kent williams wrote:
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 8:17 AM, Kevin Kennedy wrote:
At the end of
the day (or night), does it really matter? If it moves you then it
moves you. If not, what is the point?
I think that the distinction between 'Live' and 'Not Live' is blurred
at this point to where it
Actually most the big rock bands do pre-programmed sets during their 'live'.
The order of the tracks, their lengths etc. Its everything but
spontaneaous. The good proof for that is that all the lights and visuals
are pre-programmed (just go next to the light jockey in a rock live, he
has next t
kent williams wrote:
Good ol MMT8s. When Shawn Rudiman played here, one of the things we
did in my studio is record the tape dump from his MMT8 to the computer
and burn it to an audio CD, so that when his crashed he could reload
it. He had the pattern memory so full that the OS would crash if h
> For both guys, they're making dozens of decisions every minute about
> how to shape their music, and their goal is to engage their audience.
>
> What makes their performances 'live' isn't how much of the music
> they're playing in real time, it's how they make the music interactive
> with the au
Good ol MMT8s. When Shawn Rudiman played here, one of the things we
did in my studio is record the tape dump from his MMT8 to the computer
and burn it to an audio CD, so that when his crashed he could reload
it. He had the pattern memory so full that the OS would crash if he
made the wrong move.
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 8:17 AM, Kevin Kennedy wrote:
> At the end of
> the day (or night), does it really matter? If it moves you then it
> moves you. If not, what is the point?
>
I think that the distinction between 'Live' and 'Not Live' is blurred
at this point to where it's meaningless. I
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 4:43 AM, Williams, Graham wrote:
> The way I see it is, when you just use Abelton and a midi controller,
> it's not really live. It's just pressing play and tweaking a few knobs.
That's overly arbitrary and quite unfair. There are many ways to use Ableton.
As far as I kno
> Never mind. Next!
>
> g
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Martin Dust [mailto:mar...@dustscience.com]
> Sent: 17 April 2009 11:21
> To: Williams, Graham
> Cc: Three-One-Three
> Subject: Re: (313) What does "Live" mean these days?
>
>
> On 1
Never mind. Next!
g
-Original Message-
From: Martin Dust [mailto:mar...@dustscience.com]
Sent: 17 April 2009 11:21
To: Williams, Graham
Cc: Three-One-Three
Subject: Re: (313) What does "Live" mean these days?
On 17 Apr 2009, at 11:18, Williams, Graham wrote:
> No it
On 17 Apr 2009, at 11:18, Williams, Graham wrote:
No it's not the same point from the 70's, you said " like the hippy
students union in the 70's with their keep music live campaign"
I never said anything about keeping it live.
But you are saying it's not live, right?
m
l 2009 10:56
To: Williams, Graham
Cc: Three-One-Three
Subject: Re: (313) What does "Live" mean these days?
On 17 Apr 2009, at 10:48, Williams, Graham wrote:
> I think you're missing the point Martin, it was about what is and
> isn't
> live, not about keeping it a
On 17 Apr 2009, at 10:48, Williams, Graham wrote:
I think you're missing the point Martin, it was about what is and
isn't
live, not about keeping it alive...
g
It's the same point from the 70s, their point is/was it wasn't live,
which is your point I believe?
m
I think you're missing the point Martin, it was about what is and isn't
live, not about keeping it alive...
g
-Original Message-
From: Martin Dust [mailto:mar...@dustscience.com]
Sent: 17 April 2009 09:47
To: Three-One-Three
Subject: Re: (313) What does "Live" mean t
Haha 313 techno list sounding like the hippy students union in the
70's with their keep music live campaign *.*/f
m
The way I see it is, when you just use Abelton and a midi controller,
it's not really live. It's just pressing play and tweaking a few knobs.
g
-Original Message-
From: Arturo Lopez [mailto:arturo.m.lo...@gmail.com]
Sent: 16 April 2009 18:08
To: Three-One-Three
Subject: (313) What does "
http://www.urbandictionary.com/ defines "live" as:
"Jumping, full of people, exciting. Something was very enjoyable."
For example, Kevin Reynolds' set last night was live. You could also say
it was "all the way live."
m50
At 2009.04.16 12:08, Arturo Lopez wrote:
This is not a snarky ques
On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 13:08, Arturo Lopez wrote:
> I'm not nearly as old school as most of you but I do remember when
> live meant you had a rack of gear in front of you and you were piecing
> together/reshaping music on the fly.
This is nostalgia. There are plenty of 'live' acts that had DATs
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