Eno Quote

Discuss music production with Ableton Live.
EgAD
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Post by EgAD » Sat Feb 09, 2008 1:59 am

dj superflat wrote:ego, why so defensive about this? no one's trying to get rid of old timey actually played music. enjoy what you like, just don't claim what others are interested in isn't valid musically/artistically (this has been the silly rallying cry of the old guard for ages (what's this? horns with strings? guitar through an amp? absurd!)).
dude this is not about ego and if I'm gaurding anything it would be your in accuracies, first of all you suffer from the charge you made in the first half of your post and secondly you have no clue what the discussion is about.

this is not about digital vs. analog, or digital vs. vinyL, or the evangelical right vs. elvis presley.
no one made any argument about musical validity.

I can't believe you actualy said "old timey actualy played music" you should be embarrased. :lol:, you must be one of the kids from that musical apacolypes that eno was envisioning, you actualy believe it's old fashioned to play music. haha. ok i'm done, I think this is the perfect place to end my contribution to the discussion.from now on I'll just refer back to your post, and please don't edit any of your post, it's all just too good and explains my point far to well.

dj superflat
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Post by dj superflat » Sat Feb 09, 2008 4:20 am

sport, get over yourself. i've been involved in this thread about since it began, so i'm well aware what folk are discussing here. and i guarantee you i'm about as old timey music as they come -- piano at 5, bass at 12, guitar at 14, etc. -- most of my career in trad bands, with trad recording, etc. (odds are also very good i'm older than you, if not much older, kid). your irony detectors are way deficient. you're not defending anything that needs defending, you obviously haven't a clue (if you did, you wouldn't view this as your personal crusade to protect the integrity of a certain kind of music you prefer). and you're seriously misguided -- if not dense -- if you think you've explained anything. just about every response to you has been along the lines of mine, effectively saying you just don't get what people are saying, are misinterpreting, etc. as for dropping out of the thread, that's not a threat, that's a blessing. godspeed fool.

impete
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Post by impete » Sat Feb 09, 2008 5:21 am

Thinking back to the mid 90s, we released a product called Koan X (no longer available, of course!), which was what we called a "drag-and-mix" generative tool.

You installed various "template" packs, and dragged the elements of those packs you like, from a side-panel, into and around in a "mixing window", and could drag those elements around in X/Y to adjust relative pan and volume position. You could also have them drift around automatically for an automated mix!

The key thing here is that the template elements were *all* generative rule sets for the Koan engine. So the user dynamically built-up a generative composition, by dragging-in (say) drum, bass, lead, chord etc. elements; with a couple of simple controls to adjust tempo and scale.

This made it incredibly easy to create good sounding music, and was empowering for those who tried it who weren't skilled musicians. Some of the elements used MIDI, others contained built-in MP3 samples; there was a fabulous "morphing drum and bass" pack we did with Zero G. :)

So, we (effectively) delivered unfinished compositions that anybody could use and play with easily, with good (and inherently slightly unpredictable!) results... it was an approach that worked very well with those who weren't skilled musos, and gave very interesting results compared to tools that used simple fixed samples in a timeline sequence.

Hoping this is of interest,

Pete

EgAD
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Post by EgAD » Sat Feb 09, 2008 9:03 am

dj superflat wrote:sport, get over yourself. i've been involved in this thread about since it began, so i'm well aware what folk are discussing here. and i guarantee you i'm about as old timey music as they come -- piano at 5, bass at 12, guitar at 14, etc. -- most of my career in trad bands, with trad recording, etc. (odds are also very good i'm older than you, if not much older, kid). your irony detectors are way deficient. you're not defending anything that needs defending, you obviously haven't a clue (if you did, you wouldn't view this as your personal crusade to protect the integrity of a certain kind of music you prefer). and you're seriously misguided -- if not dense -- if you think you've explained anything. just about every response to you has been along the lines of mine, effectively saying you just don't get what people are saying, are misinterpreting, etc. as for dropping out of the thread, that's not a threat, that's a blessing. godspeed fool.
you must be posting in a different thread than you are reading, both chrys and pete have agreed with the gist of what i'm saying and have said so.

and heres a question for you, exactly what type of music is it that you claim I am defending? 8O

you need to stop smoking dude.

and the fact that you've played several instruments since the age of 5 and still made that "old timey" comment only proves your a bigger idiot than I thought.

EgAD
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Post by EgAD » Sat Feb 09, 2008 9:13 am

you know what dude I'm going to apologize to you, because of you this thread has decended into name calling, your tone and everything you've said has been nothing but a distraction and a detraction. you really need to listen before you open your mouth. we were having a good discussion as pete pointed out and had remained civil, you notice that you're the only one in the thread I called an idiot, thats because my exchange with everyone else in this thread has been different than with you. I don't know whether you responded to me or I to you first but whichever it should not have happened.

we were not talking about genres of music
I wasn't talking about protecting anything
you are confused.

chrysalis33rpm
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Post by chrysalis33rpm » Sat Feb 09, 2008 10:46 am

chill fellas, its been a really interesting discussion and I've learned a lot from both of you, both in this thread and others.

Egad, you do seem threatened or offended by the Eno quote, which is kind of mystifying to me, its not like generative music is anything but the tiniest of tiny demographics.

But I think we can all agree that we want quality music, however we get there.

Nokatus
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Post by Nokatus » Sat Feb 09, 2008 4:11 pm

Interesting thread. Not much to add, but a few comments:
EgAD wrote:I wasn't talking about protecting anything
Don't blame the ones who think you are talking about that, though. You make it sound like you are very much trying to protect non-generative music, and see generative music as non-art.

As you say things like, "envisioning that kind of future is envisioning a future where we take the art out of music", and "it's wonderful for a game to be musical but music is not a game", you give an impression you're not recognizing the art in defining new rulesets, setting up causal relationships, deciding what is being generated and how -- i.e. programming and setting up the underlying construct which results in the actual music.

In other words, you don't think coding can be art. I think it can be just that. Defining a generative music system (no matter whether it's done using relatively low-level programming languages or specialized environments allowing you to define sufficient logical rules to describe music) is a way to express artistic, musical ideas through programming.

You say "computers can make music, programs can make music, just don't tell me that you made it" -- but how can a program make music without the musical aspects being sufficiently designed? That designing act, leading to the final structure of the resulting music, is the art. Only the methods of arriving at the musical output are different, but nevertheless, there is an artist at work.

You say the musical "style is is up to the computer therefore anybodys guess", but again, it's not going to be guesswork for the one who designed the system. You don't run a generative environment and suddenly get a completely different genre out of it, based on the whims of the computer. If that seems to be the case, rest assured it's part of the original design as well. [Of course, at some point people will be dealing with artificial intelligences learning to do major spontaneous extrapolation like that, but that's not what we're dealing with generative music now, is it :)]

"Music is not a game" is a topic worth of a discussion of its own, but I just have to say, in my opinion music as an artform is exceptionally open to abstract games. People have been playing and "playing" music for centuries, sometimes basing their work on devising different rulesets and indeed gamelike constructs. Both designing these kinds of underlying rules and applying them successfully are creative acts themselves.

Elaborate rules have been tested and put to good use, and subsequently broken to make way to new ones. Historically music has often been manually generated using these constructs, of course making logical and aesthetic decisions creatively along the way, shaping the final form of the work. Think of a fugue (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fugue), for example.

In short, reading these comments about generative music, I know exactly what dj superflat is getting at when he says, "this has been the silly rallying cry of the old guard for ages". EgAD, even though you say nobody made an argument about musical validity, you seem to make a strong argument about artistic validity in general. No matter whether we're talking about the literary arts, the visual arts or music, that's indeed the perpetual rallying cry of the old guard: not recognizing a new structure, a new kind of approach, a new movement, as art -- in the fear that it will ultimately devalue something old.

dj superflat
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Post by dj superflat » Sat Feb 09, 2008 8:29 pm

so let's see ego, i say most people are also viewing you as defensive, you claim i'm alone, and then the next two posters to weigh in say the same? go back, reread the thread, maybe this time you'll see all the folk responding to you and wondering why you're at such pains to defend something no one's really attacking, and also effectively calling various music types illegitimate.

i mean, are you really saying your views on music have more legitimacy than eno's? not that you should buy into his opinion because of who he is (appeal to authority is a logical fallacy, i know), but based on his resume, you have to respect what he says, recognize it likely has some validity.

as for the comments about playing instruments/oldtimey music, i was suggesting that i'm basicly on your side -- if there are sides in this discussion -- because i don't do much generative stuff (though i love how live lets you randomize things via, e.g., follow actions). but i see the appeal, i'm somewhat tired of guitar/bass/drums, there's a certain freedom in letting go of some of your (i mean mine) fixed conceptions of what music should be.

when i found electronic music, it was like matisse describing how he felt once he turned to paper cutouts -- i know it's pretentious, but it was like a whole new world, music was suddenly fun again, i was learning new ways to get beats (it's easy to think there's isn't an art to step sequencing if you can play drums, but then you realize that's just small minded). at 21 i would have responded the same way you did to the eno quote, seeing it as threatening what you consider real music. now, i'm willing to consider it, see the appeal of generative music, setting some parameters and seeing what evolves (my eyes opened the first time i literally spent hours twiddling the knobs on the korg analog sim synth as a seqence played, hypnotized by the changing textures). no, it's not creator directed music like mozart, but there's definitely a creative musical element to it. and who cares? i just want cool stuff to listen to, don't care how it came about.

funny thing is, i used to be you. i wish i could go back to the people i dissed in the 90s for doing sample based stuff (even though i loved PE, made no sense), asserting that playing an instrument, even just building your own loops was so obviously superior, and apologize for having been small minded. (it's kind of like the self-righteous people who never use presets -- who cares? use what you want.

also, be careful who you call an idiot, doesn't make you look particularly smart (if you've bothered to read what i've written here, elsewhere, you may disagree with all of it, but doubt you can honestly say i'm an idiot (if you'd like to go off line and compare intellectual and musical credentials of whatever type, i'd be happy to do so to demonstrate that i'm worthy of entry into this thread)).

regardless, i accept your apology, apologize in turn if i somehow offended.

dj superflat
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Post by dj superflat » Sat Feb 09, 2008 8:40 pm

one other thing, egad, you've played a tremendously valuable role in thread (seriously), pushing all sorts of folk to respond, weigh in, etc. these are the kinds of threads i love, because they make you think about the process of music, what it means, how to go about it, what is or isn't legit. i think these issues are becoming more compelling in the electronic age because so much of the process can now be done solo. so self-exam, tiresome navel gazing about what it means, what to do, becomes more of a necessity for those not being pushed by playing with others directly, for those who have the option of just pressing play even live, or just using premixed loops, or just using presets, or just using follow actions, etc. threads like this and the one about faking or about kid beyond/imogen all are tremendously helpful for people trying to figure out how to transition from old forms to new, particularly live, without losing what they valued about the old way of doing things.

of course, some of this is likely debating whether duchamp's urinal is art. does it matter what you call it? (if picasso can turn bike parts into the head of a bull, and it's great art, clearly remixing existing loops can be art, unclear how generative music is so far afield that it should be exempted from the playground.)

EgAD
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Post by EgAD » Tue Feb 12, 2008 7:55 pm

bump

impete
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Post by impete » Sat Feb 16, 2008 3:03 pm

Just out of interest, did any of you try Koan X? OK, I know, it was obscure and a long time ago ... :roll:

Pete

TITBAG
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Post by TITBAG » Sat Feb 16, 2008 3:30 pm

impete wrote:Just out of interest, did any of you try Koan X? OK, I know, it was obscure and a long time ago ... :roll:

Pete

i didnt

impete
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Post by impete » Tue Feb 26, 2008 8:22 am

A shame! :(

I think more people ought to try using generative music tools, if nothing else they challenge one's view of how to create and appreciate art! :)

Pete

Suade
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Post by Suade » Tue Mar 18, 2008 11:01 pm

Hey Pete,

Is there any way of getting to try Koan now?

impete
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Post by impete » Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:06 pm

Sorry - been away from the forum for a few days!

If you want to use Koan ... use noatikl instead! :D

Koan is no longer available, and noatikl takes the generative music concept behing Koan a whole lot further. noatikl runs on Win and Mac, can even import old Koan content, is available in various plug-in variants, includes very powerful scripting extensions and also looks quite pretty!

I hope you give it a go!

In fact, we updated noatikl to 1.5.0.7 just a couple of hours ago (fixing some annoying bugs...!)

http://www.intermorphic.com/download/noatikl.html

Hoping this helps, and with best wishes,

Pete

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