#219850 by electronic fantasy
Tue Jul 30, 2013 3:02 am
Tue Jul 30, 2013 3:02 am
@Chippy
I admire people who have the ability to hear a symphony in their head right away and commit it to paper (dead sheep, piece of clay or whatever) Personally I am not able to do that, I have to improvise the melody over some backing progression in order to get it out of my head.
The point I was trying to make is that digital tools available today are not all that evil and bad as some may see them. In fact they help an artist to write a piece. You can record and/or mark up the progression part and some preliminary beat then do several takes on melodies and play around with harmonies, arrangements, insert drum rolls (even if you are not a drummer) etc, etc... ...and in the end get the piece you want, learn it and then record from top to bottom. Put it on the shelf for a few weeks, listen back to it, realize that you have to change a whole bunch of things, change them and by the time you are done you know how to play all the parts in it. Now you can play it for anyone or email an MP3 to your band members.
If you are alone, you are done. If you play in the band it is easier to make a demo of your new material in this way and show it to the rest of the guys in the band. They will hear a more complete piece rather then just a separate disconnected part of it.
Thus if you do take your music seriously digital media is a tool that one can use no matter what genre or style one prefers to play.
That was my point.
Although someone may have written a symphony on leather, they eventually had to show the piece to someone in some form, usually by way of actually playing it. This is why I engaged the topic if you will.
I admire people who have the ability to hear a symphony in their head right away and commit it to paper (dead sheep, piece of clay or whatever) Personally I am not able to do that, I have to improvise the melody over some backing progression in order to get it out of my head.
The point I was trying to make is that digital tools available today are not all that evil and bad as some may see them. In fact they help an artist to write a piece. You can record and/or mark up the progression part and some preliminary beat then do several takes on melodies and play around with harmonies, arrangements, insert drum rolls (even if you are not a drummer) etc, etc... ...and in the end get the piece you want, learn it and then record from top to bottom. Put it on the shelf for a few weeks, listen back to it, realize that you have to change a whole bunch of things, change them and by the time you are done you know how to play all the parts in it. Now you can play it for anyone or email an MP3 to your band members.
If you are alone, you are done. If you play in the band it is easier to make a demo of your new material in this way and show it to the rest of the guys in the band. They will hear a more complete piece rather then just a separate disconnected part of it.
Thus if you do take your music seriously digital media is a tool that one can use no matter what genre or style one prefers to play.
That was my point.