Multiple spaces in recordings
geoff wrote:
On 13/04/2019 7:17 AM, nickbatz wrote:
On Friday, April 12, 2019 at 8:48:19 AM UTC-7, Scott Dorsey wrote:
Moreover, most people's ears have changed since sequencers came
along, or e=
ven before that with click tracks. Nobody ever noticed that "Gone"
(Miles/G=
il Evans Porgy and Bess) has a couple of clams and speeds up. Or
"Chameleon=
" (Herbie Hancock of course) speeding up like crazy.
Speeding up and slowing down is part of what can make music interesting,
just like dynamics in amplitude.Â* Not that it's always a good thing, but
when it's good it's good.
--scott
Absolutely.
I'm just saying that almost four decades of sequencers have changed
how we hear music. "Perfect" performances were never possible before -
no clams, perfect timing, intonation, dynamics...
And click-tracks. I loath rigid time, unless extreme and unintentional.
geoff
I like to intermingle rigid and not-rigid on my own stuff. It does
trainwreck at times.
I have parts in mixes where if you heard them soloed, you'd think I
can't play at all but mixed in, they just work.
Music is so strange.
--
Les Cargill
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