[PD] CVs

2011-05-07 Thread Josh Moore
I just got out of a long and heated argument with someone who claimed
he was an EE and told me that digital synthesizers use CVs. I tried to
explain to him that if they did, it would be ONLY a numerical
conversion so he was wrong and he still insisted that digital
synthesizers used CVs. Has anyone had this kind of experience?

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[PD] Am I alone?

2011-01-29 Thread Josh Moore
Well in my opinion most electroacoustic shit is all surrealist/dadaist crap.

The people involved try too hard to be the electronic version of John
Cage, it's quite annoying.
In fact, I'm so against it that I'm going to come up with a parody
album with actual good dance music
that uses elements of the academic code geek norm with real electronic
music that have titles like
computer scientists make for very bad musicians and chainsaw in a
cave, recorded 6 feet down

In all seriousness though, i like the science.

However, I believe that just because it's accepted academically
doesn't mean that it will
put you ahead of everyone else nor do I like/take part in the elitism
that follows which is ten
times worse.

I read the CCRMA and IRCAM articles/publications, use Max, Csound,
ChucK, and all of that jazz.
I even read the Pd/Max/Csound/Chuck mailing lists too but I choose to
make actual music with those tools.
I use Renoise for sequencing because it can send open sound control
data to the extra stuff, then I multitrack it
in whatever DAW I feel like using that day whether it's Pro Tools,
Live, Logic, DP, or whatever really.
Most of what I make is just normal synthesis stuff, like what you
would get out of a synth/workstation anyways
but I like the fact that I made what I'm using, or heavily modified it
if it was sampled.

An off subjerct example but relative is the guys with modular
synthesizers. You can go to youtube and
see videos with these guys with big huge multithousand dollar Buchla
synthesizers and they make this
repetitive crap that sounds like it came from lost in space. Then,
they just keep turning knobs
and it's the same thing for five minutes. It's like, wtf is that trash
nobody is going to listen to that...

The technical ability to program synths is great, and I love people
who take the time to be
scientific about their sound but to me the whole entire point of music
is about being technical
with a control present. You can look at all of the great classical
composers, marching band composers,
composers/musicians on labels and find the same thing. If I was to go
to school to study music and
electronics, and figured out that I can get a plastic drum, destroy an
alarm clock to make a contact microphone,
and do some basic signal processing I can do much the same thing then
I would be asking serious questions.

I guess for someone who's learning, that stuff is fine but these big
institutions who teach music already
require one to take proper music courses in primary school yet we find
5 minute 20 hz drones everywhere
with some white noise. Are the teachers assigning this stuff? Are they
mad? I grew up in a super small
area in Washington state and I've never been to college so I wouldn't
know but what comes out of this
circle is baffling.

Perhaps it was just the way I was musically brought up, I don't know.
I had a crazy band teacher in
primary school who would flunk you if you didn't show up to any of the
performances, and dock your
grade if you didn't practice so many hours a week that had to be
logged and signed by a parent. Plus,
you had all the standard music theory stuff, tests on melodic,
chromatic, harmonic scales, sometimes the
odd ones too, inversions, chords, and so forth. My mom would listen to
Van Halen, Stevie Ray
Vaughn and Bluegrass music which in my opinion is very technical. I
was into house and dance when
I was in my preteens to late teens and my mother used to always say
that stuff isn't music
because it repeats too much. Eventually I saw her wisdom and started
listening to lots of Prog Rock
and Aphex Twin, Radiohead, Industrial Metal, and stuff like that and
it totally changed my view.

I think it's all too easy to get caught up in the technology behind
production, and leave the good stuff out.
Most of the stuff, including my own that's made with computers just
doesn't have that same feel even
after I spent 8 hours programming complex drum patterns note by note
in a numeric based step sequencer.

However, in my case my own musical control would be the simple math
that makes up harmony and melody.
Some however can defy this and still make good music, like Sonic Youth
for instance or other people who have
experimental music actually published on a reputable experimental
label. There's still structure there, what
is up with this other post-modernist stuff?

Shouldn't artistic enrichment be the goal? Did I miss the boat?

To me, music is controlled noise. You can make a math equation based
on chaos theory and apply it
to a sequence, but then it becomes noise. You can destroy all sense of
scale and timing, but then it
becomes noise.

I mean, i can sit there on a synth patch and make noise for 8 hours or
I could just go write a song.

Personally, I'll choose to write the song.

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Re: [PD] Am I alone?

2011-01-29 Thread Josh Moore
To all involved in this discussion, the last few responses were great. :)

It was a bit harsh to some, and I figured as much but it's also a very
real question.
Beatthefinalboss and a couple others hit the nail on the head, and
that's partially what I meant in my long rant.

From the things I've read and seen I understood that eventually the
techniques pioneered
by Max/Miller/Vercoe/etc have always found their way into popular
music. The comment
about braindance as well was also noted, and I enjoy that music.

It was originally Brian Transeau that got me interested about Csound
and what it was
early on. I didn't like it then and needed a few more years of sound
design experience, but it's wonderful now with csound~ as an external
in maxforlive and all of the tools Csound has now.

I just think in many ways there is too much emphasis on experimenting.
A better way
to say this is I tend to like Debussy more than I like Schoenberg,
Stockhausen, or Cage.
There are simply lots of aspects of 20th century contemporary academic
music that are just
strange to me. I also agree with the statement on Kraftwerk. They took
what was there and made it marketable.

Same goes for bands like Skinny Puppy and Nine Inch Nails in contrast
to stuff like Throbbing Gristle and Einsturzende Neubaten. (though
they've toned down lately)

If you go on youtube and search up The Beatles and Yoko Ono you may
find this video
where Yoko Ono is telling the beatles to play randomly on their
instruments to create noise
music while she shrieks and makes weird noises. The Beatles are
capable of making
excellent music, but this was really bad.

It was more a philosophical question/rant than anything really.
Experimental music
in the sense of drones and so on is quite new in the scene, not
historically though
since many other tribal cultures had it too and perhaps that's
partially where it comes from.

On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 7:07 PM, Mario mare...@gmail.com wrote:
 Problem is that nowadays each composition student does an exercise and call
 it a piece... but that is a social problem not of the techniques.
 Greetings Ricardo  :)


 2011/1/29 Ricardo Lameiro ricardolame...@gmail.com

 I am a newbie in electronic music (not dance music by the way, electronic
 in the broad sense) but i am also a classic musician, teacher, I also
 played in traditional music groups etc... background aside here goes the
 idea.

 A long time ago, in the renaissance and before, a third and a sixth were
 considered a dissonant interval. Consonants where only the forth, fifth and
 octave... this could be caused by a lot of different aspects, one of them
 was the Temperament of the scale that was quit different from the 12 equal
 semitones used later. Also the music was made primarily to be sang and
 played in church and monasteries were the reverberation was big. After that
 came the keyboard instruments and the difficulty of tuning of the same
 instruments on different key signatures, this lead to a standard of twelve
 equal semitones that allow interchangeability of keys. Some years later
 came the continuous modulation, after that the dodecaphonic series and after
 that integral serialism and electronic instruments etc etc etc.
 Each of this changes were highly disregarded by the broad public being
 used later on for more commercial music.

 What i want to say is that, you may not like some type of music,I dont
 like techno, even the pseudo good techno, on a bar, or at my music player,
 however it has its space on a disco. Each music has its time, its
 progression. Time its the best filter, maybe 90 % of the music created
 nowadays will not be heard in 200 years, but when the music touches senses
 it will endure. there where hundreds of baroque and classical composers at
 their time, however you only know a handful of them sometimes we as a
 society need time to assimilate change. Maybe a chainsaw is more musical
 than a violin, it all depends how the music is made, how the musical
 discourse and flow goes. apart of the music, there will be always place for
 etudes. Problem is that nowadays each composition student does an exercise
 and call it a piece... but that is a social problem not of the techniques.

 sorry for the rant
 bye

 2011/1/30 beatthefinalb...@gmail.com

  I even read the Pd/Max/Csound/Chuck mailing lists too but I choose to
  make actual music with those tools.

 How do you define Actual Music? Some of us happen to define
 chainsaw in cave 6 feet down as music ;)

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 Bassoon / Contra-bassoon
 http://myspace.com/ricardolameiro

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Re: [PD] Am I alone?

2011-01-29 Thread Josh Moore
Actually, that comment was meant towards Ricardo not Beatthefinalboss,
it's weird reading a mailinglist in gmail. Sorry for the confusion!

On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 7:34 PM, Josh Moore kh405.7h3...@gmail.com wrote:
 To all involved in this discussion, the last few responses were great. :)

 It was a bit harsh to some, and I figured as much but it's also a very
 real question.
 Beatthefinalboss and a couple others hit the nail on the head, and
 that's partially what I meant in my long rant.

 From the things I've read and seen I understood that eventually the
 techniques pioneered
 by Max/Miller/Vercoe/etc have always found their way into popular
 music. The comment
 about braindance as well was also noted, and I enjoy that music.

 It was originally Brian Transeau that got me interested about Csound
 and what it was
 early on. I didn't like it then and needed a few more years of sound
 design experience, but it's wonderful now with csound~ as an external
 in maxforlive and all of the tools Csound has now.

 I just think in many ways there is too much emphasis on experimenting.
 A better way
 to say this is I tend to like Debussy more than I like Schoenberg,
 Stockhausen, or Cage.
 There are simply lots of aspects of 20th century contemporary academic
 music that are just
 strange to me. I also agree with the statement on Kraftwerk. They took
 what was there and made it marketable.

 Same goes for bands like Skinny Puppy and Nine Inch Nails in contrast
 to stuff like Throbbing Gristle and Einsturzende Neubaten. (though
 they've toned down lately)

 If you go on youtube and search up The Beatles and Yoko Ono you may
 find this video
 where Yoko Ono is telling the beatles to play randomly on their
 instruments to create noise
 music while she shrieks and makes weird noises. The Beatles are
 capable of making
 excellent music, but this was really bad.

 It was more a philosophical question/rant than anything really.
 Experimental music
 in the sense of drones and so on is quite new in the scene, not
 historically though
 since many other tribal cultures had it too and perhaps that's
 partially where it comes from.

 On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 7:07 PM, Mario mare...@gmail.com wrote:
 Problem is that nowadays each composition student does an exercise and call
 it a piece... but that is a social problem not of the techniques.
 Greetings Ricardo  :)


 2011/1/29 Ricardo Lameiro ricardolame...@gmail.com

 I am a newbie in electronic music (not dance music by the way, electronic
 in the broad sense) but i am also a classic musician, teacher, I also
 played in traditional music groups etc... background aside here goes the
 idea.

 A long time ago, in the renaissance and before, a third and a sixth were
 considered a dissonant interval. Consonants where only the forth, fifth and
 octave... this could be caused by a lot of different aspects, one of them
 was the Temperament of the scale that was quit different from the 12 equal
 semitones used later. Also the music was made primarily to be sang and
 played in church and monasteries were the reverberation was big. After that
 came the keyboard instruments and the difficulty of tuning of the same
 instruments on different key signatures, this lead to a standard of twelve
 equal semitones that allow interchangeability of keys. Some years later
 came the continuous modulation, after that the dodecaphonic series and after
 that integral serialism and electronic instruments etc etc etc.
 Each of this changes were highly disregarded by the broad public being
 used later on for more commercial music.

 What i want to say is that, you may not like some type of music,I dont
 like techno, even the pseudo good techno, on a bar, or at my music player,
 however it has its space on a disco. Each music has its time, its
 progression. Time its the best filter, maybe 90 % of the music created
 nowadays will not be heard in 200 years, but when the music touches senses
 it will endure. there where hundreds of baroque and classical composers at
 their time, however you only know a handful of them sometimes we as a
 society need time to assimilate change. Maybe a chainsaw is more musical
 than a violin, it all depends how the music is made, how the musical
 discourse and flow goes. apart of the music, there will be always place for
 etudes. Problem is that nowadays each composition student does an exercise
 and call it a piece... but that is a social problem not of the techniques.

 sorry for the rant
 bye

 2011/1/30 beatthefinalb...@gmail.com

  I even read the Pd/Max/Csound/Chuck mailing lists too but I choose to
  make actual music with those tools.

 How do you define Actual Music? Some of us happen to define
 chainsaw in cave 6 feet down as music ;)

 ___
 Pd-list@iem.at mailing list
 UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -
 http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list



 --
 Fagote / Contrafagote
 Bassoon / Contra-bassoon
 http://myspace.com

[PD] Hello!

2010-02-18 Thread Josh Moore
I have been working with PD for a couple weeks now, so I guess this is
my way of saying 'hi' to the community.

I've managed to make heaps of FM stuff, and I'm getting into learning
all the wavetable type objects and how they work. I've probably have
gone through half of the tutorials. It seems to be working well with
me, as I have been programming my own synth patches for years
including some modular synthesizers. As an audio engineer/enthusiast
with a six year time (semi-long for being 21) composing in many DAWs
and trackers I also have had concrete knowledge of the physics of
digital audio prior to starting.

It's great fun, more stable than Reaktor which I think is yuck to
begin with, and I'm mostly learning for the lack of good live granular
synthesis on the mac.

Josh

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Re: [PD] Hello!

2010-02-18 Thread Josh Moore
Oh yeah, I remember hearing about audiomulch when I was reading some
interview on Reznor ages ago, and then tried it out and it was cool,
but Jeskola Buzz did everything at the time, (and still does and to
this day still a favorite toy since I cut my teeth on that and
FT/Modplug/IT/etc)

On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 9:27 AM, Derek Holzer de...@umatic.nl wrote:
 Hi Josh,

 welcome on board! I also went from Reaktor (and Audio Mulch) to Pd, but that
 was many years ago in the dark ages when I used woolly mammoths on a
 treadmill to power my laptop, and cavebear bones as a physical interface.

 If you're into granular stuff, have a look at my Particlechamber
 abstraction:

 http://macumbista.net/?page_id=514

 Due for an update after 7 long years sometime this spring or summer ;-)

 Best,
 Derek

 Josh Moore wrote:

 It's great fun, more stable than Reaktor which I think is yuck to
 begin with, and I'm mostly learning for the lack of good live granular
 synthesis on the mac.

 --
 ::: derek holzer ::: http://macumbista.net :::
 ---Oblique Strategy # 16:
 Assemble some of the elements in a group and treat the group




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Re: [PD] Hello!

2010-02-18 Thread Josh Moore
Thanks! I checked it out a couple of days ago and it's pretty cool!
The weird polysynth you had was an interesting design as well.  I'm
currently playing around with the tables, seeing what all they are
capable of in a half scientifical/half trial and error fashion... I
think it is the coolest thing about modular environments, since it
makes for less of a headache prototyping some sort of design method.
For all of the power Csound has, (which has opcodes for everything and
seems to take nothing less than a printout dictionary to even be
usable beyond sine waves) it is something that don't do well even
though it does everything else.




On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 9:39 AM, Phil Stone pkst...@ucdavis.edu wrote:
 Welcome, Josh.

 I'll also put in a plug here for my synthesizer based on Jamie Bullock's
 granular synthesis engine:

 http://www.pkstonemusic.com/polygrainsynth.html


 Phil



 Derek Holzer wrote:

 Hi Josh,

 welcome on board! I also went from Reaktor (and Audio Mulch) to Pd, but
 that was many years ago in the dark ages when I used woolly mammoths on a
 treadmill to power my laptop, and cavebear bones as a physical interface.

 If you're into granular stuff, have a look at my Particlechamber
 abstraction:

 http://macumbista.net/?page_id=514

 Due for an update after 7 long years sometime this spring or summer ;-)

 Best,
 Derek

 Josh Moore wrote:

 It's great fun, more stable than Reaktor which I think is yuck to
 begin with, and I'm mostly learning for the lack of good live granular
 synthesis on the mac.




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