Muse
Lifer
- Jul 11, 2001
- 41,259
- 10,424
- 136
Originally posted by: NeuroSynapsis
then you shouldn't say it doesn't require practice
if you were to SPIN, a turntable would be your instrument
it takes alot of work to produce a GOOD track, and if you can't appreciate the time/effort required to make a GOOD track, oh well
I'm not putting it down and I do like a lot of it. I'm just saying that a lot of it sounds crappy. There are some great artists out there doing it, but I hear a lot of music that's crap - stuff that you know right off the bat that nobody is going to be interested in after a few years. That's the stuff I avoid, or try to. I like a number of artists who work electronically. Blevin Blechtum is a local female techno artist I dig. I am fascinated with what John Oswald does - "Plunderphonics". That stuff takes a LOT of work and I think it's great. But what Oswald does is different from most electronic artists. He used to work with razor blades and tape, I think. Now I'm sure he does it digitally.
