And I'm not that modest as you my have discovered!
Evan Evans
Ha, ha, [:D] , Hi, hi [:D] Evan, you´re really cute. [:D]
"Modest" isn´t exactly the word I ever would have used to characterize you. [:D]
196,803 users have contributed to 43,032 threads and 258,448 posts.
In the past 24 hours, we have 2 new thread(s), 18 new post(s) and 91 new user(s).
Well I am not sure there is a good example of my approach "out there" yet. But I have been doing some amazing experiments. I am about to start on a psychological thriller called FEAR OF CLOWNS and I have every intention of making the music sound as impressive as possible, and I am excited to, at some point, posting some links to my mixdowns. I have NO idea what to expect from myself. I can only hope it's a good score! HUNTING HUMANS is hard to top. I get a lot fo positive fanmail/responses about that score. It has been nominated for best score in several indie festivals as well@mathis said:
1) Evan, technically: your approach is of course working very well on strings, since there the layers can be blended nicely. But how do you do with woodwinds and brass?
Social skills?! Lol. What are you form England? Are you? Hmm. Let me check. Lol. Anyway, no ... I am a composer. It doesn't get much more socially inept than that!@Fred Story said:
...Hopefully we were all taught a few more social skills.
Wrong. it does not change the fundamental flexibility of what you do with it. It is merely a different sounding version of single note samples. it is a technology so advanced a plugin had to be written to take advantage of it. A cresc/dim doesn't have that flexibility. The perf-tool/inst combination merely gives you the same flexibility with the fundamental concept of using these pointillistic playback samples called "notes" (we've used them for centuries now), with a little added realism. In no way can anyone write HALF a note. A note is complete when it is played from NOTE ON to NOTE OFF. The performance instruments do not fundamentally change that concept and that power and flexibility which has always been available.@William said:
Sorry my friend, but you changed the logic of your argument in midstream. Now it applies only in certain cases. The crucial element that creates the legato performances - the brief slide between start and end notes - is NOT adjustable at all.
I hear you. But at the same time it sounds like someone has a little bit of an inferiority complex or is sensitive towards those who might.@Fred Story said:
My point is, I don't criticize the choices others make. I don't do it with the other composers I work with. I don't do it on public forums. I think it's disrespectful and just plain wrong. And those who dash it off as 'simply being honest' or 'speaking their mind' just don't get it...and probably never will. Hopefully we were all taught a few more social skills. Plus, setting oneself up as the arbiter of 'artistic integrtiy'...just how pompous is THAT?
So for those who refrain from the value judgments, thanks for sharing. We all benefit from an exchange of ideas and experiences.
And to those who think that if we're doing things any way but theirs we're wrong - or somehow lesser for it, well...that's YOUR problem.
Indeed. perfectly said. before these huge libraries I was as much a dissatisfied ETHIC A composer as possible. I write for the orchestra. Not having that capability at my fingertips was very unsatisfying. As little as it sounds, I believe now with VSL you can do about 40% of what the orchestra can do. My art is the orchestra.@jbm said:
However, what interests me about Evan, is that I now see that he's found his way to an application of this technology which truly honors his ethical standpoint.