening - making skronking sounds on my computer, none of which will ever figure in a piece of music -- somehow an end in itself?
Just wondering
It depends. Are you a a resident of the criminal state of Amerika?
Unsound Designer
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
I started getting to know Massive a few months ago. I made some presets from scratch following some step by step instructions. Some sound great but I don’t know what I would personally use them for. Others I would use but I haven’t come up with a song for them yet. But a happy side effect has been when I bring up a Massive preset I didn’t make I now have a better idea on how to adjust it to my liking and what might be causing the weirdness that doesn’t fit what I am working on.
I haven’t had a song in my head before I write it in forever. So for my songs it almost always starts with some sound(s) I like. I don’t have a problem using presets I didn’t make, but if that is going to be the first source of my inspiration I shouldn’t always rely on what some other developer came up with for the masses. As long as I’ve been composing music I’m still at the baby steps of this realization.
I haven’t had a song in my head before I write it in forever. So for my songs it almost always starts with some sound(s) I like. I don’t have a problem using presets I didn’t make, but if that is going to be the first source of my inspiration I shouldn’t always rely on what some other developer came up with for the masses. As long as I’ve been composing music I’m still at the baby steps of this realization.
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
I compose first and get in to sound design later. I leave mixing for the end.
I also found important to commit to sounds fast to avoid endless tweaking.
I also found important to commit to sounds fast to avoid endless tweaking.
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
Agreed, that's the main reason I always record straight to audio and skip MIDI if I can. Too easy to endless tweak the life out of something.
tarekith
https://tarekith.com
https://tarekith.com
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
I rarely commit MIDI tracks to audio, but I also rarely make slight adjustments to the preset. The main reason I keep the MIDI is for the notes, either for layering more sounds or changing the original sound completely.
Re: Is all this power helping us make better music?
there are many ways to go down a tech abetted rabbit hole and I've personally experienced many
Re: the original post, I'll openly admit I'm preset tweaker. I see the value of being able to design sounds from the ground up, to be able to create, with my own hands the exact sound that precisely fits a musical need. But in practice I've found that treating presets as starting points that I tweak to serve a present need in the midst of songwriting works best for me. When tweaking presets I lay hands on nearly the same number of parameters as "sound designers" - osc waves, amp and filter envelopes, filters, lfos, etc. I'm just not starting with a raw osc. I don't really understand the act of preset design as an abstract activity, where you're creating presets for some future song.
Re: the original post, I'll openly admit I'm preset tweaker. I see the value of being able to design sounds from the ground up, to be able to create, with my own hands the exact sound that precisely fits a musical need. But in practice I've found that treating presets as starting points that I tweak to serve a present need in the midst of songwriting works best for me. When tweaking presets I lay hands on nearly the same number of parameters as "sound designers" - osc waves, amp and filter envelopes, filters, lfos, etc. I'm just not starting with a raw osc. I don't really understand the act of preset design as an abstract activity, where you're creating presets for some future song.