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moonchild View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 04 2004 at 13:43

I hate the new trend to sample pieces of music. Write your own, don't steal from others.

I hate drum machines. Humans are better.

 

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Tauhd Zaļa View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 06:54

It is strange and this trouble me :

The last 2 "LOVE" threads (top 15 albums and 5 best instrumentalists) have respectively 20 and 37 answers.

But this thread of "HATE" has 60 answers...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 07:26
There are just many evil things in the world that some of us hate (like drum machines)
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Tauhd Zaļa View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 08:37

Originally posted by Joren Joren wrote:

There are just many evil things in the world that some of us hate (like drum machines)

You have just to forget them and buy CD without drum machines.

It is the first step, a constructive action, "HATE" is useless

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 09:09

Maybe... but if you DO have it (oops!), this thread is helpful to share your frustrations with others who feel the same way about it...

Moonchild: I don't like drum machines either!

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Tauhd Zaļa View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 09:16

Drum machines are not with evidence my biggest frustration in this world

Master Joda : "Fear makes frustration and frustration makes hate, hate makes you falling down into the dark side of the Force"



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 09:20

I have to disagree- HATE as an obsession is very bad, but only as much as any other fanatic blindness, whether it's positive or negative in origin. However, HATE as a motivating force is among the most basic human impulses, able to motivate us long after more pleasant feelings have abandoned us. Trying to remove hate from our emotional palette is useless, and one of the worst mistakes of the Western theological tradition. Trying to squash negativity often just lets it fester forgotten, insidiously coloring all other feelings, and getting ever harder to separate and deal with in a reasonable manner.

So go ahead and hate drum machines- it's a quirky character trait other people may find interesting, anyway- as long as you don't end up stalking Boss and Alesis executives, or campaigning to blacklist or confine drum machine users. Better yet, find out what makes you hate them, and come to some sort of emotional compromise that you can live with.

Q: why is a drum machine better than a real drummer?

A: you only have to punch the correct rhythm into the machine once.

"The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them; that's the essence of inhumanity."
-George Barnard Shaw



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Tauhd Zaļa View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 09:40

Yes James Lee, I understand you (I try)

But "HATE" was never a motivating force for me. "HATE" always destructed me when I felt it.

I don't want to be sexist (I "HATE" this) but maybe it is one of the differences between men and women ??

And about drum machines :

For me the most important is not the fact a music use or not drum machines but the way drums machines are employed.

It is always the same problem of the man and the tool...

"Q: why is a drum machine better than a real drummer?

A: you only have to punch the correct rhythm into the machine once."

Yes but in electronic music you have sofwares that are able to make imperfections to the correct rhythm of the drum machines (from 90ies I think).

The result ?

More "human", more life in the beat, more groove...

But for me : "Q: why is a drum machine better than a real drummer?

"A: a drum machine never drinks beer and never looks at my chest"

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 10:48
Originally posted by Tauhd Zaļa Tauhd Zaļa wrote:

Yes James Lee, I understand you (I try)

But "HATE" was never a motivating force for me. "HATE" always destructed me when I felt it.

I don't want to be sexist (I "HATE" this) but maybe it is one of the differences between men and women ??

And about drum machines :

For me the most important is not the fact a music use or not drum machines but the way drums machines are employed.

It is always the same problem of the man and the tool...

"Q: why is a drum machine better than a real drummer?

A: you only have to punch the correct rhythm into the machine once."

Yes but in electronic music you have sofwares that are able to make imperfections to the correct rhythm of the drum machines (from 90ies I think).

The result ?

More "human", more life in the beat, more groove...

But for me : "Q: why is a drum machine better than a real drummer?

"A: a drum machine never drinks beer and never looks at my chest"

And it never listens to another drum machine play and says "I'm much better than that guy. He just got lucky."

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 12:07

On some of Allan Holdsworth's albums, he credits the drummer as Mac Hine. I didn't really give it much thought, the tunes always sounded good to me.... Then I realized Mac Hine was Machine.... I still like the tunes.  I don't hate them... But "live" a REAL drummer adds some flash to a show.

I just saw Erik Norlander and he was really great with the "Wall of Doom" but the interplay wasn't sorely missed. Too clinical...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 14:52

On Jon Anderson's solo tour I saw earlier this year.. it was just him, his acoustic guitar, a Korg piano, a harp... and a computer...

Actually it was really very nice and I enjoyed it .

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 16:12

I don't know where I'd be without my CDs of drum samples and software drum machines - my bedroom is a bit small for a drumkit!

Once I've put my ideas together, I can then find a real drummer to make sense of what I botched together.

Drum machines worked for the Orb, the Prodigy, Kraftwerk (to name but 3 awesome electronic bands).

Smile

"Give a man a Fender Stratocaster and he won't immediately become Eric Clapton" (Quote attributed to Roger Waters).

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2004 at 23:06

I gotta plug my favorite band yet again...The Cocteau Twins used a drum machine for most of their career, and many of their best tracks now sound a little dated solely for that reason.

It's all about what works for the music- Norman Cook, among others, can get more expression and funkiness out of his machines than many real drummers could ever manage.

Many of the problems that people have with drum machines are similar to the complaints that were made when synthesizers first began to get mainstream (thanks mainly to Floyd, Wakeman, Emerson, and other prog pioneers). The British musicians association even tried to ban the Mellotron! I have a feeling that if our beloved bands had access to drum machines, you would certainly have heard one from time to time, especially for spacey or futuristic accents.

My wife wonders what this debate is about- she seems to think that 'progressive' music should exploit the latest technology. I had to explain to her that most (not all, don't jump on me!) prog is based on what had been 'progressive' in the 60s and 70s. It is called progressive ROCK, after all. If you went to a club or trendy music store and just asked for "progressive", they'd most likely assume you meant progressive house and send you to BT or Spooky.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2004 at 04:40

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Drum machines worked for the Orb, the Prodigy, Kraftwerk (to name but 3 awesome electronic bands).

Yes but no...

It was true in the early beginning when KRAFTWERK was only formed by Ralf Hutter and (und) Florian Schneider but after Wolfgang Flur and Karl Bartos joined the band.

These 2 guys played "Electronic Percussion"

Even I never closely checked it I think they are real men , not drum machines.

I saw a gig (not a jig - thks Peter ), Radioactivity era. Wolfgang Flur and Karl Bartos played effectively themself electronic percussions.

One of the devices they used was strange. I try to explain.

It was infra-red or laser rays that the musicians cut with their hands.

Each time a ray was cuted, this made a percussion sound (one sound per ray).

It was funny to saw them moving on stage like the guy with flags on the tarmak of an airport or aircraft carrier or a policeman at a cross-roads

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2004 at 08:29

Caught! - But to make a sound, those electronic drums had to replay a drum sample, as they could make no distinct noise of their own

Didn't Jean-Michel Jarre use a similar light-operated instrument?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2004 at 09:24

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Caught! - But to make a sound, those electronic drums had to replay a drum sample, as they could make no distinct noise of their own

Yesss !!!

But with this device the tempo was "human"

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Didn't Jean-Michel Jarre use a similar light-operated instrument?

A kind of electronic harp if I remember well the TV show

Both beautiful for eyes and ears

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2004 at 01:14

Well I saw Pamela Kurstin recently at Moogfest doing one hell of a job playing that theramin.  The sound doesn't actually do all that much for me.. but the gracefulness of her hand movements and the playing was just stunning...

Also, I'm not quite sure what instrument Joe Gallivan was playing... but it was sort of like a theramin.. played with drumsticks... and he looks like Frank Zappa.. so overall it was a very interesting evening... I get all that and Keith Emerson, Rick Wakeman and Jordan Rudess playing at one event.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 28 2004 at 10:51

Re: Drum machines & drums mixed to the front of the recording mix.

I've greatly enjoyed several of Bruce Hornsby's albums released during the 90's e.g. Harbor Lights. However, even though I have a couple of BH & the Range albums, I've not given them any airing for many years  - until last Monday night. In particular  Scenes from The  Southside album. Every damned track  starts off, or after a rambling keyboard intro, bangs in with virtually the same drum effect (a machine or human?) and mixed right in front of everything else: seeming to me to scream out 'Hey late 80's production values!!!'  - goodness how it is dated. I am afraid that album is getting the boot, every track is spoilt badly by those dreadful drums which quite a number of  folks thought cool 15 years ago.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 28 2004 at 11:07

Love drum machines  Great fun, and thats from a drummer!

Mind you every drum machine I've ever met has been better than me.

Some of the best music of the 90's involved sampled drums and electronics generally. The Orb has been mentioned, and they were brilliant (most of the time) but also Future Sound of London, Global Communication, Plaid, Boards of Canada..This was the best music of the 90's IMO. To my mind that is 'Neo-Prog' if anything has to be at all. Not the likes of IQ et al, they are PROG ROCK as far as I'm concerned.

Anyway, I waffle. Long live sampled percussion!!



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 28 2004 at 11:28
I hate being caught by my ex-grilfriend's current boyfriend doing things that I shouldn't
I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
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