or time to stop writing mad long explanatory passages, and get yer head
locked away in the studio.....

just go for it dude....

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Robert Caponi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: 19 August 2002 05:32
> To: Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List
> Subject: [dnb-prod] Changing direction
> 
> 
>       Right now my gear status is in a state of limbo, and 
> I'm about to 
> (finally) mix down my album, so my thoughts turn to a change in 
> music-making protocol, the necessity of which I have become 
> increasingly 
> aware. Basically, I've refined my formula for making 
> (putative) drum 'n' 
> bass, and I've learned a lot in doing so, but it's time for 
> me to move 
> on, and use what I've learned to make more accessible music. I'm no 
> stranger to conscious changes in musical direction,-- three 
> years ago I 
> consciously decided to veer away from the (putative) hip-hop I was 
> making and focus my efforts on drum 'n' bass. Only problem 
> was, I didn't 
> go to parties and there weren't and dnb record shops in my 
> area; all I 
> had were a handful of eclectic cds and my own ersatz opinions on what 
> drum 'n' bass *should* sound like. This changed almost 
> exactly one year 
> ago when I first had access to internet radio, and was able 
> to hear what 
> mainstream, contemporary dnb actually *sounded* like.
> 
>       The main problem most people have with my music is the 
> rhythm, and 
> as little desire as I have to bend over backwards to satisfy these 
> people, my rhythms are nearly unmixable. Today I listened to 
> Konflict's 
> "Messiah,"- I would say that this and my own "If Soul Is 
> Strong Enough" 
> are equally drum-programming intensive, but are worlds apart in the 
> aural effect they create. What I need to do is harness and distill my 
> syncopation into something more palatable to the general public  
> (although I maintain they sound fine to me.) If I can 
> maintain the same 
> rhythmic interest and at the same time use squarer, more 
> "on-the-grid" 
> rhythms, I'll have succeeded. There's also another 
> technological aspect 
> to my music that needs to be addressed, and that's the fact that my 
> music making hasn't gotten out of the '80s. I had a record 
> label owner 
> come over to my house, and his main problem with the way I make music 
> (besides the fact I still use sample disks) was that it was 99% MIDI, 
> with the audio component relegated to mixdown stage 
> decision-making. He 
> basically said "You've gone as far as you can with MIDI, now 
> it's time 
> to tackle audio." I imagine this way of working would have 
> far-reaching 
> consequences for my music.
> 
>       My own insouciance about what other people thought 
> about my music 
> and how it qualifies as drum 'n' bass has gotten me in 
> trouble on this 
> very mailing list. As proud as I am of the material I've created 
> heretofore (collected in the 2xcd "Linear Response,") I am 
> equally fond 
> of the sounds of current dnb. Basically, it's time for me to 
> stop making 
> solipsistic jungle and start making *drum 'n' bass*.
> 
> 
> ---
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