[ddots-l] Re: rekindling the passion for music composition

  • From: "Gordon Kent" <dbmusic@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2010 16:57:50 -0400

Heloo:
When I had he syjhclavier which was the first real digital workstation, I could 
create sounds almost instantly.  It was ver tactically friendly even though it 
did only have one knob for changing values, but a whole bunch of buttons to 
select the parameter and of course you heard the changes in real time.  It used 
a combination of FM and what they called frame synthesis which allowed you to 
change harmonic content over time, cross fading from one scene to another.  I 
really miss it.  On top of that the sequencer was very straight forward also 
using the button pannel to make punches, rewind/fast forward, etc.  You could 
boujnce sounds vrom one track to another, and it did have midi implementation, 
though it wasn't very complete at the time.  Still, I feel like I did some of 
my best composing work with that setup.  Sculpting sounds with synths like z3 
or rapture is very time consuming and counterproductive in my oppinion.
Gord
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Steve Wicketts 
  To: ddtots 
  Sent: Sunday, July 11, 2010 5:03 AM
  Subject: [ddots-l] Re: rekindling the passion for music composition


  Hi Scott,

  Everyone has that wow factor when having their first synth or Work Station, 
the sounds sound amazing to you and you own it. In a few Weeks you know exactly 
where every single patch sound is located and which one's you love.
  Everything is quick and this links to being inspired.

  Using Sonar, is a much slower working  environment, , we have issues with a 
lot of the great sounds not being accessible and there's a lot to learn, 
however, once you climb the learning mountain.
  The view is one of production levels that you never thought possible, 
understanding of making a tiny softsynth sound so big it blows your speakers 
off the wall.
  Having effects where you can tweak or even completely change the presets, 
Routing sound so you can isolate the whole Horn section with just one key 
stroke.

  I too felt disillusioned when first looking at Sonar, I'd spend a Week on a 
project and when comparing my Sonar project with the same Motif project the 
Motif would sound much richer and overall just better. 

  It took awhile and loads of patients before the Motif was finally made to 
look like an old little mouse frightened in the corner of my studio. 

  I don't believe your Passion has gone, it's just frustration throwing a 
blanket over it.

  If you'd like, I could sent you an MP3 of some music I did on the Motif and 
the revamped version on Sonar.
  Just let me know what style of music you like and I'll send examples in that 
style. 

  It's music from other artiste that inspires me, for example,  Prince's new 
album "2010" was released in Europe and the UK yesterday, after hearing this 
album, my inspiration has been set to mega boost.
  His best album in 20 years and I've got them all.

    Steve W 

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Scott Lawlor 
    To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Sunday, July 11, 2010 3:47 AM
    Subject: [ddots-l] rekindling the passion for music composition


    Hello.

    I'm feeling lately that the passion and love for music composition that I 
used to have is fading.

    When I got my kurzweil pc3, and would play it, I didn't feel the same 
excitement and creative spark that I felt long ago when I had my first keyboard.

    I'm not sure if it's a case where maybe I've changed over all this time 
without an outlet for musical creativity because I've been without a board for 
so long but I'm wondering, for those of you who have been in music for a while, 
how do you ignite the passion if you feel it slipping away?

    Someone suggested to me that maybe I'm just ready to go in a new direction 
musically.  Reworking old material is predictable and boring, even on a new 
board and as much as I'd like to get into ambient and space music, I find that 
when I try to write that sort of thing, I find myself wondering where to go 
with an idea, how long to stretch it out, etc.  I enjoy the long-form 
characteristics of a lot of ambient music. Perhaps I'm getting in my own way as 
I've heard that some artists have that problem.

    If we get this new house that we're hoping to buy, I'll have a dedicated 
space for my pc and whatever keyboard I decide to buy and maybe that will help, 
having my own personal creative space.  Right now, everything's in the study 
which is a common area for all of us.

    Thanks for letting me ramble out some thoughts and for giving me any ideas 
or feedback you might have regarding what I've written.

    Scott



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