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#2921 - 04/28/02 08:25 PM
Re: What are the ingredients for electronic pop ?
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Member
Registered: 01/27/01
Posts: 217
Loc: Lexington, KY USA
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800dv: I'm assuming you're calling the invention of the phonograph (in 1877) as the beginning of electronic music. However, for nearly a century, the use of "electronics" with music was about preserving accoustic or electrically-amplified performance. Distorting or rearranging those recordings, or synthetically generating sounds electronically, for the porpose of making new sounds and new musical expressions, began in earnest only in the 1960's (and, not incidently, substantially outside of the world of popular music).
As for "leaving one's mark..." Although I'm also a great believer in live performance, I'm afraid MRT1212 and I seriously part company on the "non-anonymous" point - it's a pet peeve of mine, so pardon while I indulge myself . . .
Most of today's "music" is about celebrity, recognition, and profit. The actual writing and performing of music is a caboose on that train. My attitude is that music posted on a website as free download is one of the most sincere forms of artistic endeavor, since the artist is giving of himself purely for the purpose of musical expression and pleasure without concern for or interest in whether the appeal is broad enough to generate self-serving celebrity or profitability.
My ideal in musical success is a former insurance account executive by the name of Charles Ives, who wrote in obscurity (and at night) for much of his life. His music was revolutionary, idiosyncratic, and personal. His eventual recognition was one brought on by the sheer force and quality of that music as promoted by other composers and performers who recognized it. Comparing his stature and contribution to Moby's is a little like comparing the importance of Edison's invention of the phonograph to the invention of the 8-track tape player.
_________________________
"The problem with the world is that the ignorant are cock-sure, whereas the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell
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#2923 - 04/28/02 11:29 PM
Re: What are the ingredients for electronic pop ?
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Member
Registered: 01/27/01
Posts: 217
Loc: Lexington, KY USA
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Goo'ness! OK, I defer to your greater historical knowledge of the world of electronic music. I do assert that my primary assertions (the early focus of recorded music, and the "beginning in earnest" of electronic processing in the '60s) are technically correct. The dabblings of folks like John Cage, who used accoustic instruments and ambient "real sounds" almost exclusively until late in his career ("Imaginary Landscape No. 1" being a pretty rare exception) can't really be called an awakening of the genre, nor can the very early film scores.
But I'm picking nits. You can have your "superior knowledge" moniker with no protest from me. I would, however, be curious as to how you justify the inclusion of the terribly derivative use of electronic sampling and sequencing in current hip-hop and rap into such a varied and interesting historical context. It's hard to compare the desperately unoriginal and repetitive sampling of something like Fat Boy Slim's "Weapon of Choice" to the intense and abstract tape manipulations of Morton Subotnik's 1967 "Silver Apples..." I realize we're comparing apples to oranges, but, by my read, the world of electronic music, as a body, is simply not moving forward.
I do admit to having downloaded the "Weapon of Choice" video, but it sure wasn't for the music . . .
_________________________
"The problem with the world is that the ignorant are cock-sure, whereas the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell
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