I like how the conversation can flag but we all know the playing
continues.
Does anyone else see the lutenet as an afterdinner conversation? In my
analogy sometimes we wander off to a room and mention we have a tune
going, so to speak. It's in that spirit that I don't feel the need to
polish things up. Or, more prohibitively, wait the 50 years until I've
got everything polished up.
Sean
On Oct 10, 2009, at 3:58 PM, David Tayler wrote:
Dan's computer room, Valery's kitchen table, Rob's amazing Visee
from the original score, Sean's dark closeups, and the others, this
is the golden age for me.
dt
I didn't. No reverbs or sound enhancements or edits. It took a good
many (ok, a bad many ;^) takes to get a reasonable piece together.
Unfortunately the ones in the rep I like are often 3-6 minutes in
length. By the end of the session I couldn't believe my exhaustion.
And plenty of wincing later on the elimination rounds.
Still, I see it as a fantastic tool if only for personal education
purposes as well as feedback from a peer group I can generally trust.
Between Valery's kitchen table, Dan's computer room and my garage I'm
not sure where a Golden Age fits into this. If we're being upstaged
by
professional/digital enhancements so be it. 'Twas ever thus.
Sean
ps here's a short entry of my own in the "72 club".
http://vimeo.com/3951942
On Oct 10, 2009, at 12:47 PM, David van Ooijen wrote:
On Sat, Oct 10, 2009 at 9:37 PM, David Tayler
<[email protected]> wrote:
The Golden Age of live video performance is now officially over, as
more and more videos are now edited for presentation.
I think from the start people tweaked the audio-bit. What you see is
not what you hear.
David
--
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David van Ooijen
[email protected]
www.davidvanooijen.nl
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