Originally Posted by
Skullhead
No argument that it is not a creative tool. Of course it is, but it is also a very different process. It certainly allows for an artist to very easily become pretentious. What I mean by that is in the true literal meaning of that word. Pretending you are better than you are.
I can now pretend that I can lay drum tracks as precise as Neil Peart did on Permanent Waves. I can paste in extra snare or tom hits pretending I could really do that. Neil on the other hand, before computers, actually had to increase his skill level as a player to arrive at his speed and precision. Many hundreds of "inconvenient hours" or practice to do so.
But it's not just the inconvenience of practicing that is at stake. Sometimes creative ideas come to a musician during these extra hundreds of hours of practicing. I play drums a bit, and I have accidentally found some unintended uses for accidents or things I have stumbled across while exploring the art of excessive practicing.
To make an "impressive" recording, one certainly doesn't have to practice as much as they used to.
So this begs other questions. Can one tell the difference between real and manipulated? Does anyone even care?
I suppose most can't and most don't care.
But I am sure that in the pre digital age, people didn't have to even consider that distinction, and YES they did care.
Many people went to see "Rush" for example to see if they could actually play like that live. They gained a significant fan base for this reason. They were excellent live. It was jaw dropping really.
Later on, once the computer became a friend of the artist, it was common for the band to play along with the computer driven pulse or computer generated sounds. All this done in the name of art.
I don't know for sure, but when it's all said and done for the musical historians of the future, I believe that the pre computer albums that Rush did will be held in the highest regard. Yes, Genesis, Gentle Giant, ELP, Tull, Crimson, I don't think any of these bands works will be regarded as their greatest achievements post computer involvement.
Of course I could be wrong.
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