Yes, yes.... mine the metal and grow the trees.
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Certainly and certainly not. The condescending nature of it depends on how much on teh other end of the debate you are. But would it have been more or less condescending if Mozart told you it? Think about that.@Fred Story said:
Did you mean for this comment to sound so condescending?
It is entirely what is disgusting. I have nothing wrong with the existance of such samples. It's the people who use them, the music that it's used in, and what it does to teh value of the art, that DISGUSTS me. Although nice guys finish last, and I could "write" many composers under the table, it is still quite DISGUSTING to see people to use crutches, sellout, and succeed doing SO LITTLE. Anyone who is on teh other end of this argument is someone perhaps to blame.@SMP3602 said:
when you have a very limited amount of time to turn around a massive orchestral piece, adding a few looped fragments iwithin the composition is hardly "disgusting".
By actually writing every note and nuance. maybe I have to chalk this up to having great orchestration skills, but I do not find it a problem to come up with a creative orchestrational solution to a particular budget/schedule and be able to execute it without non-musical based MAGIC TRICKS.@SMP3602 said:
You work within sample libraries as well as live musicians, correct? How then, are you able to produce a heavily orchestrated score using all conventional and unconventional orchestration techniques and deliver in a timely manner? When I say "timely" of course, I am saying you know, 12 - 14 hour days laboring to get original sample based music to sound as real as possible. Unless, you have no deadlines, I am confused how this can be seen as doing "so little".
There's not much art in literally 'writing' an octave gliss, or is it ? Figuring out if, how and where it goes is the work and you can't delegate that to the sampler.We're not talking about composing, we're talking about bringing the composition to sound. Please enlighten me.Well Christian, thank you for putting it that way, because I feel that I'd like to enlighten you. Apparently I am not doing it very well, but, actually there is MUCH art in writing the octave gliss, especially when it's different everytime. There is the timeless issue of being able to communicate later the entire compostion down to it's purest technical qualities should it need to be translated or re-performed. If you are writing for just the one momentary project than you are trapping your art to it. There is no future for concert work without the composer's help. My sequences are such that I could throw them into Sibelius and every nuance of the musical compositon will be there.
Christian
@musos said:
How can we possibly respect someone with a substance abuse problem like that? If Mozart admonished me, I'd laugh at him. Colin [[;)]]
paulR, where did you buy your sense of humor? I want to get it too! [[;)]]@PaulR said:
I'm not going to do anything politically to those who continue to use sampled compositions (Phrase, licks, runs, etc.).
Thats very kind of you Evan. Thank you so much.
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