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lewisflude | 1 year ago
However, I do think there is a case to be made for falling into the trap of being more interested in the gear than the thing you're meant to do with the gear.
At the very least, Teenage Engineering hardware is generally very well designed, high quality and built to last. At least this product has some creative spirit behind it. I'm in love with the merge of Medieval and Modern Electronic here!
For an example of excessive consumerism, look no further than the Eurorack[1] space. They don't call it Eurocrack for nothing!
pgt|1 year ago
donaldihunter|1 year ago
https://entertainment.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2663265&c...
IAmGraydon|1 year ago
bmitc|1 year ago
yungporko|1 year ago
that is literally the intention behind all modern music hardware (eurorack especially) i think. i've been a producer for nearly 20 years and i've still never seen anybody make genuinely good music with any of these things. not even once.
these 30-40 year old "enthusiast" types getting 17 views on their 28 minute "generative ambient jam #236" videos are basically an unlimited cash cow.
pbronez|1 year ago
When I want productive music making, with the intention of publishing, a computer with a DAW is the obvious tool for the job. No question. Hands down.
Still, there are absolutely people who publish fun tracks and perform live with this stuff:
https://youtube.com/@teftymeems
https://youtube.com/@espenkraft
https://youtube.com/@hainbach
https://youtube.com/@elisetrouw
https://youtube.com/@truecuckoo
https://youtube.com/@bobeats
And that’s just the indie fringe. Chvrches uses hardware synths. The Stranger Things soundtrack includes a critical sequence programmed on a modular sequencer for microtonal control. The Weekend’s Dawn FM video album features a Moog One prominently. Taylor Swift performed with a special edition Prophet 12. Etc etc
geethree|1 year ago
Ciani has been a pioneer in this space since the 70’e https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzanne_Ciani
Check out the boiler room set of https://caterinabarbieri.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W25FTlO42VY
Vogelsinger has pieces all over YouTube. https://helenevogelsinger.bandcamp.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYxheEGl2oM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W25FTlO42VY
Some others that come to mind: https://polypores.bandcamp.com/
https://bluetech.bandcamp.com/music
Evan B’s label for this music only https://www.behindtheskymusic.com/
Wurdan|1 year ago
Retr0id|1 year ago
JansjoFromIkea|1 year ago
Pocket Operators are a great fidget toy but the collecting nature of them all is a bit annoying (saying that as someone who bought a bunch of them and only ever really enjoyed 3 of them: 14, 32 and 33). Useless as music outside of maybe an drum beat to improv over from what I can see though?
Have very little issue with them myself though. Even absurd projects like the Choir are kinda neat to me; toys for rich people to burn money on which may result in other people stealing the good bits and making something better and more accessible.
Think whatever this is is a big misstep after the EP-133 done a good job addressing a bunch of their past issues as a business (albeit with a lot of room to improve)
code_biologist|1 year ago
Of course he's brilliantly talented and became Dorian Concept, to your point.
BoredPositron|1 year ago
Almondsetat|1 year ago
It's no coincidence that we invented the "enthusiast" or "prosumer" categories precisely to separate certain products from professionals
dartos|1 year ago
I think dipplo (a big edm artist) used the OP-1 in his live sets for a while.
audunw|1 year ago
So? Why does that matter?
I have a decent second hand Nord Piano 3 .. I certainly can't make good music on it, but I have fun playing it. Sure, with that kind of instrument I'm sure there's plenty of people making great music on it, but does that matter to me? Not really
I'm willing to bet the overwhelming majority of instruments sold are never used to make genuinely good music. People buy them to challenge themselves, to have fun, to learn new things.
Some instruments are more aimed at that kind of usage rather than actually making good music, and I think it's fair to say that Teenage Engineering stuff falls in that category.
I bought a couple of pocket operators at some point. I found it very fun and challenging to work within the constraints of those devices. I would never use any professional music making software because it's just too overwhelming. But with the Pocket Operator I feel motivated to try making some simple jams and have fun with it. It's never going to become anything serious and that's OK.
tayistay|1 year ago
maccard|1 year ago
Have you ever met a guitarist[0], or a golfer? I play guitar, and as a teenager I spent _years_ playing a cheap encore guitar plugged into a no-name 15w amp imaginable with a zoom 505 [1]. I practiced for hours upon and hours and sounded awful. Now as an adult, I get to spend some money on the hobby and sound like what I thought I sounded like aged 15!
[0] - https://www.guitarworld.com/features/gear-acquisition-syndro... [1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGKrBrCw-aQ (not me, but representative)
ChrisMarshallNY|1 year ago
I no longer play, but did get get pretty good. In that case, the tool made the difference (and a buttload of daily practice. I felt I needed to earn the right to play that thing).
But I think everyone knows some rich bastard, that has a handmade bespoke axe, and is absolutely terrible.
[0] https://cmarshall.com/MulletMan.jpg (I still have that guitar, and the neck is still true.)
lewisflude|1 year ago
Also, I love the sound of a good crunchy 15w practise amp. I think one day those old zoom pedals and the Line 6 bean will be highly coveted!
camillomiller|1 year ago
brtkdotse|1 year ago
Is that such a bad thing? It’s supposed to be a hobby, if geeking out on gear relaxes you you shouldn’t have to feel bad for not being productive with it.
fellerts|1 year ago
lewisflude|1 year ago
wintermutestwin|1 year ago
The fact that there are tons of consumers like me makes this gear more affordable for everyone, including low level artists.
kashyapc|1 year ago
I was amazed and aghast at the amount of expensive "outboard" gear and other vintage hardware such as "compressors", "filter banks", "levelling amplifiers", Korg PS-3100, a vintage analog synthesizer which costs more than 20,000 (!) euros,tape recorders, etc.
Many of these things I didn't even know existed. But I'm just a newbie to learning music.
It's a privileged position to be in, to just acquire whatever vintage hardware, instead of resorting to emulated software to create the sounds.
At least, he (and others like Nils Frahm) can justify it, as a highly successful professional musicians. But many hobbyist musicians seem to fall into the trap of, "if only I get that Roland Juno-60, I'll make more awesome music".
[1] https://youtube.com/watch?v=2jTHNuvuQC0
criddell|1 year ago
But you might! A new instrument can inspire you and make you want to play more music and that can lead to improvement.
All things considered, the Medieval isn't all that expensive. All you are really risking is approx. $100 if buying new (because you can resell on eBay) and practically nothing if you buy it used.
isoprophlex|1 year ago
How the hell do you replicate your sounds between performances, recordings, etc.
This must be the musical equivalent of people sending eachother zip files with source code instead of using git, lol.
EDIT: don't get me wrong, not dissing the approach! It looks glorious and I wish I could play with one once..!
sixeyes|1 year ago
Or, some do improvised live patching, in which the goal is NOT to replicate sounds.
throwaway030|1 year ago
maccard|1 year ago
ygra|1 year ago
Seems complicated, indeed.
lewisflude|1 year ago
Still, most of the time you find something incredible and it's gone as quickly as it appeared!
arnorhs|1 year ago
thih9|1 year ago
You can sample certain sounds and perform with that instead.
You can patch it once and never touch again.
You can learn how to patch it exactly the same, even with 100s of cables.
You can keep parts of the patch the same. Some modules can help, saving their internal state or communicating with other modules on their own.
Etc.
TheFragenTaken|1 year ago
AstroJetson|1 year ago
0mp|1 year ago
tetha|1 year ago
But the realist and the person in my who doesn't like spending money both agree: If $350 - $500 are on the table, I'm probably better off with a good keyboard with MIDI support, since it's a more open-ended and flexible tool. And my DAW can do a lot of the looping, looped recording, effects and such.
But enough negativity, this thing still looks really, really cool.
lynx23|1 year ago
Besides, Eurorack is even more dangerous when it comes to GAS.
unknown|1 year ago
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