Evolution of Music
Categoria: Referat
Engleza
Descriere:
The same will apply to music in the future: a song you write may
involve so many contributions and meta-contributions that to claim
exclusive rights to it would be a joke. Like a language, music will be
a collage of ideas, notes, chords, and sounds from many many different
creative minds. The term "collage music" already exists to describe
such a phenomen, pioneered, in part, by the views of artists like
Negativeland and John Oswald and embraced by genres like Techno. Music
will be the communication that begins where conventional language ends... |
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1
The future: a world of
musicians
From a
creative perspective, where I see all this going is that music becomes
like
language. Just as no one owns the English language, no one will own
what music
will become. The reason no one can own the English language is because
of the
number of people that have contributed to it, molded it, and made it
grow and
adapt--it's either owned by everyone or no one at all. It's a
continuous and
complex dynamic system, evolving in a non-linear manner, and growing
from the
previous changes created by feedback loops. The same will apply to
music in the
future: a song you write may involve so many contributions and
meta-contributions that to claim exclusive rights to it would be a
joke. Like a
language, music will be a collage of ideas, notes, chords, and sounds
from many
many different creative minds. The term "collage music" already
exists to describe such a phenomen, pioneered, in part, by the views of
artists
like Negativeland and John Oswald and embraced by genres like Techno.
Music
will be the communication that begins where conventional language ends.
There is a
large proliferation of hard disk multitrack recorders in the music
scene today.
Consider a scenario where you can not only make your songs available
mixed down
in MP3 format, but also each of the tracks in MP3 format such that
software and
hardware-based MP3 players can handle data track by track. Imagine the
possibilities: Don't like a guitar solo in the middle of the track?
Edit it
out, or record your own solo! Want to change the drum kit in the drum
track?
Given the sound to MIDI converters,
this will
be doable in real-time, so you can assign drum patches to a real
drummer. Even
the smallest tweak in the mix may result in a new song for the person
listening
it.
Another
method by which I think creative cross-fertilisation will occur is by
coupling
appreciation of musicians (i.e., payment) with creativity. For example,
in one
of the FMAs (Free Music Archives or FMAs), if the artists get a
percentage of
advertising revenues based on song downloads, then rather than just
having the
option of receiving actual cash, they may also receive hard copies of
music by
other bands. This way, an incestuous relationship between the artists
will be
developed. Given a large population of musicians, which will grow if
the above
multitrack models are implemented, this will result in a
self-sustaining
complex system with unimaginable creative dynamic. We're all musicians
as well
as listeners. The potential for breeding creativity is even greater if
other
creative ventures such as software, visual art, and literary art are
coupled
with music.
In
conclusion, I don`t like how music will evolve. In a final, it will
self-destroy.
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