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Techno Counterpoint


guidewire

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a ha! it is you, guidewire, here as well! i didn't realize i was talking to the same person across both threads.

 

And yeah, I agree I'd love to see more of this kind of stuff. We all appreciate AFX production work, but I've always thought his composition was great as well. I don't have the tools to describe why it's great though, so this sort of stuff is very helpful when proselytizing.

 

I also think the main point here, that AFX loves counterpoint is an interesting one because it sort of gives him an appeal-ceiling. I think there a lot of folks who simply don't like music without a strong main (pop) melody.

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Personally, i find the need to write down techno musics into academic context depressing. On why it's depressing there is an old Stockhausen story on african patterns and sugar melodies. This specific paper is decent, but i recall that guy Adam Harper who did scores for the so called post-dubstep tracks and compared them to microtonality of Ligeti and the likes in terms of complexity, which was just laughable, like fucking Zomby steals synth demo sample and suddenly he's continuing Ligeti legacy.

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great read..but I am experiencing problems with the example samples...they won't load properly ...its like while the site loads they flash up for a sec and then when the site is loaded a blank space (not even clickable) takes its place

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yeah...and that's exactly why it's funny. it sort of contradicts the validity of the entire paper. while analyses like this tend to be done on pieces which develop over time:

 

 

 

while Bach and Perotin employ melodies that change over time. Both Bach and Perotin were working on paper and conceiving music for voice where the musical lines are designed to support an evolving text.

 

and the conclusion of the paper is

 

 

 

Aphex Twin creates highly sophisticated musical results through the agency of tracking.

 

it is sort of a wtf!?

 

sure, loops can be highly sophisticated. But when i think of highly sophisticated loops, i tend to think about those bach goldberg variations. not those post-african rhythms of mr james.

 

sorry to be a dick and all.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Personally, i find the need to write down techno musics into academic context depressing. On why it's depressing there is an old Stockhausen story on african patterns and sugar melodies. This specific paper is decent, but i recall that guy Adam Harper who did scores for the so called post-dubstep tracks and compared them to microtonality of Ligeti and the likes in terms of complexity, which was just laughable, like fucking Zomby steals synth demo sample and suddenly he's continuing Ligeti legacy.

 

For me, it's about enriching something I already like. When it's the other way around, it's torture.

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Personally, i find the need to write down techno musics into academic context depressing. On why it's depressing there is an old Stockhausen story on african patterns and sugar melodies. This specific paper is decent, but i recall that guy Adam Harper who did scores for the so called post-dubstep tracks and compared them to microtonality of Ligeti and the likes in terms of complexity, which was just laughable, like fucking Zomby steals synth demo sample and suddenly he's continuing Ligeti legacy.

 

For me, it's about enriching something I already like. When it's the other way around, it's torture.

 

 

So it's always enriching and never impoverishing? I'd say it's the second in most cases, just because contexts don't give proper tools for digesting each other. Would it be normal to analyze punk music in the same way? These types of music were created in protest against academic language of music. There is nothing of additional value.

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  • 3 weeks later...
  • 1 year later...

i was always wondering why only few people analyze electronic music like this. after reading that paper for a bit i started to understand. after all "talking about music is like dancing about architecture"

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