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Ask Slashdot: Can Digital Music Replace Most Instrumental Musicians?

deviated_prevert writes "Most instrumental music used today in television commercials, background sounds and themes even on the majority of produced shows comes from completely digital composers who produce the product through digitized instrument samples. This has almost eliminated the need for real human instrumental musicians. For many listeners this makes no difference, as such music is essentially background in nature and does not need to have a true musical interaction with a listening audience at all. The same thing applies to the waves of digital music produced for things like raves. To quote one observer at the Globe and Mail 'So now we know why Deadmau5 and Daft Punk wear helmets when they perform. Everybody is digging the music, but no one is dancing. It is a sad development; the headgear of the maestros is there to mask their tears.' Will the live performance of instrumental musicians also become a thing of the past, or will there continue to be a real need for it? Purely instrumental groups like Booker T and the MGs, as well as solo performers like Herbie Hancock or John McLaughlin, seem not to take the spotlight as they once did. It is apparent that unless someone with a young fresh face is singing, today's producers will not attempt to seriously promote them. Regardless of how great today's instrumentalists are musically, there no longer seems to be a market for real musicianship. Even great performing classical musicians and ensembles are becoming scarcer due to faster and cheaper digital music production."

225 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Rodrigo y Gabriela by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    ... would like to disagree.

    Instrumental groups have a hard time up against bands with singers; they always have. As a species, we like singing. But there _are_ instrumental bands out there still.

    1. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by torsmo · · Score: 2

      I don't think John Coltrane would have a hard time finding an appreciative audience.

    2. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by TranquilVoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Read the fine title :) That's why the it refers to most music. People like singing because it's an extension of talking, our primary mode of communication. We can differentiate between 1000s of voices in the same accent and therefore singing has more 'personality' than a guitar or piano tone.

      Rodrigo y Gabriela belong to the sphere of virtuostic rock music where the personality of the instrument (and playing) is much more pronounced. This makes them an exception. Most of the songs on X-Factor/Idol could be played back instrumentally, using synthesised instruments, and most of the audience couldn't tell.

      I do think the need for live instrumental musicians will never disappear. This is the whole point of a concert, to get worse sound quality in exchange for direct communication with the artist*. If the artist is just pushing the play button that disappears. Further, many people enjoy the expression of playing an instrument themselves, and they will always want to hear others do the same.

      * Or the hype of a crowd, so maybe DJs will prove me to be wrong.

    3. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by flyneye · · Score: 1

      You play the music you like, if you play, they will come. You figure out your audience and book your gigs accordingly.
      Live music is alive and well, instrumental or not. Like the story posting says, no one could care what is played at them during a commercial, BECAUSE WE ARE TUNING THE WHOLE THING OUT. So go ahead and use canned music.
      Author of story posting lives in his own fantasy world and should broaden himself before entering the world of music journalism. Sensational garbage.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    4. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't go that far. Yes, some music use lyrics to cover up their sloppy music, but to me it is not the main purpose of lyrics. Different people have different level of interpretation to music (or anything). Appropriate Lyrics actually help those who cannot deeply understand the music to get the feel of it (an advantage but not apply to "all"). For example, some people do not have any emotion when they listen to a sad music unless they are in that kind of emotion. An appropriate lyrics with the music gives a better idea of how and/or why the music is sad.

    5. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Umm...that's the purpose of music when it's supporting a singer. The SINGER is the focus and the purpose of the music is to support them. Together, they make for a complete musical performance.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    6. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by sycodon · · Score: 1

      The human voice is an instrument. Works more or less the same way and has in many cases greater range and dynamics than many instruments.

      You speak as if it was some sort of add on when it is, in fact, the genesis of music.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    7. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by Matheus · · Score: 3, Informative

      I would like to *emphatically disagree... matter 'o fact I'd just shove this into the usual /. reactionary article category. Whomever thought this was a valid premise spends their time no where near the vibrant music community. There is no decline... As a direct hit to the reference in the summary: Daft punk wears helmets to hide their tears because no one is dancing? Are you f$%^ing kidding me? As a specific point their most recent album was significantly *less digital than their previous and there are no shortage of people dancing their asses off to it.

      I spend my life in the music biz and this article really angers me not because it has any grain of truth but because there are people out there who really think it is! The only links in the article are fairly laughable... sorry a soul band from the 70's can't come back and see the same draw they had before. There's a saying I like which applies heavily to the music biz "So what have you done for me lately?" people are very forgetful and extremely ADD when it comes to music. Keeping the audience's eye for year after year requires constant attention and you still might lose 'em.

      As for the no one dancing? BS. Crowds at any show that gets packed have to figure out how to move with limited space... that's logistics not music or some change in the landscape. the people who really want more room to move you'll find at the edges and you'll see *plenty of movement in the middle it just takes a different form.

      Anyway... dunno why I'm arguing this logically... it really wasn't worth the energy I put into it... I'm going away now.

    8. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      I disagree. I'm not a native English speaker, but most music I listen to has English lyrics. Now - I've even got a hard time to understand the lyrics in my native language. For English songs, I really need to concentrate hard to understand the lyrics. Therefore they could very well sing "LaLaLa" (OK, with some variations ...) and it wouldn't change much the way I feel for/perceive a song. It's more about the phrasing, rhythm and melody. The voice is just another instrument - and a very versatile one. Oh, and did I mention that I absolutely love monumental choirs? :)

    9. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by xelah · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I am a native English speaker, but I generally hate listening to music with English singing. It usually seems flat and dull, with the meaning of the words never matching up to the appeal of the music.

    10. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      I think it is an issue of Quality.

      Digital Music plays flawlessly, but lifelessly.
      Human Musicians can very from Horrible to Near Flawlessly with a lot of life.

      Amateur and sub par Professional Musicians will take a hit. As Digital Music will be cheaper and better then they are.
      But the people who have really mastered the instrument will still be in demand for making real music.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    11. Re:Rodrigo y Gabriela by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      Be careful. The playing with gravity/dance from whence beats are derived could just as justifiably be accorded the crown of progenitor of music.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  2. Automatons vs performers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You aren't going to replace a jazz player with a sampler. Getting rid of concert performers for media production is just economics.

    1. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Inflammatory+Fallacy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're underestimating a synthesizer. Take a look at a Moog sometime. There's a lot of knobs and dials, and they all do something (and most of them do something that was nearly impossible with any other instrument invented). A saxophone can't gradually alter its entire timber mid-phrase, the closest wind instruments have are the various kinds of mute, each limited in its ability in a way a synthesizer isn't. The electric guitar is the closest, because using different digital and analog pedals one can achieve a massive range of effects, in much the same way a synthesizer does. And, may I ask you to remember what the common reaction was to the invention of the electric guitar? Much the same as the modern reaction of so-called 'purists' to the popularization of sampling, synthesizing, and digital production via software. The fact of the matter is, they are no longer able to be looked at as more or less than each other. They are simply different ways of making art, and each is capable of truly amazing things.

    2. Re:Automatons vs performers. by ebusinessmedia1 · · Score: 2

      Agreed. A Moog synthesizer is a musical instrument. For instance, Don Buchla insists that his synthesizers be called musical instruments.

    3. Re:Automatons vs performers. by ApplePy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're underestimating a synthesizer.

      I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano. Or the delightfully analog feel. Or dynamic range. Or imposing presence in the living room. As well the synthesizer completely fails at those little weird harmonics only found in acoustic pianos but which add rich character to the sound.

      No thank you sir, you may keep your electro-wizardry, your programmable gewgaws, your artificial noises. I do not wish to play on a computer; working on one is enough. Nay, sir, the music comes from the soul, through the fingers, and sings or roars out from the harmonious combination of iron, steel, copper, and spruce. The pure pitch and harmonic perfection of your electronically generated waveforms only takes away from the music; it adds nothing. Computerized precision has no soul, sir.

      --
      That I'm right, and you don't like it, doesn't mean I'm a troll.
    4. Re:Automatons vs performers. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano.

      This is extremely frustrating to me.

      Or dynamic range.

      Well actually you just need bigger speakers. Some will blow your eardrums. Those speakers go up to 11.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Automatons vs performers. by rioki · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think you people are talking two different things.

      From the summary:

      Most instrumental music used today in television commercials, background sounds and themes [...]. For many listeners this makes no difference, as such music is essentially background in nature and does not need to have a true musical interaction with a listening audience at all

      Can Digital Music Replace Most Instrumental Musicians?

      Betteridge's law of headlines says: NO.

      You are both right and wrong. Current synthesizer technology is incredibly advanced and can produce a large number of music. Especially music that used in contexts that few people care. The dulcet [sweet and soothing (often used ironically).] noises of you grand piano will be lost in the recording for a Mc Donald's commercial. Will someone put a synthesizer in his living room to show how sophisticated he is? (Somebody probably will.) There is a reason why live classical performances exists and it will remain. Even with perfect reproduction people will want to see live performance, singing the queen of night is an achievement, hitting the play button is not.

    6. Re:Automatons vs performers. by spongman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      i have yet to meet a piano that can sound like a violin.

      yet, it's still a musical instrument.

      just because one machine can't make the same sound as another machine, doesn't mean that it's not an instrument.

      no, you're a luddite snob.

      that is all.

    7. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano. Or the delightfully analog feel. Or dynamic range. Or imposing presence in the living room. As well the synthesizer completely fails at those little weird harmonics only found in acoustic pianos but which add rich character to the sound.

      Just because you are ignorant, doesn't mean it's not doable (it might just not be easy to do it real-time with current processing abilities). Waveguide synthesis can replicate all of that, and in a way that's perfectly undistinguishable by a human (with its limited frequency range) from the real thing, given appropriate sampling rates... it's just not very computationally cheap.

      Besides, if what you want is "the delightfully analog feel" (whatever you mean by that), there are analog synths out there, you know (e.g. a theremin)?

      Nay, sir, the music comes from the soul, through the fingers, and sings or roars out from the harmonious combination of iron, steel, copper, and spruce.

      So, whatever comes out of an electric guitar cannot be classified as music, right?

      Protip: "music" is just structured sound, which can be obtained from a wide range of means; redefining "music" to mean "sounds that come out of $choose_arbitrary_instrument" is not insightful.

      The pure pitch and harmonic perfection of your electronically generated waveforms only takes away from the music; it adds nothing.

      Yes, because it's impossible to add noise or otherwise detune oscillators. Also, try to figure out how "pure" the pitch of the common analog synth is (protip: not very pure).

      Computerized precision has no soul, sir.

      The difference between a computer and a piano is that, with a computer, you can choose to be as precise or imprecise as you want; with a piano, you have no choice.

      The funniest thing is that, for sure, you have already heard renditions of piano that you thought were "real" (i.e. were recorded from a physical piano), but actually weren't (i.e. were recorded from a waveguide model of a piano).

      A computer might not have a soul, but if you can't distinguish between the sound that a soulful piano makes vs. the sound a soulless computer makes, maybe that distinction is purely arbitrary autism?

      TL;DR: You need to polish your "no true scotsman" fallacy, brah.

    8. Re:Automatons vs performers. by gtall · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And you won't replace the spontaneity or timing insight of a drummer either. Most of what I've heard in computer generated drum rhythms and fills seems to have been produced by non-drummers. It's usually mundane because most people, including other musicians (especially other musicians) have no idea what makes a rhythm or fill interesting. They just want something back there so they can concentrate on their instrument. As a consequence, and as a drummer, I find their music usually mundane and uninteresting.

      Look at a YouTube video, say, Buddy Rich Amazing Drum Solo. No one yet has been able to reproduce electronically what he was capable of. Most drummers can't come close either.

      Also, you wont' drive a band like Deep Purple without an Ian Paice or Iron Maiden without a Nicko McBrain. Both bands are still touring to large audiences. And why would you go to see a bunch of electronics generate music at you. Part of the allure of a live performance is, uh the live performance. If all you wanted was to jump around with a bunch of friends to loud music, throw a party.

    9. Re: Automatons vs performers. by um...+Lucas · · Score: 1

      Luddites are on slashdot?!?

    10. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      This is extremely frustrating to me.

      Check out Modartt's Pianoteq, it's extremely good, and almost completely synthesized. I think they still maybe use samples for the pedal noises and other very faint, nonlinear sounds inside the piano, but the steel string is 100% synthesized.

      Sampled piano synths are also pretty good these days, although not as flexible. Take something that ought to be well-known to everyone, the Minecraft music. Do the pianos in there sound synthetic to you? (It's a sample based synth piano - Native Instruments' Komplete, I believe.)

      You may be able to pick out differences, if you really go listening for them. But as far as I'm concerned, the difference between a recording of a piano vs. a live piano is so much greater than the difference between a recorded vs. a synthesized piano, that it's silly to make a distinction. Yeah, it'd be nice if was clinically impossible in blind tests to tell the difference between a piano synth and a piano. It would also be nice if I had live musicians in my room rather than streamed music.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    11. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      You sir, have never played a Yamaha CS-80.

      It's entirely analogue, it makes the most mind-meltingly beautiful and organic sounds and is impossible to mimic.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    12. Re:Automatons vs performers. by JimSadler · · Score: 1

      I do think that the theme music behind the Miami Vice tv series was a turning point for synthetic music. At that point some synthetic music began to be true art. Performing musical artist have been in a more than challenging shifting sand since the microphone and radio destroyed the traditional industry. There was a point in the 1970s that electric guitars seemed to usurp the entire musical universe. Right now the brass bands seem to be making a comeback but we have a huge flaw. The loss of Tin Pan Alley culture and the lack of availability of good sheet music is hurting us bad. When was the last time you heard Dixie Land music ? Some of these losses are so serious that our cultural history is being lost. Free radio on the net was making music accessible but the law has chocked net radio so severely that it is now not much of a resource. And trying to find sheet music for early jazz is a disaster as well.

    13. Re:Automatons vs performers. by smpoole7 · · Score: 2

      > I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano.

      That's true to someone who is sitting at the piano, playing it.

      But remember, when you're talking about *recorded* music, you should compare that to the sound of a properly-miked grand piano vs. a properly-sampled piano. Both sounds are ultimately stored and then played back through speakers, and test after test have shown that most listeners can't tell the difference (and/or just plain don't care).

      From my own experience, I can get the sounds I want from digital synthesis and sampling, but it does take a lot more work. However, the benefit is that I DON'T have a giant grand piano and a drum kit in my small home studio. I'm willing to accept that tradeoff. :)

      --
      Cogito, igitur comedam pizza.
    14. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Ardyvee · · Score: 1

      I wonder, however, if Buddy Rich could ... (let's call it) sequence one of his solos. I don't think the synth can't reproduce his solos, but that nobody who uses a synth knows how to ever get close to it, and whoever would know how just does it in the drums because they like it better.

      That is not to say that so far an electronic may not be able to just go and play an unscripted solo that sounds good, of course. We are not there, yet.

      --
      I don't care if I'm wrong. I only care about everyone obtaining something from the discussion.
    15. Re:Automatons vs performers. by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

      Getting rid of concert performers also removes any chance of improv.

      One of the best parts of a show is the final acts encore in which they may elect to play more songs or simply screw around and play covers. I recently went to a show and saw Alestorm (pirate themed metal band, yargh!) and their encore was more like the second half of their set. They played various songs, messed around as well as played a cover of In the Navy by the Village People. They were accompanied by Trollfest (a hilarious Norwegian folk metal band) who are a comedic bunch who would prank the other bands on stage. (side-note: a band called Gypsy Hawk also played, fucking amazing band, live set was like a studio recording).

      I saw Nine Inch Nails not too long ago and the live set was phenomenal. Thing is, Trent Reznor records all the music himself, there are no full time band members and no session band. But when on tour he has a backing band comprised of select musicians that gives the music a unique sound compared to the solo recorded studio albums.

      A single singer with prerecorded music playing in a live show would suck balls. Fuck any concert that is nothing but a recording with someone who may or may not be actually singing.

    16. Re:Automatons vs performers. by DoctorBonzo · · Score: 1
      +1 for creative crankiness.

      I appreciate your plaint, but you may be a bit narrow in your definition of music.

    17. Re:Automatons vs performers. by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      Oh that is just a pile of crap. If it is sound it can be copied! We did not talk about resolution because most devices might not have the resolution needed to fool the human being. This is what one calls going forward in time. You talk about how your devices are the "pure" thing, I call BS! For if you went back say 200 years or even 300 years did your piano sound like they do now? This is the entire crux of the argument in that instruments have advanced, and changed with the passing of time. Sounds change, and what sounds appropriate changes as well. No what I hear are people who yell, "get off my lawn I don't want an friggen change because it is not right."

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    18. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Critical+Facilities · · Score: 2
      *disclaimer - I am a musician and a composer, and I am not making the argument that "robots" or anything else can ever replace live musicians

      With that said:

      I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano.

      You would be surprised at how well some of the sampled, Virtual Instruments have progressed.

      East West Quantum Leap Pianos

      Native Instruments Piano Collection

      8dio 1928 Steinway

      Now again, so be clear, I'm not supporting the position that computers will ever replace musicians or actual, real instruments, mind you. I just wanted to point out that VST's have really come a long way, particularly in the last 10 years or so. No more are you stuck with Garritan Pocket Orchestra, and sad, tinny reproductions of instruments based on the PC wavetables. If you've got the money to spend, you can get some amazing sounds, with a stunning amount of dynamics and articulations availble.

    19. Re:Automatons vs performers. by coldsalmon · · Score: 1

      Software pianos are currently not up to reproducing acoustic pianos, and can be easily distinguished. However, the gap is closing fast and there is no theoretical reason why they will not be able to fully reproduce the sound of an acoustic given enough time and effort. For an exhaustive discussion and some scientific testing of software pianos vs. acoustic, see the pianoworld.com Digital Pianos forum, particularly this thread: http://www.pianoworld.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/1365103/The_DPBSD_Project.html and this thread, discussing a fully-modelled (i.e. no recorded samples) software piano called Pianoteq: http://www.pianoworld.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/1470073/Just_tried_Pianoteq_OMG.html

    20. Re:Automatons vs performers. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Thanks I'll check it out.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    21. Re:Automatons vs performers. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      This is an incredible piece of machinery, thank you for the link.

    22. Re:Automatons vs performers. by fatphil · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'm no musician (though it's one of my interests - I do listen to a lot, and go to live gigs all the time), but the difference between a sequenced drum track and a real drummer's line are like black and white to me. When I do encounter real drummers playing as if they were a soulless sequencer I always why they bother - they must have bored themselves stupid just cycling through a few bits of motor memory a few hundred times.

      Oh I highly recommend the recent Ginger Baker documentary /Beware of Mr. Baker/.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    23. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      I have known a few drummers and most wouldn't even attempt it, the strict quantisation of most drum machines makes it impossible to replicate any real kind of feel. I'm pretty sure there was an article in New Scientist a few years ago that showed that in certain types of music the backbeat arrives fractionally late (giving the music swing), there was another study showing that for example in a twelve bar blues the drummer will unconsciously pick up the pace as he nears the turnaround. Little things like this that many people are totally unaware of are part of the reason programming drums to sound natural is so hard.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    24. Re:Automatons vs performers. by jdschulteis · · Score: 1

      You're underestimating a synthesizer. Take a look at a Moog sometime. There's a lot of knobs and dials, and they all do something (and most of them do something that was nearly impossible with any other instrument invented). A saxophone can't gradually alter its entire timber mid-phrase, the closest wind instruments have are the various kinds of mute, each limited in its ability in a way a synthesizer isn't..

      I think you missed the point. A saxophonist with a wind MIDI controller can play a synth with a similar level of expressiveness as that provided by a keyboard plus pitch and modulation controllers. However, no Minimoog patch sounds much like a real saxophone. A physical modeling synth played with a breath controller can sound pretty good, but not quite "right". Kind of like how human actors in front of a digital matte painting look fine, but digital actors have the "Uncanny Valley" problem.

      GP AC: "...it still will require some type of v-drum set to handle the different ways of striking the drum head." Similarly, a breath controller is very helpful for wind instruments. Many real instruments have special playing techniques that are difficult to completely emulate in virtual instruments.

    25. Re:Automatons vs performers. by vux984 · · Score: 1

      I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano. Or the delightfully analog feel. Or dynamic range. Or imposing presence in the living room

      Have you met one of these guys?

      http://www.roland.com/products/en/V-Piano_Grand/

    26. Re:Automatons vs performers. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I am reminded of the Movie Fame. There was a scene where a student was proclaiming the virtues of synthesizers and proclaiming other instruments obsolete. One person could per4form a whole symphony.

      The professor replied, "that's not music, it's masturbation."

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    27. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      A synthesizer can never replace the actual vibrations and harmonics produced by actual instruments, i.e. physical oscillating waves. For those of us acutely sensitive to disparate frequencies or who listen to music "with our body" electronics can never replace acoustics.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    28. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Are you arguing that the laws of physics have changed over the past centuries? Otherwise your arguments are hooey/

      Perhaps we've fiddled with the frequency of 'A', or the timbre has changed due to material differences, but the interaction of parts that creates harmonics hasn't and THAT is what all the fuzz is about.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    29. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Did you know: What makes a rhythm or fill interesting to you as a drummer, who is using his body in a certain way to produce that rhythm, is different than/what makes it interesting to a musician, using it as a stable base to ground his solos, or a dancer, reacting and complimenting with his body.

      We'd all love to see good quality drum tracks out there, however, until you allow a drummer to lay down an electronic track from his drumset you just aren't going to see that

      In other words how many digital drumtracks have you contributed to the cause?

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    30. Re:Automatons vs performers. by MonkeyPaw · · Score: 1

      I have known a few drummers and most wouldn't even attempt it, the strict quantisation of most drum machines makes it impossible to replicate any real kind of feel.

      Drum machines, maybe. Drum sequencing on a computer, no.

      I do all my drum lines on an electronic trap set. These capture what I'm putting in, the variances in timing, the loudness and expression of the playing. The "recording" of all of these elements are recorded as MIDI events in the sequencing software. The MIDI sequences then trigger the sounds for whatever drum sound I want.

      There are benefits to doing it this way. I could be playing perfectly on a track but glitch a section in the first chorus - maybe a single snare hit comes in late. With a regular acoustic recording, I could either try to punch in over this section or replay the entire track. If I re-record the entire track then I lose the really nice fill I did leading into the second chorus. Now I'm stuck trying to recapture something. With the MIDI recording, I just slide the single late snare hit to be in time. I can also mix and match sessions - cutting and pasting just the sections I want.

      As for the drum sounds, the samples I use are of real drums and each tom and snare hit contain many different sample sounds of the drums being hit at various velocities and different sections of the head. So the sounds are good.

      Let's say I'm working on a song. I've got the chorus section and the verse sections finished - then I get pulled away on another project. I revisit the song 6 months later. Do you know how hard it would be to match the micing and recording of a drum set 6 months later? The heads will sound different, the mic positions slightly different, room location and sounds slightly different. It would be easier to record the entire drum line again. But with the MIDI recording I can just load the same drum sound set and I'm off and running.

      Having said that, it really depends on what you're recording. If I'm bashing away on something with sticks, I don't feel there is that much of a difference between my sampled drum sounds and a real drum set once the tracks are in the mix. Hand drums are different. Congas, bongos, tabla - something where the expression is based on the movement of the hand. If that type of track is required and it is front and forward in the mix, I'd rather it be acoustically recorded.

      The same is true with other instruments. The new sampler software and multi-sampled instrument sets are amazing. You get squeals and slides and instrument sounds just like you get with an actual instrument. I have piano samples that even make a instrument sound when you lift the sustain petal.

      Here is a test. This song has both acoustic and sampled instruments. See if you can tell which is which - https://soundcloud.com/7graylands/seven-graylands-lost
      This song has a sampled sax in one section and a live sax. Which is which? https://soundcloud.com/7graylands/seven-graylands-cinder

      --
      My studio - www.graylands.ca
    31. Re:Automatons vs performers. by xaxa · · Score: 1

      I didn't say the synthesizer isn't an instrument. I said it can't fully duplicate the real thing.

      Why does it need to duplicate the real thing? It's its own instrument.

      The first post in this thread was about a sampler, which is different to a synthesiser. The first plays back recorded noises, the second generates new noises, or perhaps distorts a recorded noise beyond recognition.

      (An instrumental track with [almost?] entirely synthesisers which I happen to like. I'm sure there are much more intellectual artists.)

    32. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself. I'll take Wendy Carlos or Tangerine Dream over twangy country any day.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    33. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I have yet to meet the synthesizer that can even remotely duplicate the dulcet noises of the old-fashioned dead trees and metal strings of my grand piano.

      A synthesizer which is tasked with duplicating the sound produced by a grand piano is a waste of a perfectly good synthesizer. Which is, of course, kind of the point of the thread.

      Or the delightfully analog feel. Or dynamic range. Or imposing presence in the living room.

      That's because you've never met an Ondes Martenot.

      Or a Moog modular, for that matter.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    34. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there are much more intellectual artists.

      Keith Emerson is the only one that comes to mind.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    35. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Just for comparison, electronic pipe organs are indistinguishable from air-and-bellows-based organs today. Admittedly, the main reason for this is that most of the sound of the instrument is the reverberation of the space that it's in.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    36. Re:Automatons vs performers. by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you but I wouldn't call that sequencing, you are actually playing it and recording it. The guitar is surely artificial (I don't have time to listen carefully to the full track, sorry). Personally I don't have a strong opinion on synthesised music, I like a lot of good synth sounds, and I don't have anything against most sampled or synthesised instruments. It is worth noting though that on sampled instrument sets you would expect it to make squeals and instrument sounds just like the real instrument because it is comprised of samples of real instruments.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
  3. Composition or Instrumental Excellence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Music success is much more about creativity and the composition than the performance. The most difficult part is writing good songs which is why the best musicians often can't make a living off music. Now that computers can reproduce instruments at an above average level, people only need to learn piano and composition and show talent in creating new music to make a living.

  4. No dancing? by Fwipp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "So now we know why Deadmau5 and Daft Punk wear helmets when they perform. Everybody is digging the music, but no one is dancing."
    Have you seen those concerts? Maybe it ain't the Charleston, but those kids are certainly groovin to the beat.

    "It is a sad development; the headgear of the maestros is there to mask their tears."
    Somehow, I think they have no trouble sleeping on their large piles of money each night.

    1. Re:No dancing? by spongman · · Score: 1

      mass-produced? deadmau5 and daft punk? you do realize that those three are pretty much the sole performers, engineers, producers, marketers & distributors of their music? they make their own music on their own in their own studios that they built. they own their own record labels. they perform on stage alone. (sure, they collaborate...)

      or do you mean mass-produced like they print a bunch of CDs?

    2. Re:No dancing? by znrt · · Score: 2

      Money... Because that's what music is about. Burn in hell while listening to your mass-produced music, Idiot.

      the whole issue is much more about music industry than about music itself, pretty much pointless and, well, just wrong: in fact musical creativity has boomed since technology has universalized (well, almost) the means for production and distribution. if TFA author would get his head out of his ass he could listen for himself. just count the occurrences of the word "production" in the post. you don't "produce" music, but "products": icons, myths, aesthetics, fashion. what is he talking about? mass-production. mass-produced music is like mass-produced everything else.

      another aspect that is fuelling musical creativity nowadays is, not surprisingly in this scenario, economic crisis. it's driving people to find alternative ways to have fun, largely ignoring the mainstream canned offering. at least in europe more people every day are rediscovering folklore and old popular musical styles and instruments and combining them with modern styles and tech. in essence, they are rediscovering music. you won't hear that in mtv, though.

    3. Re:No dancing? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      They *made* it mainstream.

    4. Re:No dancing? by DeuceDaily · · Score: 1

      The person whose complaint is they can't dance to something has never taken the time to listen to the music.

      The person whose complaint is that what is obviously dance music is uninteresting has never taken the time to dance to the music.

      Both have exactly the same mental hang up.

    5. Re:No dancing? by znrt · · Score: 1

      ..."in fact musical creativity has boomed since technology has universalized (well, almost) the means for production and distribution"

      You are fucking delusional, more content does not mean better and in fact, most of what is created sucks donkey balls, get a fucking clue!

      you should really get yourself a dictionary before stomping into rational conversations you don't even understand. now do look up "creativity" and realize that the concept has nothing to do with any measure of "quality" you might be wanting to force on the rest of the world.

    6. Re:No dancing? by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that if music is catchy, is easy to sing-a-long to or has a nice danceable rhythm, which in turn causes it to become popular, it is automatically crap?

      What a sad sad life you must lead.

      --
      Eat the rich.
  5. Betteridge's Law of headlines by Hieronymus+Hero · · Score: 1

    No.

    Absolutely, no.

    Journalistic principle.

    1. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by Imrik · · Score: 1

      Except the answer is yes. Most music can be made with digital tools without significant loss. It can't, however, replace all of them. Digital music is good for technically perfect scripted performances. It falls short for live music and anything where the imperfections improve the music, primarily music heavily focused on emotions.

    2. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by Inflammatory+Fallacy · · Score: 2

      It really doesn't "fall short" in any case. Digital tools are tools nonetheless, and equally capable of transferring emotion to a sonic medium. There is plenty of 'digital' music that does so consistently, it's just a matter of finding it.

    3. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by ApplePy · · Score: 1

      I think you have pretty much described (part of) a world not worth living in.

      --
      That I'm right, and you don't like it, doesn't mean I'm a troll.
    4. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by Pubstar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My friend made a video about a track she was recording. It was the same song, but the difference was one had all the drums PERFECT. The other had the drums just the slightest amount off, to emulate someone playing life.

      It was weird. Just that little bit of imperfection made the song sound quite a bit warmer. Her youtube account has since been deleted. Its rather sad, she had tons of good stuff on there.

    5. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by ranton · · Score: 2

      Except the answer is yes. Most music can be made with digital tools without significant loss. It can't, however, replace all of them. Digital music is good for technically perfect scripted performances. It falls short for live music and anything where the imperfections improve the music, primarily music heavily focused on emotions.

      Except you just explained why the answer is not yes. So the answer is still no.

      Since the headline was actually wrote well (because of its use of the word "most"), the answer is still yes. Just like every industry that AI and robotics is transforming, technology doesn't have to replace 100% of human activities to have an enormous impact.

      The next step would be identifying how various imperfections enhance the perception of emotion, and then the digital tools will be able to emulate that too. Not 100% (at least not for a long time), but enough to make using human performers irrelevant for most venues.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    6. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by fatphil · · Score: 1

      And were the headline to be
      "Are Instrumental Musicians Redundant Now Digital Music is so Capable?"
      ?

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    7. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by Ardyvee · · Score: 2

      Another issue with perfect drums is that it may get annoying. Just like listening to the same sound over and over again.

      --
      I don't care if I'm wrong. I only care about everyone obtaining something from the discussion.
    8. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by Imrik · · Score: 1

      But then you have to synthesize the imperfections differently each time, if you go that far, there's little point in replacing an instrument musician with a digital one.

    9. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by Pubstar · · Score: 1

      Eh, for dance music its fine. I listen mostly to Techno and Tech-House... If you hate the same sound over and over again, you'd probably die of boredom.

    10. Re:Betteridge's Law of headlines by whiplashx · · Score: 1

      A good drum programmer always includes lots of dynamics in the velocity, filtering and timing. :)

  6. Uhh... No one is dancing?? by urbanriot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm guessing he's never been to one of the aforementioned performer's party since he's talking out of his ass.

  7. Laugh tracks by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Comedy shows on TV have used canned laughter for decades, but nobody would say that it beats the experience of sitting in an auditorium live, with a great comedian on stage. The better TV shows will continue to have real music played by real musicians, and we'll all continue to get a better musical experience by going to the local concert hall, church, or bar.

    This is really about Big Music losing its stranglehold on deciding who the big stars will be.

    1. Re:Laugh tracks by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This.....

      There are few musicians/bands i will pay to see in concert any more. But i love going to festivals and watching performers. I love hitting bars to watch local talent. I don't even care if the sound is imperfect or the acustics reminds you of dogs barking at cats having screaming loud sex. Its the ecperience of seeing people give it their best and having a hell of a good time in the process.

      The last major concert i went to, it seemed like my $80 for tickets bothered the band or something. It was almost like they had something better to do. I know i have something better to do. Long live the garage bands and festivals. Even the has been headliners stuck doing county fairs are better then most headliners in my opinion.

    2. Re:Laugh tracks by Pubstar · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I paid $20 to see Dick Dale at some bar a few years back. Best show I've ever been too. It was seriously just like having some local band up on the small stage, but, you know, Dick fucking Dale. It was a bit weird though - I was the only one under 25 there.

    3. Re:Laugh tracks by acid_andy · · Score: 1

      Having said that it makes ME wonder how something created digitally would sound on vinyl!!

      Don't you realise there's a whole LOAD of electronic music on vinyl? What do you think DJs in clubs were using? Some choose to do it without the vinyl now but it's still been the definitive medium for underground dance singles.

      --
      Your ad here.
    4. Re:Laugh tracks by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Yes, and it's born of ignorance. Listen to a Led Zeppelin LP, then the CD, the LP will sound better. Listen to a Cars LP and a Cars CD and the CD will sound better. Why? Because the Zep was recorded in analog and the Cars were recorded digitally. Each format has its own benefits and detriments, and when you mix the two you get the worst of both worlds.

    5. Re:Laugh tracks by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      It's a lot more complex than that.

      Some of the best-sounding albums I own on CD were originally recorded on analog media. Like for instance Boston's first album, or basically anything produced by Alan Parsons back in the Pink Floyd and The Alan Parsons Project days. They sound great on LP, they sound great on CD, they sound great as FLAC files on my PC. The reasons is that the people doing the recording, mixing and mastering knew exactly what they were doing. They knew the benefits and drawbacks of the whichever medium they were targeting, and tweaked the mixes, levels and equalizing to suit.

      You simply cannot just throw a spot-on mix made for LP on a CD and expect anything but a mediocre result, and vice versa. The basic reason for this is a vinyl is honestly pretty crappy. Low frequencies a noisy because of the RIAA equalization needed, high frequencies roll off around 12-15kHz at the most. And that's before you get into the massive problems with dust, scratches and wear and tear. Thus the mastering needs to work around these issues, and by the time the the CD was coming onto the market, LP mastering was pretty damn good, so people just threw those same masters directly to CD, with mediocre results because the medium was completely different. Some techs even forgot to apply RIAA equalization to their masters, leading to extremely tinny and weak-sounding CD releases, creating the idiotic audiophile myth that all CDs sound bad "because they're digital". Absolute bullshit, a CD will give back exactly what you put into it, every damn time.

      Vice versa, some modern LP releases have been lazily created from straight made-for-CD mixes, without compensating for the drawbacks of vinyl. The end result is a shitty, often severely overdriven and distorted sound. Luckily, some modern vinyl releases are seriously great. Blackwater Park by Opeth sounds amazing on vinyl, and there is a definite charm to peeling an LP out of its sleeve, putting it on the turntable, giving it a quick wipe with the carbon fiber brush and carefully dropping the needle into the groove yourself. Another example is Californication by RHCP, where the CD sounds like absolut shit due to the techs turning everything to 11 like a pack of shit-flinging monkeys, but the LP sounds great because you simply cannot overdrive an LP like that without destroying everything, so they were forced to make a better mix.

      For some albums, I listen exclusively to good FLAC rips of the vinyl edition, because of the massive difference in mastering quality. Sure, the noise floor is much higher and there is some definite high-frequency roll-off, but I much prefer that to the "everything louder than everything else" approach that a lot of CDs have been mastered to. I could burn one of those vinyl FLAC rips to a CD and play it back to you on my inexpensive CD player, and your would swear I was playing an LP. Why they couldn't just put those well-crafted mixes on CD in the first place, I have no idea.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    6. Re:Laugh tracks by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Some of the best-sounding albums I own on CD were originally recorded on analog media. Like for instance Boston's first albumSome of the best-sounding albums I own on CD were originally recorded on analog media. Like for instance Boston's first album

      You lost me right there, Boston on CD sucked so badly that the guy who started Boston was, last I heard, doing a re-mix. Boston on CD had no dynamics whatever, and the dynamics were a big part of what made that album great.

      Sample that Boston LP using the shitty cheap circuitry on your PC and it will sound better than the factory mix. Who are you trying to bullshit here, boy?

    7. Re:Laugh tracks by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      I don't know which CD version of the album you've heard, but the one I own sounds great, good dynamics, all of that richly layered signature Boston sound is intact. According to Allmusic.com, there have been 14 different CD releases of that album. I'm away on vacation at the moment, so I can't tell you which one I have.

      --
      Eat the rich.
  8. poor venue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Music discussions should not happen on /.

    That being said, digital music is simply another facet of the experience. There are plenty of acts out currently combining live instruments and digital equipment (big gigantic, griz).

    Music fans will always prefer a live show, instrumentalists are not going anywhere.

  9. My opinion by EvanED · · Score: 1

    I know the article is mainly about dance music, but I see this happening a bit in the world of orchestral soundtracks, which is a genre I tend to like quite a bit, where recordings of orchestras are being replaced by sample libraries. And it's really unfortunate... even without getting into any philosophical arguments, just from the listener's perspective. For instance, I really like a lot of the music from the Mass Effect series, but there are certain parts that just sound bad even though compositionally I much approve.

    1. Re: My opinion by Inflammatory+Fallacy · · Score: 1

      I'd suggest E.S. Posthumus. It's purely digital, but they were pretty good at what they did. Sadly, all the tracks are too short.

  10. Shaping notes by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    An article by a digital musician I read recently claimed that although digital synthesis can approach the quality of a real orchestra, it's extremely time-consuming to shape every note to fit the mood and context of that note.

    If you factor in the time and effort to "carve" the note to sufficient quality, it's not economical compared to a smaller orchestra, because experienced musicians do the same in real time, with 1 practice and 2 takes on average. The performing group gets it done in about an hour, while diddling a synth rendering can take weeks. Even though it's one dude or so, it's a LOT of one dude.

    Plus, you risk "ear burn-out" from so many replays such that you cannot recognize quality anymore. One has to switch between projects and styles to keep their ears fresh, delaying the finished product.

    Maybe the editing software eventually will get better and the computer can assist with more natural "guesses" to get closer to expectations to reduce customization, but at this stage if you want quality performances, synthesis is not fully competitive.

    1. Re:Shaping notes by quax · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Only a real orchestra offers massive parallel musicality, and they scale pretty well under a competent conductor.

    2. Re:Shaping notes by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 2

      I'm a hobby musician (ie can string a few notes together) and I can't tell the difference most of the time, what chance do regular folk have? My wife can't even tell the difference between a bass and a guitar, do you really think people like her will notice it an individual note on an individual instrument has been hammered instead of bent? The one intangible thing that regular folk do grasp is the energy of live music, but as the Daft Punk example shows, even that means nothing anymore.

    3. Re:Shaping notes by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      I'm a hobby musician...I can't tell the difference most of the time

      But enough critics, audiophiles, and fans can such that it can affect the reputation of a work or publisher.

      The organic, primitive sound of a beat-up but well-chosen instrument for vintage chamber music is sometimes pure magic. It's very difficult to emulate something half falling apart in the hands of somebody who knows how to tame a wild mustang to it keep just on the inside of rogue.

    4. Re:Shaping notes by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Do you have a link to that article? It sounds fascinating to me.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Shaping notes by KNicolson · · Score: 1, Funny
    6. Re:Shaping notes by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      what chance? why would they care.

      if you need to care about an individual note then the song sucks. sorry.

      I'm spending the winter in thailand and every 4th bar has live music every day. it's not very good most of the time, maybe it would be better if listening to it while drunk though... but a good dj would be better most of the time.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    7. Re:Shaping notes by spongman · · Score: 1

      but why would you bother trying to emulate the sounds of an orchestra or of any real instrument?

      why, when those sounds are so limited in their expressiveness? the electronic music producer has a far wider tableau to play with than wobbling tubes and strings.

    8. Re:Shaping notes by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      digesting breakfast, having families, etc. I think you can hear all of that in many ensembles.

      Holy cow, what sort of concerts do you go to?!

      Seriously, though. Empathy is nice and all, but don't imagine that it is something other than empathy. If you hear the performers' breakfast and kids, that doesn't really come across with the sound waves, but rather with your foreknowledge and beliefs. Don't confuse the music with the baggage, nice as though the baggage may be.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    9. Re:Shaping notes by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      Orchestras and different instruments evolved because there was no other way to produce music rich in various sounds, and it could not be automated at all.

      Case in point: Opera. Many people find the singing style of classical opera weird and gross, but fact is there are very few other ways to make yourself heard over an orchestra without a microphone. Except the ones that are uglier, and/or would wear out your voice quickly.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    10. Re:Shaping notes by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      I was going to say something slightly different. A real orchestra's players have years of hard work getting the individual notes just right, and getting the experience of playing in groupts etc. So for electronic musicians to complain that a piece of music takes weeks to get right using software tools is pathetic, really. It's still orders of magnitude less than the work that was required to get an orchestra to the point where they play an equivalent (or even superior) piece.

    11. Re:Shaping notes by RabidReindeer · · Score: 2

      but why would you bother trying to emulate the sounds of an orchestra or of any real instrument?

      why, when those sounds are so limited in their expressiveness? the electronic music producer has a far wider tableau to play with than wobbling tubes and strings.

      When I was much younger, my preferences ran to synthesizers and pipe organs because of their incredible range of timbres and didn't have much use for the piano. Gradually I learned to appreciate the nuances that a good piano performance can deliver.

      Music is a discipline that covers an immense amount of territory. Sometimes it's good to be unsubtle, sometimes not. Sometimes you even blend the two, as Beethoven demonstrated so well. And, incidentally, Beethoven also composed one of the first works for "synthesizer" (Wellington's Victory).

      Recorded music, whether as pure audio or as programmed via MIDI or similar is "dead" music. It may be very good music and worth listening to a thousand times, but it will always sound the same. Live music will always sound different. If nothing else, someone will accidentally kick over a cymbal stand in the middle, which makes it a bit of an adventure and an opportunity to explore alternative performances.

      In short, live or canned, "natural" instruments, "prepared" instruments or synthetic ones, music is diverse and wonderful and always worth listening to. At least assuming that it appeals to you. I run from extended drum solos, rap, and other non-melodic stuff myself and opera... well, enough other people have said all that needs saying. Still, not everyone has the same preferences as me. There's room for all of us.

    12. Re:Shaping notes by quax · · Score: 1

      Yes, but while the techie whines and sweats it, the musicians put in all the work for the love of it :-)

    13. Re:Shaping notes by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      An article by a digital musician I read recently claimed that although digital synthesis can approach the quality of a real orchestra, it's extremely time-consuming to shape every note to fit the mood and context of that note.

      If you factor in the time and effort to "carve" the note to sufficient quality, it's not economical compared to a smaller orchestra, because experienced musicians do the same in real time, with 1 practice and 2 takes on average. The performing group gets it done in about an hour, while diddling a synth rendering can take weeks. Even though it's one dude or so, it's a LOT of one dude.

      Plus, you risk "ear burn-out" from so many replays such that you cannot recognize quality anymore. One has to switch between projects and styles to keep their ears fresh, delaying the finished product.

      Maybe the editing software eventually will get better and the computer can assist with more natural "guesses" to get closer to expectations to reduce customization, but at this stage if you want quality performances, synthesis is not fully competitive.

      I think it's more than that - it's human imperfection being able to color the music so it feels "more right" or "more wrong" than normal.

      This argument has been going on for decades, ever since computer synths came out. Especially on video game soundtracks, where the music is almost always synthesized.

      The deal is, the synth feels, well, artificial. It's precise, it's correct, but it feels ... not real. It's why there are plenty of Video Game Symphonies out there that play with a real orchestra and are well attended.

      And besides the live music, there are plenty of OSTs out there which come from the output of a high-end synth, and many re-releases where the composer took it to a real orchestra as well. Heck, there are video games that started out using synths then migrate to orchestras as well. And composers do it too - they take the video game scores they write, use it ingame with a synth, then later down the road, release an album done with a studio and orchestra.

      And yes, note shaping is important - most movie scores are initially composed using a synth, but then performed with a small orchestra when recording the mix to be used in the movie.

      And I'm sure the likes of deadmau5 and daft punk aren't doing purely synth - the artistry is not in the synth composition, but everything around it. The synth makes the notes, the artist shapes it to make the music. Plus, I'm sure they also do a ton of effects that are harder to do on a synth than to do "live" on a recording

    14. Re:Shaping notes by k6mfw · · Score: 1

      Interesting discussion particularly "risk "ear burn-out" from so many replays such that you cannot recognize quality anymore." Sometimes at ballroom dance studios bring in a live bands, though many are not the greatest (the really good bands are quite expensive) but they can be fun. I also learn by "hands-on" experience when the beat tends to shift around or speeds up (I remember one band began a slow waltz that evolved into viennese waltz). But then at other ballroom dance events, Autumn Classic or Intl Grand Ball dancesport competitions were they brought in live bands. Ross Mitchell band http://www.rossmitchellband.com/ played at Autumn Classic and this is where you can ***clearly*** hear the phrasing and watching how competitors accentuate their movements to the music. I vividly remember how one couple ended a cha-cha with a solid line right on beat of the last "4 count" of the eight measure. Mostly at studios it is DJ music, some songs the orchestration has variations but yet can still feel how the phrasing is moving so delivering various moves to the music can be done relatively easy. Other songs tend to be monotonous and lack "substance" so it's difficult to dance it with feeling. Of course what helps is when the lady is an excellent dancer so she can present a nice "picture" as long as the man provides consistent lead with a good frame.

      Some months ago there was an article discussed here on ./ about someone analyzed current music and showed that much of it does indeed sound the same because many musicians use auto-pitch or some other digital means to fix impurities of the voice and instruments.

      --
      mfwright@batnet.com
    15. Re: Shaping notes by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Must be Monster.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    16. Re:Shaping notes by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I've spent a lot of time in Thailand, the problem is the DJs are just as bad. At least the poorly translated cover bands offer some humour value :)

    17. Re:Shaping notes by harlequinn · · Score: 1

      Well said. You remind me about a pet peeve I have.

      In the end of movie credits, the individual orchestra members, having put in more hours of practice and dedication than anyone else to be able to contribute to a movie production, do not get individual credits in the end credits. It is instead normal just to credit the orchestra as a whole. The conductor, orchestrator, song writer, famous solo artists or groups will always get individual credit. All the musicians - nothing.

      I could say "Darth Vader" and most people could instantly hum the march. Or "Jaws" and people could hum the classic opening from the brass. Or maybe "Alien" and people would think of the music that scares them shitless (it's not the alien that is scary, it is the sudden noise from the orchestra). I think all of these musicians deserve full credit for their work. Especially if in many movies they give credit to things like "babies born during production" or other non-contributors.

    18. Re:Shaping notes by deviated_prevert · · Score: 1

      Someone please mod this to 5 it nails right on the head the reason why I started this discussion!

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
    19. Re:Shaping notes by deviated_prevert · · Score: 1

      Still, not everyone has the same preferences as me. There's room for all of us.

      I have heard a velocity sensitive player piano impression that Maurice Ravel actually did of his famous Pavane pour une infante défunte piano solo. It was like listening to a ghost playing, strangely compelling and yet haunting as the piece indeed was intended to be. Thank you for expressing this important sentiment and bringing clarity to this discussion!

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
    20. Re:Shaping notes by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      Still, not everyone has the same preferences as me. There's room for all of us.

      I have heard a velocity sensitive player piano impression that Maurice Ravel actually did of his famous Pavane pour une infante défunte piano solo. It was like listening to a ghost playing, strangely compelling and yet haunting as the piece indeed was intended to be. Thank you for expressing this important sentiment and bringing clarity to this discussion!

      Thank you. On the flip side, I listened to some Glenn Gould recordings on a concert grand piano. Gould had a reputation for being an outstanding pianist, but between the lifeless ambience of the recording studio and his utterly precise mechanical style of playing, no robot could have sounded more soulless.

    21. Re:Shaping notes by deviated_prevert · · Score: 1

      Thank you. On the flip side, I listened to some Glenn Gould recordings on a concert grand piano. Gould had a reputation for being an outstanding pianist, but between the lifeless ambience of the recording studio and his utterly precise mechanical style of playing, no robot could have sounded more soulless.

      Poor Glen had an Achilles heal and it was not at all intentional. HE USED HIS VOCALIZATION TO CENTER HIS performance with atonal commentary and could not stop doing it. Like all players that are skilled in improvisation as well as disciplined performance of memorized music the voice is used to counterpoint count the phrasing when working out an interpretation. Listen to Oscar Peterson grunting and then tell me that Gould was an automaton. He had the ability to split duplets on the fly at incredible speed, he could also sting the dampers to shape the notes in running passages of 32nd notes at good quick tempos. The guy was a freak yes BUT WHAT A FREAK and a brilliant one to boot. I would guess that you are most likely listening to the latest Sony garbage digital remixes of Gould that synthetically removed his humming. THOSE FREAKING MORONS AT SONY SHOULD BE NUTTED FOR TURNING THE RECORDINGS OF GOULD INTO PATHETIC SYNTHETICALY CASTRATED DIGITAL SWILL! Much worse even is some of the pedagogues in music conservatories telling up and coming instrumentalist that they play Bach's with too much emotion! I guess people did not have emotions during the Baroque era in their learned opinions. LOL Speak to those who have actually heard Glen when he was alive then comment about him as an artist, but to each their own.

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
  11. I'm guessing you never attend live performances by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Seriously, a good band playing out on thr edge of their comfort zone and creating something magical, or the power of a full orchestra with the complexity of the sound reverbarating around a concert hall.... is going to be replaced with some samples?

    And art galleries have died because you can see digital photos on the net?

    No doubt it has and will be tried again and again, but this is like saying you won't ever need to have sex again because off the pron on the internet.

  12. Oh, please... by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. They said the same thing when the Mellotron was built back in the 1960s. In fact, members of the Musicians Union would picket Moody Blues concerts because they felt the Mellotron was taking away jobs from hard working union member musicians.

    2. No recording of an orchestra is going to sound like sitting in the same room with an orchestra playing. Period. End of discussion.

    3. There are PLENTY of instrumental bands that are doing just fine. Examples:
    Animals as Leaders: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCsWlOo9qgw
    Explosions in the Sky: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mqBMmhgsjM
    And boodles of electronic music bands that have no interest in whether or not you dance to them, for example:
    Boards of Canada: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vp8ZBT-VHrA&list=PLZqsyBiYZFQ1SDoE-ulm6Qlpt7jetkEMH
    among many others.

    Then this howler:

    Purely instrumental groups like Booker T and the MGs, as well as solo performers like Herbie Hancock or John McLaughlin, seem not to take the spotlight as they once did.

    WTF? Booker T's bass player died last year. HE WAS 70 YEARS OLD. How many pop bands of any stripe are in the spotlight at age 70? Herbie Hancock is 73. John McLaughlin is 71. They Are Old People. What do you expect from them? Then this bit of cluelessness:

    It is apparent that unless someone with a young fresh face is singing, today's producers will not attempt to seriously promote them.

    It's not their producer's job to promote them. It is their PROMOTER'S job to promote them. That's why they're called PROMOTERS. The producer helps direct and manage the PRODUCTION of the record. Believe me - I know these things.

    This article is basically flamebait.

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    1. Re:Oh, please... by mbstone · · Score: 2

      No recording of an orchestra is going to sound like sitting in the same room with an orchestra playing. Period. End of discussion.

      Depends on the quality of the recording and of the playback equipment. You can get pretty close.

    2. Re:Oh, please... by xfade551 · · Score: 2

      By "close" you mean seated in the nosebleed seats of a good amphitheatre. One thing you miss even in a good recording is the directional quality of sound from the different instruments and sections. Stereo recording helps, and surround sound has an interesting quality of its own, but it's still not quite the same as being there!

    3. Re:Oh, please... by mbstone · · Score: 1

      Pro applications don't use vinyl.

      If you were a cheap bastard stage-play producer you wouldn't use vinyl. You'd hire pros to make a multichannel, high-sample-rate digital recording of the pit orchestra using very expensive mics, and you'd hire pros to design the playback PA. If the PA was also in the pit no one would bitch about the lack of directional sound, even from close up.

      Of course this would depend on how cheap of a bastard you are.

    4. Re:Oh, please... by xfade551 · · Score: 2

      Instrumental (progressive) metal has been gaining more popularity of late, but still has not attracted the interest of the major record labels, yet, so most of the bands are unsigned, DIY, or only signed to minor record labels. A few bands off the top of my head worth checking out (mostly local to my area - greater Seattle): Steelscape (fully instrumental; Seattle area) Isthmusia (fully instrumental; Seattle area) Lo' There Do I See My Brother (a couple songs with lyrics; Seattle area) Summer Finn (a couple songs with lyrics; Seattle area) Lion in Winter (long instrumental parts, with some interspersed screaming; Seattle) Ghosts of Glaciers (fully instrumental; Colorado)

    5. Re:Oh, please... by ApplePy · · Score: 1

      Depends on the quality of the recording and of the playback equipment. You can get pretty close.

      Those words could only be said by someone who:

      * has either never been in a concert hall with a real live orchestra, or

      * is tone deaf.

      If you're the latter, gods bless you, you'll never be disappointed.

      --
      That I'm right, and you don't like it, doesn't mean I'm a troll.
    6. Re:Oh, please... by rmstar · · Score: 1

      One thing you miss even in a good recording is the directional quality of sound from the different instruments and sections.

      You also miss out on the experience. On having been there. You miss out on the champagne and everybody dressed up. The feeling of belonging to the exclusive club that will be there at this time, an experience which will never repeat.

      What I mean is that music really is way, way more than airwaves. It makes a difference if it's "just a synth" prgrammed by Nameless, or if it's mister Weirdface who used to be an alcoholic and now is spreading the message that set him free. Even if it were completely pointless from an audio processing point of view, people would still want to hear the human playing, bacause at the end of the day this is all about humans listening to each other.

    7. Re:Oh, please... by TheSeatOfMyPants · · Score: 2

      You might be surprised -- my town has a nice small-venue theater, benefit concert, and a medium-small venue up the road, and we quite frequently get older successful acts with "old" band members that still kick ass. For example, a few I've seen in recent years: Lester Chambers (age 73), Leo Kottke (age 68), The Family Stone (at least a couple over 65), Jefferson Starship (multiple 70+) and Big Brother & The Holding Company/Quicksilver Messenger Service (multiple 70+).

      Bands/musicians like that are still out there, people just don't know it. Speaking as a thirtysomething: yeah, these guys aren't young hotties, but they rock out enough to more than make up for it -- like in this 2012 Family Stone concert. It's cool if you don't like older music, but if you do like it, in most cases you're really missing out by dismissing the artists based on age. :)

      --
      Now mostly at Usenet:comp.misc & SoylentNews.org (it's made of people!)
    8. Re:Oh, please... by TheSeatOfMyPants · · Score: 1

      Not everywhere. San Francsico's theaters (Orpheum, Curran, etc.) are set up so even people in the middle of the first row** hear the instruments as coming from all around us & slightly ahead rather than distinct directions. I don't know whether it's because they have the speakers' volume up, or the relatively small orchestra pits, but the end-effect is no different from listening to a band from 10-15 rows back in a medium-small venue.

      **company tix that my father gets to use 1-2x/year

      --
      Now mostly at Usenet:comp.misc & SoylentNews.org (it's made of people!)
    9. Re:Oh, please... by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      Those words could only be said by someone who's not very good at distinguishing in his mind the purely auditory experience from the full experience.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  13. Instrumental should always have a place. by klingers48 · · Score: 1

    The world would be a poorer place if it didn't have Carlos Santana and his legacy in it.

  14. Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subject. by Inflammatory+Fallacy · · Score: 2

    The same thing applies to the waves of digital music produced for things like raves. To quote one observer at the Globe and Mail 'So now we know why Deadmau5 and Daft Punk wear helmets when they perform. Everybody is digging the music, but no one is dancing. It is a sad development; the headgear of the maestros is there to mask their tears.'
    No, it doesn't apply to "the waves of digital music produced for raves". Firstly, the rave scene died in the 90's, but it appears that you're not actually referring to a rave, you're talking about a concert by a musician whose methods you don't understand. Go see any decent house, dubstep, or techno artist play, and suddenly it's apparent that the quote you referenced is completely wrong, at least in the context in which you're using it. You can get a crowd moving with a Macintosh, it's not that difficult.
    Will the live performance of instrumental musicians also become a thing of the past?
    No, it won't.. Look to the same examples to see evidence that musicians without vocalists are actually becoming far more popular. And if you're trying to insinuate that a DJ isn't an 'instrumental' artist, you're wrong. A pair of turntables is an instrument just as a guitar is, and a performance using one requires just as much 'musicianship' as with any other instrument.

  15. Well by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You can either sit at a computer pasting together sound samples and massaging them into some semblance of emotion,
      or you can hire a musician to play it for you and give you the sound you're looking for.

    Some of the most famous musical acts in the USA recorded their albums using the studio's house band.
    Which is why it's so funny that the submitter brings up Booker T. & the M.G.'s: they started out as a house band.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Well by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      You can either sit at a computer pasting together sound samples and massaging them into some semblance of emotion,
          or you can hire a musician to play it for you and give you the sound you're looking for.

      Stop it, I'm dying from snobbery overdose!!

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  16. Question is so 1980s by mbstone · · Score: 1

    The cost savings realized by eliminating live musicians is generally due to using one recording of said live musicians and playing it back multiple times (for example in many stage plays). There's not much extra savings to be realized by using, say, MIDI controlled synths for the original recording.

  17. Not really by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

    Replace? Yes. Sound the same? Definitely not. Just consider the range of effects possible with an electric guitar. The only way to do that with a digital workstation is to use a guitar for input, then it isn't purely digital. Another example: synthesized piano is getting very good, but it still cannot be mistaken for the real thing.

    Sound different but just as good? Maybe, sometimes. There is no question that digital has already invaded the territory of traditional instruments. In applications where top quality is not a requirement a digital clarinet or trumpet can work out just fine cost a lot less than the real thing, perhaps unfortunately.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    1. Re:Not really by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      synthesized piano is getting very good, but it still cannot be mistaken for the real thing.

      Citation needed. When a physical piano is of a brand that goes for an intensely clean and standardized sound (e.g Yamaha grand pianos), it often sounds more "synthetic" than an actual piano synth.

      Go here and listen to one of the examples of "chamber recording" or "concert recording". IMO, it's very, very easy to mistake that for the real thing.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  18. Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by cold+fjord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Depends on the purpose. For just listening to background music, or the radio, probably. Session musicians? Maybe, but live is better. For events in which live musicians add to the prestige, no. And in between?

    If I'm gong to pay money to see the The Typewriter, Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet, or Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, I want a real symphony orchestra (and preferably real canons for the 1812). No digital music will replace someone like Victor Borge (RIP).

    Marching bands can't really be replaced with digital music. Certainly the British and Russians would never do it for their parades. (Are bagpipes even compatible with digital music? ;) . )

    There is no replacing a cappella music, such as this, or a barbershop quartets. Many other forms of music would suffer, maybe even be pointless, if they were done without live performers. They are often much of the fun.

    Digital is handy for composing though even if you will perform live later.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    1. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by spongman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      i think you're missing the point. digital musicians aren't attempting to reproduce what's been done before. they're creating new stuff - called music - digitally.

    2. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Let's revisit part of the question:

      Will the live performance of instrumental musicians also become a thing of the past, or will there continue to be a real need for it? .... Regardless of how great today's instrumentalists are musically, there no longer seems to be a market for real musicianship. Even great performing classical musicians and ensembles are becoming scarcer due to faster and cheaper digital music production."

      I think my answer stands. There is a place for all digital, of course, including the creation of new music. But there will still be a place for live musicians.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    3. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by cardpuncher · · Score: 1

      It's not just about earning money. Don't underestimate the desire of people to perform. There's a well-organised programme of community music where I live and there are many hundreds of people participating in live music - choirs, small jazz and folk groups, community orchestras etc - and they're paying to take part (to cover professional teachers/conductors/accompanists/venues...). Most of the live bands you find in pubs will not be covering their costs, but they do it because they enjoy it.

      Of course, in terms of technical quality, synthesisers would beat many of these performances hands down - but that's not really the point.

      What is a more interesting question is whether the lack of career opportunities for merely competent jobbing instrumentalists leads to a lack of infrastructure to develop the talent of the exceptional performers that people will still want to pay to hear play.

      Given that musicians have in the past had better career options than most authors or painters - and we hardly seem short of the latter even now, though of course it's much easier to be a individual contributor as an author than as a viola player - I don't see an imminent shortage of soloists. And I still see plenty of young faces in orchestras (or at least they seem young to me...), certainly young enough to have grown up with electronic music.

    4. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Are bagpipes even compatible with digital music? ;)

      We've embraced digital recording just as much as anyone else, though the culture of perfection in the piping community tends to mean that we get less benefit from it. And yes, you can buy an electronic bagpipe. Ugh.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    5. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by fatphil · · Score: 1

      > Are bagpipes even compatible with digital music?

      Bagpipes are the equivalent of buffer overruns.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    6. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Are bagpipes even compatible with digital music?

      Bagpipes are not compatible with any kind of music!

      (Just kidding: One of the best gigs I've ever had was with an uilleann piper)

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    7. Re:Can Digital Music Replace Most Musicians? by Yogijalla · · Score: 1

      i think you're missing the point. digital musicians aren't attempting to reproduce what's been done before. they're creating new stuff - called music - digitally.

      You'd be surprised how much music is not new. In western music we have a tradition of reusing the same patterns. The digitalisation only make it easier to reuse those patterns, with composition tools, arpeggiators and harmonisers etc..

  19. Kids these days.... by ripler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ironic that Herbie Hancock was used as an example. It wasn't so long ago that Mr Hancock would have been the poster's point made with synths vs real piano players. Musicians make the music. The instruments are just tools. There has always been, and will always be crappy mass produced pablum. Likewise, there will always be musicians who rise above the rest. The tools they use influence the sound, but the artist creates the experience.

    Now, get off my lawn!

    1. Re:Kids these days.... by spongman · · Score: 1

      rockit was the 1st 7" i ever bought.

      i still have it somewhere...

    2. Re:Kids these days.... by ThirdPrize · · Score: 2

      Can we bring up Pat Metheney and his Orchestrion at this point? He has an orchestra full of real instruments that he can play with his guitar, sort of like MIDI for real instruments.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VymAn8QJNQ

      --
      I have excellent Karma and I am not afraid to Troll it.
    3. Re:Kids these days.... by fatphil · · Score: 1

      But even if Pat Metheney with his guitar and pedals can play the xylophone, only digital music will let him bend the xylophone like he does his guitar notes. Why not have whammy bar crickets on an oboe. Digital does have the possibility of going beyond the traditional analogue.

      As someone who's liked a lot of what's come out of Fairlight CMIs over the last few decades, in particular in the hands of highly trained and skilled musicians, I see/feel more of a difference between live and any playback than I do between the best digital/sequenced music and traditional instruments.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    4. Re:Kids these days.... by east+coast · · Score: 1

      I think there are many more parallels between piano and traditional synths than there are between traditional synths and DAWs. IMHO, it's like comparing someone who goes to track vs. someone who treadmills vs. someone who plays Track and Field.

      And just as a bit of a disclaimer: I don't begrudge anyone who does their composing and playing through whatever method works for them. I listen to tons of electronic music and I recognize there are different levels of natural talent and different levels of artistic vision. The end product is what's really important.

      I think God for Edgar Froese but I don't look down on people who couldn't put two notes together without Cubase...and John McLaughlin is a great musician as well. I probably own a dozen recordings with McLaughlin on them and they're all great.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  20. Yes, actually by the_other_chewey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As TFA an incredible amount of orchestral music in movies, TV shows, ads etc.
    already is made from 100% samples, and nobody notices (or cares).

    An at the time seemingly crazy person over a decade ago started the
    Vienna Symphonic Library, a project to sample all possible
    sounds all instruments can make. A completely insane idea. Today, it's
    the undisputed market leader everyone uses...
    (make your own google analogy here)

    Will high-culture live-performance symphonic orchestras be replaced by
    sample computers any time soon? Most likely not. But that's a couple of
    thousand musicians in the world. Most on-staff "working class" instrumentalists
    are replaceable by a computer and a skilled person operating it today.

    The situation seems to be a bit like the animation revolution, when Pixar's
    Renderman (and others) turned hand-drawn animation into a bit of a niche thing.

    The big difference: The demand for animators probably has even increased
    over the last decade (admittedly, with in part a different skillset, but animators
    are animators first and not defined by the tools they use to animate) - but there
    were no "pencil operators" following an "animation conductor" in animation compared
    to "instrument operators" and... well... conductors in a traditional symphonic orchestra.

    Using the VSL samples, one person with a machine can indeed replace a whole
    orchestra for all but the most high-profile uses. And it is already happening.

    Also, the world will not end. "Nobody's dancing"? Have they seen the audience at a
    Daft Punk performance?

    1. Re:Yes, actually by EvanED · · Score: 1

      As TFA an incredible amount of orchestral music in movies, TV shows, ads etc. already is made from 100% samples, and nobody notices (or cares).

      As a fan of soundtracks, I wouldn't say nobody, because I can tell, and I do care. There are places in a couple synthed scores I have that sound downright bad to me from a musical standpoint, even though compositionally I enjoy them. For one of the cues in Mass Effect 3, for example, even a decent high school orchestra probably would have been able to do a better job at sounding good.

      That being said, I still enjoy a lot of synthed recordings -- I just think I'd enjoy it more if the companies producing hadn't been cheapasses. It's only blatently obvious during parts that highlight the weaknesses of libraries like the VSL, and one of the interesting aspects of a lot of the music that falls into this category is how it is written so that the compositions spend much more time doing things that the VSL can do reasonably well.

  21. Bad Assumption is Bad. by bmajik · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hi. Former guitar shredder here.

    I have news for you. The idea that the instrumental performers with "the most talent" will no longer get paid big bucks in the future isn't something you have to wait for.

    It has been going on for at least my entire life.

    After I had been playing guitar for about 2 years in high school, I could play nearly any guitar part of any popular song (I came of age in the 90s, the grunge time frame. So, admittedly, a low bar.)

    Most of it just wasn't very complicated. If what mattered was being able to play things note for note, capturing all of the "feeling" and what not, for most popular music that just isn't a tall order.

    I'm not being a braggart; I was nothing special. My point is that youtube is filled with kids who are _astounding_ guitarists.. and who will never make any money off of their guitar work. Technical proficiency isn't what gets you paid.

    I still love all of my Shrapnel Records artists that I dutifully bought albums from growing up. I am thrilled beyond belief that monumental talents like Tony MacAlpine are still able to record and perform after decades of being unknown outside of the guitar-nerd community. And I am escstatic that new younger talents are emerging and doing cool stuff (Seree Lee -- youtube him).

    But Katy Pery or whoever the next anonymous pretty face is will make more money off of one single than someone like a Tony Mac or Vic Wooten or Seree Lee or (take your pick) will make in their multi-decade careers. And that's not new, and digital music isn't going to fundamentally change that.

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    1. Re:Bad Assumption is Bad. by ruir · · Score: 1

      IMO, the question is deeper than technical prowess vs artistic merit. It is a problem that goes deeper in the vein of society. Specialisation is not valued and not paid accordingly. Period. People also confuse "abundance" of offer, with professional offer. They are too very distinct things. Social media, TV, soaps like Glee where the kids become pro overnight without seemingly any effort, or even freak reality shows, dont help either.

    2. Re:Bad Assumption is Bad. by u38cg · · Score: 1
      We are seeing a couple of trends. One is that the 20th century arc where music made you unspeakable rich - Beatles, Stones, etc - is coming to an end. The future is Amanda Palmer type artists, on the road, crowdfunding records and communicating with fans, not just talking at them.

      The other is the democratisation of music-making. There are more and more people making music, good, bad and indifferent, learning from Youtube, over Skype, everything else. Look at the number of guitars Yamaha pumps out, never mind everything else. Probably half of all those are going into the hands of beginners. I could make a living off my own instrument through teaching and performing but I prefer to keep something I lvoe as a hobby.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    3. Re:Bad Assumption is Bad. by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Interesting

      But Katy Pery or whoever the next anonymous pretty face is will make more money off of one single than someone like a Tony Mac or Vic Wooten or Seree Lee or (take your pick) will make in their multi-decade careers.

      That's really simple to explain: Katy Perry's real product isn't music, it's holding forth the believe that women who hear her can be like her, and men who hear her can bang her, without actually fulfilling either one. That's pretty much the job of female pop stars between the ages of 16 and 35 or so, along with dancing and acting. (And this isn't specifically about Katy Perry: Madonna, Britney Spears, Beyonce, etc all did exactly the same thing at that stage in their careers.)

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    4. Re:Bad Assumption is Bad. by fatphil · · Score: 1

      You're right - it predates you. I can't honestly think of an era in popular music since the early 60s which wasn't financially dominated by manufactured bands (and I'm including the beatles in that - they were leather-clad rockers before the real money was dangled in front of them, and they changed image and sound on a dime), and those bands were not selected on the basis of having the most talent.

      I hope you were playing Michael Lee Ferkins too, while you were in NE, rather than grunge!

      Thanks for the Seree pointer - good stuff, though rather derivative. Some of the tracks on youtube didn't seem to be going anywhere ("finger exercises" one of my jazz guitarist friends would call them) but others reminded me of the more symphonic bands like Savatage/T.S.O.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    5. Re:Bad Assumption is Bad. by PPH · · Score: 1

      [sigh]

      All this makes me feel like the drummer for Spinal Tap.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  22. DJ problem by Animats · · Score: 1

    Everybody is digging the music, but no one is dancing.

    That's usually a "DJ trying to be too cool" problem.

    There are automated DJ programs, but so far, no one seems to have one that takes in video of the dance floor, tracks how many people are dancing, and adjusts the playlist accordingly. I thought of doing that 20 years ago, but now it would be both feasible and cost-effective. (Optional feature: also connects to the bar cash register system to optimize for revenue.)

  23. CBC Radio 3 by bcbilly · · Score: 1

    Check these out: CBC Radio 3 ( http://music.cbc.ca/#/radio3 ). The Polaris Prize. The Peak Performance Project.

  24. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by Tough+Love · · Score: 1, Troll

    if you're trying to insinuate that a DJ isn't an 'instrumental' artist, you're wrong. A pair of turntables is an instrument just as a guitar is, and a performance using one requires just as much 'musicianship' as with any other instrument.

    No, sorry, a pair of turntables is not an instrument like a guitar is, it is more an instrument like a mixing board is, and a DJ is more like a sound guy or a producer than a musician. Put it another way: some DJs may be performers but not all performers are musicians. Otherwise agreed with your post.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  25. Digital vs. Analog all comes down to the task by idioto · · Score: 2

    I can play a few instruments and make my own music, as well as having played in a few bands, but over the years I've learned to accept that computers can help me out a bunch. I used to try to play everything and record it too, which was a lot of work and it made things a bear to change. These days, I just try to focus in on a thing at a time, rather than be engineer, instrumentalist, songwriter, etc. I hardly have been playing instruments much on recordings because I don't have the time to do it all and come up with the sounds I like. I will enter my chord progressions into band in a box, and find a style that I kind of like. Then I'll tweek the instruments. It's just a million times easier. So I take sequencing shortcuts as well. But it's just a matter of ease, I mean if I could find a real steel drum player and could mike them up and it wouldn't take a few hours more than clicking a button, I'd do that, but only if I really had a vision or it was going out commercially and I could justify the cost.

  26. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by ApplePy · · Score: 2, Funny

    A pair of turntables is an instrument just as a guitar is, and a performance using one requires just as much 'musicianship' as with any other instrument.

    Hm... Tell that to Christopher Parkening, or Wilhelm Kempff, or... ... hell with it. No. Just... no. OMG no. Holy shit.

    --
    That I'm right, and you don't like it, doesn't mean I'm a troll.
  27. Algorithmic Music Composition by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 2

    There's this thing called "Algorithmic Music Composition" - they analyzed the composition of famous music composers such as Bach and copied the "style" and transfer the algorithm into computer and let it churn out music.

    There's even a freeware that you can try on your own computer, more info @ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FractMus_(software)
    or @ http://www.gustavodiazjerez.com/?cat=14

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:Algorithmic Music Composition by s1d3track3D · · Score: 1

      From the site: "A word of caution: you are the composer, FractMus will create no masterpiece for you, nor it was designed for that." - @ http://www.gustavodiazjerez.com/?cat=14

    2. Re:Algorithmic Music Composition by Connie_Lingus · · Score: 1

      lol...modern popular music (pick a genre) hardly needs a Bach-inian framework to make it successful.

      in fact, people almost surely wouldn't buy that.

      pop/rock/country music relies on a three to four chord progression with a verse/chrous/bridge structure, usually in major key but minors work ok too.

      lyrics and layering of counterpoint-like fills it what makes us enjoy it more.

      --
      never bring a twinkie to a food fight.
  28. Random Access Memories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Um, the whole point of Daft Punk's latest album was that it's basically 100% analogue, real performances and sessions (and faintly-ridiculous cost), as a sort of homage, to make the kind of record that they used to sample.

    You're putting words in their mouths that they'd pretty vehemently disagree with.

  29. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by spongman · · Score: 1

    You can get a crowd moving with a Macintosh

    You can get a crowd moving with a SNES!

  30. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by spongman · · Score: 1

    wait, so these guys aren't playing instruments?

    manipulating objects that make sounds. hmmm. looks like it to me.

  31. Yes and No by Eskarel · · Score: 1

    Digital music isn't going to be replacing instrumental artists any time soon, quite possibly it may never be even capable of doing so. Folks like Yo Yo Ma or the various orchestras are going to be able to make a living for a long time yet.

    The problem is that digital music very much is replacing and will continue to replace commercial instrumental musicians, which are the vast majority of musicians actually able to earn a living from their craft. These folks are screwed. In the long term this may mean that there are far fewer instrumental artists simply because the chances of making a living from performance have become so small that no one bothers anymore.

  32. Shorter summary by J'raxis · · Score: 1

    Whining by buggy whip salesmen. That's all.

  33. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Jeeeezus how many times have I heard this. Go and listen to a piano-violin duo playing Souvenir d'un Lieu Cher then come back and tell me someone with a pair of turntables messing around with SOMEONE ELSE'S MUSIC is a musician. I'm sure they'd like to think they are but until they pick up an instrument, electronic or otherwise, that is actually capable of creating notes they are not.

    The stuff you are talking about is fine for people who don't really want musicianship. And good luck to them. Each to his own.

    --
    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  34. In 50 years it will be TV and film performers by PingXao · · Score: 2

    Digitized versions of actors and actresses will be substituted for the real-life things. Humphrey Bogart and Lana Turner will make huge comebacks in virtual form. And without all that pesky union BS that goes along with card carrying members of SAG. Audiences won't be able to tell the difference between virtual clones and the real thing. Eventually the fake replacements will garner perpetual fan bases of their own. First they came for the real musicians...

  35. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

    You raised the question of whether these guys are musicians or not, not me. I said "a pair of turntables is not an instrument like a guitar is", which is patently obvious. A turntable is more an instrument like a kazoo is, and as an art form, has a future roughly as bright.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  36. Two words... by devloop · · Score: 1

    Carlos Santana.

  37. Re:Music and its benefits by beh · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I agree with your first statement there - "market driven life" - the lack of promotion for good musicians is not necessarily market driven, but marketing driven - and not purely marketing, but also the risk-averseness of the businesses behind it.

    New "edgy" movies don't really happen any more, because noone is willing to put a lot of risk into something _new_ and untested, whereas honing the craft and doing another big blockbuster type movie that only mildly diverges from previous successes makes it easier to convince backers.

    (No, you don't need to point to a couple of counter examples that show that people do dare new things - just look at the mainstream and where the big money is.)

    In a sense it was the same with the housing boom - once it started, it became easier and easier to sell people into the idea - and "just look at the market - it just keeps rising and rising - you can't lose!".

    I agree with you, that the value of music cant be measured in dollars or pounds - as far as the consumer goes. For the producer, if something can't be measured in dollars or pounds - that just sounds like taking a safe bet that the investment is going to be a write-off.

    If I were to offer you to produce an album by some outside artist - no matter whether _you_ personally liked that artist - before you put significant amounts of money towards producing their idea on a big scale, would you do it if you didn't see a "measurable" result coming out of it?

    We see this kind of thing partially happening in crowd-funding efforts - and there it works, because noone really bets the farm on the endeavour in question. I've recently signed up on two kickstarter campaigns that _I_ think are a good idea and I want the product that comes out of it - but in either case, I'm not sure whether I'd invest my livelihood into those projects, as they may just be too niche, and my own funds are too limited that I could afford just to go on a hunch and ignore the chance of a loss. Big business might have that kind of financial means - but there it is about whether the CEO feels safe enough in his post that (s)he can engage in a big risk - so, will the CEO stake his/her own future on a hunch, or play it safe?

  38. Another stupid question by rossdee · · Score: 2

    Can dead singers replace live singers?

    Many of the songs I hear at this time of year are sung by singers who are now dead.
    Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole, Elvis, Burl Ives, Karen Carpenter

  39. The biggest source of incoming for /any/ musician by Stolzy · · Score: 1

    The biggest source of income for any working musician is still live shows. Be they small 100 crowd venues or large 50,000 crowd venues. There is something special about watching a group of musicians perform together in a live show. Something that can't be replicated by a guy pressing a button (to play pre-recorded tracks). Live DJ shows often involve lots of pyrotechnics and other visual devices in order to engage the crowd. However, any live band, be they rock, hiphop, classical, baroque, deviant, or otherwise, has an instantaneous advantage of an unending "fascination" effect from people who can't play instruments themselves.

  40. Agreed by zarlino · · Score: 1

    In a sense, you're right. Songs probably don't even try to compete with more articulate music. I think they're fine in their simplicity. What's sad is that the vast majority don't even know what a more refined music is and why they should listen to it.

    --
    Check out my cross-platform apps
    1. Re:Agreed by DeuceDaily · · Score: 1

      Why should they listen to it? They aren't looking for the same thing you are. On a side, I find it amusing that refined and processed are synonyms and yet apply so well to the opposite sides of the musical spectrum in question.

    2. Re:Agreed by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      In a sense, you're right. Songs probably don't even try to compete with more articulate music. I think they're fine in their simplicity. What's sad is that the vast majority don't even know what a more refined music is and why they should listen to it.

      Did you know that most traditional, complex music systems - such as Indian modal and Raga - are taught for YEARS first only as vocal expression? By SINGING, one practices the musical elements by internalizing it - in the body. One is often not permitted to touch an instrument for one or more years...

      Singing is a primary, forceful creative expression. It wasn't concocted to mask bad productions. There is lyric. There is music. There is music and lyric together. Each are distinct. Sometimes, there is a powerful an collaborative effect. Some music is never written, unless the writer is moved so, by the line that is written or sung - then comes an inspiration!

      There are some powerful musics that first erupt as song, and their makers could not tell you where one started and the other ends.

      I would suggest going to a good black church on a couple of weekends. You might see simplicity and "refinement" differently, than listening to what passes for "song" in the commercial marketplace.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    3. Re:Agreed by zarlino · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I was obviously referring to pop/rock songs, not to vocal music in general. Western music is born as vocal music. Just think about Ockeghem or Desprez which represent one of highest peaks of our (western) musical culture.

      --
      Check out my cross-platform apps
  41. You're right and wrong by matthewv789 · · Score: 1

    You're right that background, utilitarian music is easily replaced by programmed, synthesized music. TV soundtracks, electronica, backing of pop singers... it's already taken over for the most part.

    But there are huge swaths of music, from folk to jazz to rock that will show how irrelevant that is.

    And in the world of classical music, Spira Mirabilis and the Takacs Quartet think you're missing the point. Besides, I'd rather watch Midori or the Berlin Philharmonic than watch a synthesizer.

  42. The stage is what sets musicians apart. by Sait-kun · · Score: 1

    Any musician can sound good on record given enough time to tweak and tune their work.

    But the true beauty of music - in my opinion - comes from the quality of an life performance.
    How often do you see an DJ that really gets the crowd going? It happens but it's pretty rare.

    Now compare that to a life performance with real instruments. It has soul, the music drips with the sweat and effort of the musicians.
    At times the quality of the music almost becomes less important than the performance or at least it can compensate to an degree.

    Go visit an competent rock or metal band each and everyone will have an significant crowd going wild and dancing. Often these bands can get and keep an entire crowd of thousands of people to enjoy the experience.

    So can digital music replace even most instrumental musicians, absolutely not. Not by a long shot.
    I simply think that the current platforms such as soundcloud in combination of high quality digital production software affordable for average people is responsible the increase of digital music over the years.

  43. Translating the headline... by Zaatxe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Ask Slashdot: Can mass production replace most atisanal handicrafters?"

    --
    So say we all
  44. Car analogy by StripedCow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is a car ever going to replace a running athlete?

    There. That's how silly this question really is.

    --
    If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
  45. Maybe ... by PeterGeorgeStewart · · Score: 1

    Digital recreation of percussive instruments, or even classical instruments en masse is pretty convincing these days, but you still can't get a convincing syntesized guitar solo, or a convincing synthesized solo violin, or any stringed instrument, or synthetized woodwind, brass, etc.. There are two sides to this: the complexity of the tone to be synthesized (or modelled) and its capabilities for modulating tone, pitch, timbre, etc., on the one hand, and the complexity of what can be injected into those capabilities to utilize them in creative combinations, by humans, as against AIs at the current state of development. The sound side is pretty close, actually, in many ways. Percussion (drums, including rock drums, dance beats, etc.) is a done deal. But of course that's because percussion is the easy case, because it's a one hit deal, it doesn't have to be continuously controlled and modulated like a violin. I fancy with the developments like being able to separate sounds out of a mix, this will eventually improve, and synthesized sounds, be capable of being continuously controlled and modulated. But the AI is the big one. I think basically because what's being expressed in music does actually happen to be something that's tied intimately to our biology (incredibly fine and refined expressions of emotional nuance), and the AI would have to model that too - i.e., AI that's capable of making music will have to wait until AI that's capable of emotion generally, comes online. Needs AI with juices (something to model the hormonal bath and how it affects the total state of the organism qua signaller-of-internal-states).

  46. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by u38cg · · Score: 1

    Depends. Martyn Bennet didn't play or sing a single note that went into GRIT, yet the entire record is him. And he had the musical skills to do so if he chose.

    --
    [FUCK BETA]
  47. No Fucking Way by Khyber · · Score: 1

    You think a fucking automaton is going to do something like this?

    Fuck no, son.

    Betteridge's Law of Headlines, sucker. Proven yet again.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    1. Re:No Fucking Way by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "HERE IS THE RUB can he notate his music or even read a melody or chart off script"

      All day, every day. He's a trained and taught professional musician.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    2. Re:No Fucking Way by deviated_prevert · · Score: 1

      "HERE IS THE RUB can he notate his music or even read a melody or chart off script"

      All day, every day. He's a trained and taught professional musician.

      GREAT I truly did not know that! I should have guessed though in the way that he managed the counterpoint in the piece. Hopefully he does notate some of his works I sure as hell couldn't even though I can orchestrate and harmonize by clapping singing and whistling. Which scares the hell out of my cats and people who see me doing it, they think I am nuts. Paul Hindemith could play a satisfactory tune on just about any orchestral instrument he picked up! Brahms is once reported to have come to perform a Beethoven piano concerto and discovered that the piano was out of tune because of a semi tone alignment of the keyboard to the the strings that the tuner had mistakenly done! He practiced the piece transposing it in his head for a short time and then went on stage and played the piece to the satisfaction of the audience!

      It is indeed a very good thing that there are musical giants out there still creating great music worthy of the ages. Even in DADGAD tuning.

      PS A German made Oud must be tuned in BAHGDAD to be effective. (-: Regards.

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
  48. Music and education by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Plato pointed out that music and gymnastics are the foundation of education because they prepare the mind for grasping other subjects. One can see a place for digital composition in education, but using a traditional instrument in performance probably is more effective in what Plato meant to achieve.

  49. Who cares? by macbeth66 · · Score: 1

    IMHO, good music died a long time ago. Scratch that. I have to lower the bar. Listenable music died a long time ago. 15 years ago, I would buy some 40-50 albums ( whatever media ) a year and another ten of old stuff. Then it become individual songs. I don't think I bought anything this year. I can't even stand what they've done with the re-mastered greats.

    Sucky music, sucks, regardless if it is created by a musician or a digital hack.

    1. Re:Who cares? by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      You're not listening to the right music then. Stop shopping at walmart.

  50. Real musician do it live! by setrops · · Score: 1

    As advanced and modular papolar DAW have become nothing will replace a live performance. But that's not what we're talking about. We're talking about recorded sounds that are assembled to create a score. It's still valid and the composer still put hard work into composing arranging this piece of music.

  51. Music and muzack... by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2

    I hate vocals in music. That's why I stick to classical and electronic genres.

    I don't exactly hate vocals (I was raised as a classical violinist, but my musical appetite now weighs a little more heavily in favour of jazz), but I find lyrics just get in the way when the music should be able to speak for itself. Thus, (from TFS)

    Purely instrumental groups like Booker T and the MGs, as well as solo performers like Herbie Hancock or John McLaughlin, seem not to take the spotlight as they once did.

    just doesn't apply for me. Though of course I have to accept that other people's priorities differ, and I'm fine with that.

    What I cannot abide, however, is the current tendency to play unnecessary incidental "music" over spoken dialogue in TV shows. While I accept that my ears are not what they once were (I am well over 50 years old, and if there's one thing I would change if I had to live my life again, it would involve earplugs), I do not accept that these noises contribute anything useful, and frequently make dialogue difficult to hear.

    1. Re:Music and muzack... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Music is a language - among other things. Music can be an expression of otherwise inchoate feelings and non-verbal awareness or sensations.

      Not having REAL music - which means the playing, presence of human expression - is a loss of part of the spectrum of being human. Machines can mimic timing, tone and timbre - but machines cannot groove. They cannot translate yearning or joy into trembling fingertips... into welling breath.

      Music can be as simple as banging your hand on a log... But everybody can make music. Everybody SHOULD make music. Teach music, learn music, love music.

      Now, where IS my Earth Wind and Fire track?

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    2. Re:Music and muzack... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      I'm totally opposite. I tried to enjoy classical music but it always seems to be too bland for me. I might listen to a classical music track once or twice, but I never really want to keep listening to it.

      But if somebody takes a good instrumental track, adds nice vocals (choir singing is super-good) and at least somewhat decent lyrics then I won't be able to stop listening to it. Alas, I probably have almost all of the bands that do this :(

      Also, I like to listen to some movie soundtracks even though they might not have lyrics or vocals. I guess that the memory of the story from the movie is enough.

    3. Re:Music and muzack... by Meeni · · Score: 1

      You may want to listen to better recordings on better quality hifi gear. Classical music is stunning when listened properly. Certainly not blend.

    4. Re:Music and muzack... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      I'm not talking about bland as in "no distinguishing features". I don't really care about sound quality, it's the emotions behind the sound - a song without a story is just not interesting.

    5. Re:Music and muzack... by unimind · · Score: 1

      Mod up! That's what I'm talkin about! REAL music can never be replaced by machines because it's about creating an experience in the moment between the creator and the listener. There's a magic that happens when musicians create a kind of feedback loop between each other and an engaged audience -- an interaction that is distinctly human. Machines simply can't simulate that, at least not this side of the singularity.

      There will be people who will always crave this. I could imagine a disturbing time when all popular music is electronic and kids grow up without learning that they can actually create music in the moment (wait.. are we there already?), but then one day someone "discovers" this weird feeling they get when they start tapping on a log or a desk or a glass or something, and then they have the "innovative" idea of doing that with other people. They'll never want to stop.

      --
      The following statement is true: The previous statement is false.
    6. Re:Music and muzack... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      By the way, have you ever heard me rant AGAINST GODDAMN EARBUDS!!!????

      Music is intended to create a space of shared experience, not isolate people into private sonic boundaries.

      Buy a BOOM BOX. Turn it UP!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    7. Re:Music and muzack... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      I could imagine a disturbing time when all popular music is electronic and kids grow up without learning that they can actually create music in the moment (wait.. are we there already?), but then one day someone "discovers" this weird feeling they get when they start tapping on a log or a desk or a glass or something, and then they have the "innovative" idea of doing that with other people. They'll never want to stop.

      If you notice, in the original article that was linked, the primary complaint is NOBODY is DANCING.

      I don't care if you have only 1sq foot of space per person. That wouldn't be a problem if you had Kool and the Gang bumping your house down. The bans is tapped INTO THE EARTH'S RHYTHM. The people are tapped into THAT SAME rhythm. Every one is getting DOWN.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    8. Re:Music and muzack... by Fishchip · · Score: 1

      I think part of the problem is 'classical' is so broad that some good old music gets lumped in with the boring late-century styles. =) There's a station on Live365 called Musica Antiquior. It leapfrogs the bland classical and gets right to the crazy Dark Ages choral and similar, there's some really epic stuff down there. That is the sort of 'classical' music I can get into. =)

    9. Re:Music and muzack... by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      Try listening to the romantic period. The two periods before are a little overly math and boring repetitive pattern heavy.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    10. Re:Music and muzack... by hercludes · · Score: 1

      To be honest, not everyone wants to listen to the music you listen to, nor the music I listen to. And that's fine. I wouldn't want someone blasting their music through a boom box when I do not care to listen to it.

    11. Re:Music and muzack... by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      The Boom Box is not a toy.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    12. Re:Music and muzack... by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Alternative suggestion: Go to a concert. Most classical music is best experienced live.

      On a related note, I usually can't stand recordings of post-Baroque opera. Individual arias or choruses can be okay, but even a low-budget semi-pro staging is usually superior to a recording by the greatest singers and orchestras in the world.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    13. Re:Music and muzack... by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Palestrina FTW.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    14. Re:Music and muzack... by McKing · · Score: 1

      Alternative suggestion: Go to a concert. Most music is best experienced live.

      FTFY

      --
      If only "common" sense was actually that common...
    15. Re:Music and muzack... by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Actually, no.

      Most classical music is best experienced live. Most jazz music is best experienced live. Most rock music is best experienced live. Most pop music is best experienced live (assuming it's actually being performed live, natch).

      Most music is not. Most music that you're exposed to in any given day is in film, TV, advertising, when you're on hold, and so on. It's there to affect your mood, but not to call attention to itself. You really don't want to experience that live.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    16. Re:Music and muzack... by deviated_prevert · · Score: 1

      I'm totally opposite. I tried to enjoy classical music but it always seems to be too bland for me. I might listen to a classical music track once or twice, but I never really want to keep listening to it. But if somebody takes a good instrumental track, adds nice vocals (choir singing is super-good) and at least somewhat decent lyrics then I won't be able to stop listening to it. Alas, I probably have almost all of the bands that do this :( Also, I like to listen to some movie soundtracks even though they might not have lyrics or vocals. I guess that the memory of the story from the movie is enough.

      Take a stab at really listening to the entire Le Sacre Du Printemps some time in your life if you get the time. The average music consumer these days is not capable of listening to anything over 4 minutes in length, the attention span of roughly 3/4 of todays population. Or the average length of a song by the Monkees, which may or may not satisfy some species of real monkeys because they actually might have the ability to listen to real classical music in a more attentive way!

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
  52. Perhaps, but I wouldn't hold my breath. by Robert+Frazier · · Score: 1

    Background music, perhaps, although my notion of background music is along the lines of chamber music. Foreground music, not any time soon.

    The last concert I went to was Haydn's Creation played by a good symphony orchestra and sung by a good choir (with exceptional soloists). Before that it was Mahler's 6th (Tragic) played by an outstanding symphony orchestra. I suspect that I'll be long dead and buried (burnt or composted) before anything like those sounds can be produced electronically, or even reproduced electronically (recordings are still pale reflections). Given that, I don't see any reason why it won't eventually happen.

    Best wishes,
    Bob

  53. no by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    Musicians play because they enjoy it, and enjoy being creative. Art for the sake of an audience is not art. It's the difference between a fine sculpture and a plastic vase you buy at walmart. Are vases still made by hand despite the ease at which they can be extruded from an injection molding machine? Of course.

  54. No one dances? by aliquis · · Score: 1

    Because you can't dance to electric music?

    No one dances at raves? To EBM? In clubs?

    Everyone is dancing in front of their TVs when some classical music is sounding?

  55. Wrong question by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Instead of "Can digital music replace most instrumental musicians?", the more appropriate question is "Should digital music Replace most instrumental musicians?"

  56. yes...almost surely it will by Connie_Lingus · · Score: 1

    this is classic disruptive technology stuff, people...us "old-timers" debate the nonsense while a whole generation of kids are sitting alone in their bedrooms creating awesome music and art with these tools.

    ANYTHING THAT MAKES SOUND HAS THE ABILITY TO BE A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT. its beyond asinine to debate this.

    what the OP is *really* talking about are the sequencers like Ableton or ProTools. the ability to drag n drop notes and samples in a timeline is where the real supposed-threat is at. that's what allowing new-gen musicians to roll-their-own studios and sounds. personally, i think its awesome and liberating.

    the markets will decide what people want to spend their hard-earned money on.

    i mean, transpose this discussion back 40 years ago with a bunch a mainframe and mini nerds arguing about how these "toy" personal computers would never be able to do this or that nerdy thing...meanwhile I as a 13-year old kid was riding my bike to the Radio Shack and sitting in the window display to program on the Trash-80.

    and look at us now.

    --
    never bring a twinkie to a food fight.
    1. Re:yes...almost surely it will by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      this is classic disruptive technology stuff, people...us "old-timers" debate the nonsense while a whole generation of kids are sitting alone in their bedrooms creating awesome music and art with these tools.

      ANYTHING THAT MAKES SOUND HAS THE ABILITY TO BE A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT. its beyond asinine to debate this.

      what the OP is *really* talking about are the sequencers like Ableton or ProTools. the ability to drag n drop notes and samples in a timeline is where the real supposed-threat is at. that's what allowing new-gen musicians to roll-their-own studios and sounds. personally, i think its awesome and liberating.

      the markets will decide what people want to spend their hard-earned money on.

      i mean, transpose this discussion back 40 years ago with a bunch a mainframe and mini nerds arguing about how these "toy" personal computers would never be able to do this or that nerdy thing...meanwhile I as a 13-year old kid was riding my bike to the Radio Shack and sitting in the window display to program on the Trash-80.

      and look at us now.

      It is disruptive, but not in the normal sense. Currently most digital musicians have a traditional musical experience, having played traditional instruments, etc. Kids grew up wanting emulate the people they actually saw playing the instruments. If the trend continues, without the role models, who will future kids look to for their inspiration to get into music. Without future kids pursuing music, where will music come from in the future?

      With the emphasis on getting a job, today's public schools have all but eliminated the arts from their curriculum. Where will future generation learn music from, in order to be able to write it and perform it digitally? What will be the final outcome of this (the disruptive technology result)? Most likely, a bunch of mediocre techno-crap. Of course, by then, future generations will not know or remember what it is that they are missing out on and will embrace it.

  57. IKEA by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    I can install cabinets and shelves made by IKEA and it will be functional, but it won't be the same quality as a custom work created by a craftsman. Likewise for digital sampling versus real musicians. IKEA is made for the mass market. It's quick and cheap. Likewise for digital sampling. Then again, for both, you get what you pay for.

  58. Glass half full by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    and themes even on the majority of produced shows comes from completely digital composers who produce the product through digitized instrument samples

    OTOH, I suspect it is now much more common for a TV show to have a full original score for each episode, rather than a library of recyclable cues - and the highest production value shows will hire real orchestras for the bragging rights (and the spin-off concerts - heck, that's one show that could do with going back to cheaply-produced electronic music).

    Then there are all the amateur soloists who can practice, perform or even write their own concertos without having to hire an orchestra.

    In other news, the invention of Cinema 100-ish years ago was the end of the line for stage actors. Now they're turning movies into stage shows...

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  59. when was the last time you went to a show? by DavidThorinSaeger · · Score: 1

    Is a digital sampler not an instrument? No? Your probably the same type of person who complained when people started playing music on synth keyboards. Music adapts to tech but you are probably only going to like what you liked when you were in your adolescents. Sorry. Also go downtown sometime. There are plenty of bands doing live music with like, you know, guitars and stuff.

    1. Re:when was the last time you went to a show? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Is a digital sampler not an instrument? No? Your probably the same type of person who complained when people started playing music on synth keyboards. Music adapts to tech but you are probably only going to like what you liked when you were in your adolescents. Sorry. Also go downtown sometime. There are plenty of bands doing live music with like, you know, guitars and stuff.

      A sampler is not an instrument, it is nothing more than a sound bank. A keyboard, electric or acoustic would be an instrument. However, I think what the question is really about is skipping even the keyboard and just having the music scored on a computer, assigned the proper midi channels and a computer plays the piece using the appropriate instrument from the samples. As such, other than the instruments used to record the original samples from (which may have been years ago), there are no instruments involved in the production of the music.

  60. Well of course it can but..... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    .... that's only because the quality of music today has been diminished to where most pop music is nothing more than lyrics to a beat with som,e background filler sounds.

  61. Re:Frank Zappa Tried by imatter · · Score: 1

    He didn't have to deal with the musicians or the union.

  62. New definition by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Music is what happens when creative people make sounds. There doesn't have to be only one monolithic "music market". Just because TV is using "digital musicians" has nothing to do with the four guys who play improvised music every Monday at Jerry's on Division Street, or the dubstep cats working their butts off to create prodigious amounts of recorded, disposable music or the guy who plays contrabass for the North Shore Symphony Orchestra.

    So fucking what if the music on television is done using samples? And what the hell is "television" anyway? Isn't that what they used to call that big screen in the living room that I use to watch Netflix and streamed torrents?

    Let's not panic. I've made a portion of my living with music since about 1980. Technology has changed since then. People still make music. In fact, I bet more people make music now than back then because the technology has democratized the production of music and made it easier to learn to play than ever.

    If you're still looking to start a band and sign a deal with a major record label and..profit!, then you really need to do everyone a favor and sell your instruments and use the money to buy lottery tickets. If you're looking to have a career as a musician and pay the bills then the best approach is the same as it ever was...practice. There's nothing to indicate it's any harder today than it was when record labels and musicians' unions were king. That doesn't mean there's no need for record labels and musicians' unions, but if you don't panic and adapt everyone will be OK and there will still be music in the air and lots of lovin' everywhere so give me the night. Ooh oooh.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  63. TMBG by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    Baby, check it out, I've got something to say
    Man it's so loud in here
    When they stop the drum machine and I can think again, I'll remember what it was.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  64. What is a musical instrument? by 3seas · · Score: 1

    The answer is yes and no.
    What is considered a musical instrument? That's the real question.

    As someone who has always had interest in music, but no formal training though interest test show my interest are strongly inline with musicians as well as having physical dexterity good enough http://abstractionphysics.blogspot.com/2010/03/old-test-scores.html ......there remains the fact that available time (working outside of music) does not allow me to train and maintain my brain/hand coordination with musical instruments more than I have. Owning two Violins (one I made, electric), two acoustic guitars (1 being a 12 string), three electronic midi able keyboards (and an upright piano), where would I even find time for all the other instruments?

    There is what I hear in my mind and it is through midi instruments and software that make it possible for me to create far beyond my limited mind/body coordination ability not to forget the cost of all the instruments that I'd physically need to do it all manually.

    So what is a musical instrument, when the goal is to create music?
    What would had the great classical composers accomplished had they the tools of music production today?

    Performance.... that's different, but even the there you have such electronic equipment that often extends the performing musicians production/performance. i.e. minimoog synthesizer, marshal amps, etc..

    And to make things easier, there is now even cord progressions libraries. i.e. http://www.prosonic-studios.com/Midi-Progressions-Details.aspx?lngCollectionID=76

    So there is a divide, a difference between the instruments of music production, creation and live performance. For there is no strictly digital music that creates the stage set, special effects, costumes, etc... that are also an extension of performance entertainment.

    1. Re:What is a musical instrument? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Your argument, as phrased, is a little bit reminiscent of Bill Clinton asking the court what is the definition of sex.

      A radio, plays music, but it is not an instrument, same with a computer. A computer may be an instrument, if it is actually being "played" to produce the music, but if it is just playing a pre-recorded piece, that is no different than a radio, even if that piece is a pre-recorded MIDI file.

      Computers are great for composing music, but it is rare to actually see/hear one being played as the instrument. You might see them paired with an actual instrument like a MIDI keyboard or some other MIDI instrument, but in those scenarios, the computer is not the instrument, it is merely connected to the instrument.

      As many a vocalist has shown, instruments are not needed for a performance. You do need some sort of device to play the recorded music, however. In the past, instruments were used to create the recording. Now, they aren't needed even for that.

  65. No, even more so at live concerts by bobjr94 · · Score: 1

    You gonna replace an entire stage of musicians with a keyboard & samplers controlled by a sequencer ? Not at any show I'm going to. Not even on an album I would buy. Example # 1, great band from the Portland, OR area I videoed earlier this year. Plays mainly Jamaican inspired instrumental tunes - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4VdqsE1iE4 .

    1. Re:No, even more so at live concerts by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      You gonna replace an entire stage of musicians with a keyboard & samplers controlled by a sequencer ? Not at any show I'm going to. Not even on an album I would buy. Example # 1, great band from the Portland, OR area I videoed earlier this year. Plays mainly Jamaican inspired instrumental tunes - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4VdqsE1iE4 .

      No, you are going to, and they already have, replaced an entire stage of musicians with pre-recorded soundtracks from digital sources that were created with computers and midi files (no need even for the synthesizer keyboard). For decades, "shows" have used pre-recorded music,even at concerts. The difference was that in the past, real musicians playing real instruments created those recordings. Today, with computers and samplers, producers can save the cost of the musicians because the computer can play the score.

  66. It's about the interplay by breid7718 · · Score: 1

    The draw of live music comes from the interplay of talented musicians. One guy - no matter how talented or well equipped - is not going to produce the same kind of energy and attraction.

  67. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by spongman · · Score: 1

    Ok then. What defines a music instrument. Is a wooden block a musical instrument? How about a snare drum?

  68. Laugh by koan · · Score: 1

    "This has almost eliminated the need for real human instrumental musicians"

    Most of them are still pounding piano keyboard to trigger the samples or using something like Maschine, which I absolutely love.

    But maybe Rush said it the best:
    "All this machinery making modern music
    Can still be open-hearted.
    Not so coldly charted, it's really just a question
    Of your honesty, yeah, your honesty. "

    As with most creative things, it is really just a question of your honesty.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  69. Re:Music by sysrammer · · Score: 1

    I like this analogy. I think it sums it up nicely.

    "Pop music is like the Jungle Boat Ride at Disney. The animals always show up, there's a nice little narrative, it's over in a few minutes. Most "serious" music is like observing animals in the wild. You have to really look and listen..."

    --
    His ignorance covered the whole earth like a blanket, and there was hardly a hole in it anywhere. - Mark Twain
  70. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

    Reading comprehension issues. "Not an instrument like a guitar is". Or similarly, an instrument like a rock is. You can get music from a rock if you are determined enough. And I can communicate with you if I am determined enough, though actually this is getting boring. I suggest you go away and listen to an entire album of solo scratching. Please don't tell me whether or not you liked it.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  71. What law is it again? by Dripdry · · Score: 1

    When there is a question like this in a headline, it's just looking for clicks.

    Just answer "No."

    End of discussion, right? Right? :P

    --
    -
  72. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

    I'm looking to see where I said drums can't be used to create notes but I think you are going to have to help me.
    Maybe you are assuming I'm dyslexic and wrote notes instead of tones?

    --
    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  73. As regards the headline. by doccus · · Score: 1

    Speaking as an unemployed instrumental musician, I'd have to say.. er.. hell yes.. Instrumental music nowadays is all solely patched together loops, and prearranged samples, and more of the same.

  74. Musicians need an audience by ipgrunt · · Score: 1

    Certainly, machines make some of music heard today, but musicians are driven to perform, and they thrive in front of an audience. As long as there are people to listen, musicians will be available for performance.

    --
    ip, therefore im. -- sorry Rene, with love, IP. P.S. Love that thing with all the coordinates.
  75. NO, this simple by Optali · · Score: 1

    It's like saying that RT devices would replace most sporters.

    Netzt question, please

    --
    -- 29A the number of the Beast
  76. Re:Imagine a prolonged sigh in place of this subje by Inflammatory+Fallacy · · Score: 1

    This guy is apparently not into turntablism, for which I pity him.

  77. Sampling is an artistic medium, nothing less. by Inflammatory+Fallacy · · Score: 1

    By mixing, tweaking, sampling, and matching pieces of music together, a skilled artist can make something that equals more than the sum of its parts. If you're looking for examples, take DJ Shadow, El-P, or RJD2. Listening to an album by either artist, it's not even necessarily apparent that you're listening to song 1+song 2, it's music in its own right. I don't know how they do it, but it's definitely not to be underestimated.