crumhorn wrote:1) Make great music
2) Fuss over the fine details of the listening experience
3) Profit....
Step 2 is optional.
+1
crumhorn wrote:1) Make great music
2) Fuss over the fine details of the listening experience
3) Profit....
Step 2 is optional.
No idea what that has to do with this thread, but that is the funniest thing I've seen all day ... I say that as a ScotsmanDa hand wrote:
+2*silveriofunk wrote:crumhorn wrote:1) Make great music
2) Fuss over the fine details of the listening experience
3) Profit....
Step 2 is optional.
+1

You'd think that it would be hard to contradict something you just said, but he pulled it off nicely!!!ChiDJ wrote:Well, I can recognize the "LIVE" sound in many cases and it's because of it's trademark lack of funk. When I first heard Sasha perform years ago with his Raven controller. It was dismally straight. No funk, no groove. I pointed this out to many of my friends who couldn't hear what I was hearing. The program just made things too straight, too quantized.
To be clear, I'm not hating on LIVE. I use it in all my productions. I'm also not saying what I hear is obvious. (To me it is). I just think, the average bedroom producer doesn't have an ear for the funk so they don't know it's missing.
Villalobos definitely does. So do I. As well as a lot of really good producers obviously do. LIVE can be funky and I've heard a lot of awesome fully funky productions made in LIVE. It's just that a lot of the shit coming out is "amateur hour" and it's mechanically uninspired drivel.
my .02
Tod
ChiDJ wrote:Well, I can recognize the "LIVE" sound in many cases and it's because of it's trademark lack of funk. When I first heard Sasha perform years ago with his Raven controller. It was dismally straight. No funk, no groove. I pointed this out to many of my friends who couldn't hear what I was hearing. The program just made things too straight, too quantized.
To be clear, I'm not hating on LIVE. I use it in all my productions. I'm also not saying what I hear is obvious. (To me it is). I just think, the average bedroom producer doesn't have an ear for the funk so they don't know it's missing.
Villalobos definitely does. So do I. As well as a lot of really good producers obviously do. LIVE can be funky and I've heard a lot of awesome fully funky productions made in LIVE. It's just that a lot of the shit coming out is "amateur hour" and it's mechanically uninspired drivel.
my .02
Tod
Tone Deft wrote:(I'm looking at you Kanye.)
leedsquietman wrote:Tracks produced in other DAWS also suffer from being overly quantized with a lack of creative imagination.
This is not unique to Live - I can make pasteurized 4 on the floor beats with no kind of human feel whatsoever just as easily in Cubase, Logic, Sonar, Protools etc. The sad thing is that these tracks are the ones which often get you gigs and the airplay, stuff which is a bit left of field is often disregarded or not played. Heck, since the advent of MIDI this has been a bone of contention, I remember these arguments dating back pre Atari ST when sequencers like Roland MC-50s and Yamaha QY sequencers were around.
The new groove functions in Live 8 give some license to move the beat off totally straight, but a lot of people can do themselves a favour and not quantize everything to 1/8 or even 1/16th of a note on EVERYTHING.
There are times when this is appropriate but you don't need to do it on every track. The over use of the same beats and samples is another bone of contention. When you're warping things like synths or guitars, you don't have to warp absolutely every note straight on the downbeat, if some are just a few milliseconds out, leave some like that. (obviously if it's way off and causing an unwanted distraction that's different).
Tone Deft wrote:I think he's referring to stuff like warp, quantize, groove, tools that can suck the life out of music. powerful tools in the wrong hands (I'm looking at you Kanye.)

Yes,lozoz wrote:http://www.residentadvisor.net/feature.aspx?1128
do you think what he says is true or is it that it's the tool of choice for so many bad minimal techno producers trying to bite his sound?