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Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Feb 29, 2000
- Messages
- 32,361
It's my opinion that you fight like a dairy farmer.
How appropriate, you fight like a cow.
It's my opinion that you fight like a dairy farmer.
If the technology got so much better that we wouldn't be able to tell if they were perfected then most people wouldn't have a drive to get better or work at all. Would ever concert be lip-synched? Ugh, just thinking about that type of reality makes me sad.
I'm not sure how perfected vocal and instrumental technology would work in practice -- it's more just a thought experiment to clarify the objection. Ideally it wouldn't detract from an artist's drive to improve their talent all together, but shift the impetus more towards developing talent for ground level composing and lyric writing (as opposed to exercising their vocal tracts, improving instrumental handwork, etc). Poets and composers certainly work hard without needing to sing or do much handwork themselves. In general, I suppose removing some of the traditional constraints of song production would enable, though not necessitate, a substantial move away from the hands-on highly collaborative technical side of music to a more individualized software-savvy cerebral art. Some things would be lost from the music, but others gained.nomy said:Call me old fashioned, but I think in an industry where a hell of a lot of talented people struggle to earn a crust and work their bollocks off for years just to get noticed, then it's reasonable to be against a technology that negates any kind of talent.
How appropriate, you fight like a cow.
My wisest enemies run away at the first sight of me!
Even before they smell your breath?
In general, I suppose removing some of the traditional constraints of song production would enable, though not necessitate, a substantial move away from the hands-on highly collaborative technical side of music to a more individualized software-savvy cerebral art. Some things would be lost from the music, but others gained.