On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 15:34:23 +0200 Robert Jonsson <robert.jonsson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Friday 22 August 2003 15:03 skrev Daniel James: > > > In a digital world there is a big difference between the number of > > > external inputs/outputs you have and the number of internal tracks > > > you utilize. > > > > Sure, but he doesn't use a computer and was thinking in terms of a 24 > > track tape machine with 24 analogue inputs. He perceived that 8 > > analogue inputs on a digital system wouldn't be enough for a *solo* > > project, because he believed that professional musicans all use 24 > > track equipment - so he had to have 24 inputs too. > > > > My concern is that sometimes the technology doesn't enable creativity, > > it puts up a new barrier - such as overcomplexity. > > I can't remember who it was that said that 'any sufficiently advanced > technology is indistinguishable from magic', anyway, it is true. > > In the short term it may seem like overcomplexity, in the long term however > it's evolution and will soon be what average joe uses, without thinking about > it. > > There is a possibility that it really _IS_ overcomplexity, but then something > else will come along, a new paradigm, that takes over. Evolution saves the > day once again :) > > Myself I don't think it is too complex, it may be magic to those who haven't > taken the plunge yet though. It seems to me that the process should leave some mark... should be evidenced somehow. A bit of minimalism {tho' 30 tracks hardly seems minimal to me} might reference the source and in so doing help define "a" linux {digital} sound. Methods by which folk deal with the issue serve to develop that a bit further, push the medium, yadda, yadda... {Moog has a unique sound that many folk find to be appealing simply because it's a Moog sound, Some of the appeal to early punk is the lofi sound, Most old jazz/blues studios have a particular flavor to their recordings, etc...} I like computer music though... I'm not interested in processing a pre-existant sound or trying to give a customer anything specific. I can afford to let the sound get "coloured" by the process. {In fact... that's desirable.}