Abundance of one-man "bands" in modern prog |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17513 |
Posted: January 05 2013 at 14:13 | |
I disagree.
Musicianship is changing and will continue to change. It has been instrument/dependent for at least 500 years, and now ... guess what rock music created? ... A f----------- monster ... when all you like and go after (specially in the subdivisions here) is a "sound" ... and now you are complaining because this new process will come MORE from that "sound" of things, than it will from the compositional sense that "supposedly" has been the history of music!
Again, and he makes that point, and I agree, that the changes in music are more for getting these ideas out and down ... and this is something that musically trained people are having an issue with ... that someone without that knowledge, can create music just as good, if not better.
Musicianship, will NEVER die! ... it will ONLY change! Look at the history of music ... you are saying that Beethoven could not have written those 34 lines of music on the staff for his Symphonies, and neither could Puccini ... 34 mind you ... not just 4 musicians and instruments like 90% of rock music!
May I suggest that you look at these things again ... you are getting stuck in semantics, and not looking at music history at all ... other than the more superficial and vain story of rock and popular music! Edited by moshkito - January 05 2013 at 14:19 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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docall27
Forum Newbie Joined: December 22 2012 Location: Lake Geneva, WI Status: Offline Points: 35 |
Posted: January 05 2013 at 16:23 | |
Amen! Given the intricate counterpoint that many of the classical composers wrote, I could argue that a 'band' is an impediment to such writing. Therefore, there is an argument that would suggest that too many cooks can spoil that pot. I get the point about musicianship, but some of these one man bands seem to be very well rounded.
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 04:43 | |
To my ears, Lennon and McCartney songs (and here I mean the basic song before any contribution by other band members) are the epitome of one-man compositions because they are singer-songwriter compositions, (this is difficult to explain): often in Beatles songs the "tune" is not carried by one instrument - they need the accompaniment to resolve the composition from a music theory point of view - a dissonance in the vocal melody would be resolved in the accompanying guitar or piano chords - they are songs written by one man with a guitar or sat at a keyboard. Sure the other band members add their bits later, or add a refrain or middle-eight or counterpoint/harmony thus modifying the initial song, but the basic song composition remains.
The quality-control element is something I've mentioned before, and that is especially applicable to one-man bands. However, Jam bands are woefully lacking in QC in my opinion, improvisations may produce great ideas, but they can also produce some poor quality songs (I'd cite VdGG's Present and a good example of that - disc one is far more satisfying to listen to than disc two IMO). Traditionally the record Producer would be the quality control for a production, so when we get self-produced albums by groups and by one-man bands that essential step can still be lacking.
As to the future - I agree with much of what Kurzweil said in that article - the future will contain both because traditionally both have always existed. Modern technology has allowed us to hear far more one-man productions than ever before, and like those dreadful band demo cassettes that we were subjected to in the 70s and 80s, not all of them are good, and because they are not filtered by A&R men and Record Label execs we get to hear all of them whether we want to or not. But this is also true of bands - we get to hear all the self-released bands without this Quality Control gate to filter off the not-so-good ones too. I for one don't mind this, and I certainly don't see it as the death of anything or any reason to want to throw a hissy-fit, because now I get to choose what I want to listen to, the good and the bad and that filtering is now done by the consumer and the music fan - the good stuff will survive.
Edited by Dean - January 06 2013 at 04:45 |
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HackettFan
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 20 2012 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 7951 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 09:47 | |
This is a good point because the discussion in this thread has been about the question of whether there is creative superiority to be found from the real time interaction of jamming. Any other sort of collaboration I expect should not be sufficient (not by my view but by the thesis of the thread). Edited by HackettFan - January 06 2013 at 10:42 |
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 10:19 | |
If you want to play piano like Tony Banks you must develop. I gave up my youth practicing Segovia's book of scales 5 hours every morning, working out pieces in the afternoon, eating dinner and spending the evenings performing and hoping I wouldn't suck. Guitar was everything to me along with the great Classical/jazz musicians in Philadelphia and N.Y. who took me under their wing to push me further. It wasn't about programming 30 second notes on digital equpiment. We just played what we were asked to play. Many neo prog bands have fine players who sacrificed everything to be in the position they are in. There is an abundance of musicians in the world (that I have met), who rely on technology to replace their lack of ability to play or perform a specific piece. This is okay within itself, but it doesn't make devoted players a thing of the past. It only creates a vision for those who are less devoted in that particular case.
Edited by TODDLER - January 06 2013 at 10:21 |
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HackettFan
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 20 2012 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 7951 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 12:58 | |
Lots of people want to make this into computer programming versus playing. That is certainly something to think about on it's own merits, but Gerinsky's claim is stronger. He's saying even if a musician plays not only his own instrument but all of them there will still an inherent creativity gap between that and a band (at least for band oriented music, I think he's qualified that already). While there might be something real about band interaction, I don't know how we find evidence for it's effect on creativity. People have identified other things that influence creativity. One of the most common is hardship. However, I don't think either band interaction or hardship are necessary for creativity of high order. Sometimes, in my view, it's just about being open and observant or getting in touch with one's inner child.
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Surrealist
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 12 2012 Location: Squonk Status: Offline Points: 232 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 14:08 | |
Nice to see a couple of posters here get it.. or are starting to get it.. |
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Surrealist
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 12 2012 Location: Squonk Status: Offline Points: 232 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 14:22 | |
If you take computers out of it and force musicians to record on tape... then you eliminate a lot of the dishonestly. Better if you eliminate post recorded effects processing. I say this because running an effect between you and the output of an amp WILL CHANGE THE WAY YOU PLAY in that moment. Adding later never sounds natural. Your ears need to hear it in the moment.
Fix it by doing the take over... better if you have some pressure because you are blowing your money on studio time. The leads one to PREPARE and PRACTICE before booking time. Not sitting in your room doing 30 takes into a laptop. The old way was the better way... and we got much better music product with more limitations put on musicians. People used to love going to concerts because the music sounded better than the records.. For one, the musicians had some time to play the music out for a while on tour... let it breathe, and develop. It was exciting because it was in the moment... there was an expectation to perform well...and for the fans to enjoy that experience.. If I see another drummer playing live with headphones on I am going to throw up.... Get rid of the click tracks...and audio cues in the headphones... let the music breathe a bit. Keep it real.. It's like being on stage but riding around on a tricycle... or using crutches. How dare bands charge people for this nonsense. I want to see guitars running into amps... NOT DIRECT INTO THE BOARD... I want to hear a Hammond played through a Leslie rotary cabinet.. not a digital keyboard plugged into a modeling processor controlled by a sound guy 50 feet off the stage. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 16:05 | |
One more time: Who does it this way? Where is your evidence that everyone records in this way? You are making up scenarios to illustrate a point that you haven't shown to actually exist in reality. I cannot think of any guitarist who would not want to be in full control of their effects - I challenge you to name one.
Edited by Dean - January 06 2013 at 16:05 |
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jayem
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 21 2006 Location: Switzerland Status: Offline Points: 995 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 16:39 | |
Listening to other's music and jamming with other people helps the lone musician choosing ingredients for the next pieces.
A whole band with every soul merged into the same music for total communion is either a miracle if the people in it are genuine discoverers that happen to get along, or their souls "fuse" simply because they were shaped into similar moulds (but nothing new, so nothing genuinely "progressive") so they still create, but they aren't reference prog rockers are they (still world class talented people gatherers and legacy defenders among them though). Much time chatting that we could spend exploring new musical worlds...
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 16:42 | |
Don't just assume they are hearing a click-track unless you know for sure that's what is being fed into their headphones. Jumping to conclusions and making false accusations is the biggest nonsense here.
Edited by Dean - January 06 2013 at 16:49 |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17513 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 17:56 | |
You're going back in time ... time warp!
Adding/subtracting has nothing to with it sounding natural or not! The occasion and the proper moment is what creates that "natural-ness. But you're talking about a sound that you want from an instrument, or two, and you are going to find yourself outside the norm.
You're almost stating that no one did any adding/subtracting on the tapes, and the old TEAC's ... you are so wrong, it's not funny ... and the natural ness is simply a preference that you have in your head ... a professional putting this together for you, in both styles, I doubt you could tell the difference! In radio, a commercial (in the 70's - FM) was using at least a couple of 4 track TEAC's and my roomate was known to take advantage of the edits ... I have them on tape if you don't believe me, and it has nothing to do with the warmth in them .. has to do with the talent and cleverness of the hands, fingers and wording, or music ... of the person working on the tracks!
Please separate yourself and your preferences, from the science of it ... if you want to go out in the world and create your change and such, go ahead and ask Neil Young to be your wife, while you're at it!
But you're going to find yourself in a corner sooner or later ... an old embittered man, because you can't kick the football with those really old and soft leather shoes 50 years ago!
This is very similar to photography, when some folks think that adding magenta to the picture, makes it warmer than showing a person's skin that is not magenta tones, and in fact, might look slightly sickly because it is NOT "warmed" up! It is but a preference, that gives you an illusion ... yet another illusion, that YOU ARE REPLACING the actual playing of the instrument with.
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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timburlane
Forum Groupie Joined: March 09 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 58 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 18:01 | |
I'm sorry, but nearly everything you've said here is utter tosh. Whilst there are some pro musicians who record to tape still the fact is that very few people do so these days, most recording is hard disc based. Musicians have been adding post-production effects since Les paul in the fifties. Multiple "comped" takes is a standard recording technique throughout the industry. Lots of musicians including Yes and Genesis in the the 70's composed in the studio and Close to the Edge is a series of takes edited together...
I DO agree that limitations promote creativity, and there are plenty of limitations to creating music on a laptop with a limited budget. Speraking personally I've seen some great gigs which have invovled musicians playing to click tracks as well as breath-taking seat-of-the pants improvisation. There is a place for it all. Of course I'm going to speak out in fasvour of computer musicians/composers because i am one myself, but i'm also a gigging musician who plays solo and in bands and i love it all. these things are tools and the important thing is what you build with your tools.
Edited by timburlane - January 06 2013 at 18:04 |
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never eat anything bigger than your head
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timburlane
Forum Groupie Joined: March 09 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 58 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 18:05 | |
sorry! I was frepling to this post - it's late in the evening and I should pay more attention to what i'm doing!
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never eat anything bigger than your head
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 18:34 | |
We are living in a blame culture - it's dumb and stupid in equal measures. People look for any excuse to level blame. One-man bands are not the problem here and whatever is happening in Prog music today is not their fault - the abundance of one-man bands is not the cause of anything, it could be a symptom, but like all the whining about technology and people not playing their instruments, I think it's just a convienient excuse that is played as a "get out of gaol free" card.
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Surrealist
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 12 2012 Location: Squonk Status: Offline Points: 232 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 23:46 | |
What I am talking about is a guitarist who is adding distortion, sustain, a chorus pedal, flanger, compressor, wah wah etc..
Those sounds need to be happening while they are playing so they can hear them while they are playing. If you play it clean then add the effect later.. it's going to sound very unnatural, and not good. I know plenty of drummers who are getting click track feeds into their headphones.. playing along with pre recorded beats and so on.. Dean, what rock have you been living under? My point is simple.. Prog bands are not staying together because there is no money, not enough good gigs, no major label interest, not many festivals... and a total lack of interest from today's brain dead music consumers. So one man bands are happening like scraping the bottom of a toxic music barrel. I am not blaming one man bands... I'm sure most of them would rather be in a real band with serious musicians who love playing Prog.. but there is no upside to Prog now.. All the great Prog bands were live bands. They to some degree had to keep their albums honest because they were expected to reproduce those sounds live.. or.. they would have to substitute with more ambitious live playing like Zeppelin did. The Louvre with be around and of interest to future generations for a lot longer than the Computer museum in San Jose. Digital art played on flat screens will have about as much longevity as a Mac Donalds french fry. A persons itunes library will not have the lasting quality level of a great vinyl collection. If you don't understand this.. you need to have your ears examined. |
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 06 2013 at 23:55 | |
I don't use iTunes. |
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The Truth
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 19 2009 Location: Kansas Status: Offline Points: 21795 |
Posted: January 07 2013 at 00:05 | |
I think music should be enjoyed in whatever format it comes in.
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jude111
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 20 2009 Location: Not Here Status: Offline Points: 1754 |
Posted: January 07 2013 at 00:24 | |
Ah, so it's music fans' fault? I disagree. One can go see Robert Cray perform at an arena, but we all know - blues was the Missippi Delta, it was Chicago, it was Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf and Chuck Berry. And then it was a bunch of English guitarists copping their style. Any blues that one hears today is a reproduction (of a reproduction of a reproduction) of an era that's passed. Or the Jazz Age. Cole Porter and the Gershwins and Duke Ellington and Miles and Bird and Coltrane and Monk... It's great stuff... But it's receding further and further into ancient history, man. That's prog. The Golden Age of prog has passed. That doesn't mean the world's going to hell in a handbasket (although it is, but for different reasons, hohoho) ;-) Music has to speak to people today. I love Floyd, but I'm not sure DSOTM speaks in an immediate way to young people today. My enjoyment of DSOTM comes from my memory of when it was a revelation to me, 30 years a go. Other music speaks to me more directly today, music that seems much more immediate and important in today's world, and related to my experience of it... Edited by jude111 - January 07 2013 at 01:10 |
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jude111
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 20 2009 Location: Not Here Status: Offline Points: 1754 |
Posted: January 07 2013 at 01:20 | |
Hmmm. Interesting point. My grandparents had heirlooms going back a few generations. But my parents' stuff won't last a generation. My father (83 this year) had a rare treasured sports car that slowly disintegrated due to the salt air. Things are ephemeral today; not to mention the decline of the West. Music is reflecting this. One of my favorite albums ever is My Bloody Valentine's LOVELESS, which always sounded to me like a vinyl record left to melt in the sun. See what I mean? Great music today reflects this ephemeral quality (e.g. hauntology, like Burial's UNTRUE and The Caretaker's AN EMPTY BLISS...). Edited by jude111 - January 07 2013 at 01:20 |
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