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Conference napalm::commusic_v1

Title:* * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * *
Notice:Conference has been write-locked. Use new version.
Moderator:DYPSS1::SCHAFER
Created:Thu Feb 20 1986
Last Modified:Mon Aug 29 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2852
Total number of notes:33157

1767.0. "Are samplers "cheating"?" by MIDEVL::YERAZUNIS (I don't smoke !! That was the flamethrower !!) Thu Nov 10 1988 23:03

    The purpose of this note is to stimulate discussion on the
    ever-pressing question of:
    
    	Is using a sampler "cheating" vis-a-vis the electronic music
    	"ethic"?
            
    
    --------
    
    Note that I'm conveniently avoiding defining the terms 'cheating',
    'sampler' and 'electronic music "ethic"'.
    
    
    Let the flaming begin!
                   
    	:-)
    
    	-Bill 
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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1767.1SAMPLERS?!? ... Ha!MIZZOU::SHERMANLove is a decision ...Fri Nov 11 1988 01:2321
    Shoot.  Not only that, but using a piano is CHEATING.  Yessir! 
    Look at all those wimps who can't play the harp.  You've got to
    FEEL those strings for the music to be valid.  Somehow, when you
    put all those mechanical pieces inbetween the musician and the
    instrument you lose all feeling and the sound becomes cold.  Besides,
    it took a long time for REAL musicians (harp players) to learn their
    craft.  It's kind of sleazy to have something make music by just
    pushing buttons.  Sure, a piano sounds nice, but it doesn't sound
    like a REAL harp ...
    
    Wait a minute.  It's those darned harps that are a CHEAT.  Yeah,
    that's what I *really* meant to say.  REAL musicians don't play
    harps.  They play catgut stretched out on bows of sticks.  Those
    harp players are taking the easy way out ...
    
    oh, yeah ...
    
    ;-}
    
    Steve
    
1767.2Diet Cheesecake?WEFXEM::COTEThe Ether BunnyFri Nov 11 1988 09:423
    "music" & "ethic"? In the same sentence?
    
    Edd
1767.3Yeah, right.TALK::HARRIMANHuge Harry? Whispering Wendy?Fri Nov 11 1988 11:3629
    
    Whom might we be cheating?
    
    This reminds me of someone I once had the pleasure of educating
    at a party in Cleveland a couple of years ago. She walked in, saw
    my Polysix and announced that "electronic machines are cold". Earlier
    in the evening I had spent time with two acoustic players (one playing
    a gut-string guitar, one playing a Japanese woodwind instrument)
    and made a roomful of people understand what the difference between
    "music" and "electronic noise" was. A spirited discussion followed,
    and I was obliged to play again. I'll say that I had a lot of people
    in the room stick up for me - I did a good job of educating.
    
    What I maintained throughout the night was that it's not the medium's
    fault that people make noise as opposed to music with it. They told
    Buchla, Subotnick and many others that machines were cold too. So
    are pipe organs, especially when E. Power Biggs plays them. But
    you can make music with just about anything - look at Airto Moriera
    who plays car radiators sometimes. 
    
    So a sampler is just another tool/instrument. I think a sound out
    of context is just that - a sound. You can copyright music, and
    you can copyright programs, but I see nothing ethically wrong with
    taking sounds out of this world and turning them into data for creating
    sound. Turning it back into music is another story altogether.
    
    'nuff said from here.
    
    /pjh
1767.4nahHPSRAD::NORCROSSFri Nov 11 1988 13:367
>     ever-pressing question of:
>     Is using a sampler "cheating" vis-a-vis the electronic music
>     "ethic"?

Ever-pressing?   It never crossed my mind.

/Mitch
1767.5What do you mean Bob?DREGS::BLICKSTEINYo!Fri Nov 11 1988 13:3817
    I have to think that you think it is or might be cheating in some
    way Bob only because *I* have no real idea what you think it is
    cheating?
    
    I agree with what I think Edd said, which is that "cheating" is not
    a term that has any defined meaning in music.
    
    Eddie Van Halen describes himself as a "cheat".  For example, he
    invented a technique to do a flamenco guitar-like finger roll 
    (a staccato picked not) without actually having to develope the
    finger roll (or whatever it's properly called) technique which
    could take years.
    
    I guess what you may think of as "cheating" I think of as a "short
    cut" which has less (or no) negative overtones.
    
    	db
1767.6NONORGE::CHADFri Nov 11 1988 13:534
  Samplers are not cheating. Samplers make noise, musicians make music.

CHad
1767.8Hmmm....interesting.MUSKIE::ALLENFri Nov 11 1988 14:1510
    re .7	Sorry about that.
    re .3	Right on!
    re .1	Write on, right on!!
    re .0	I know we're supposed to be talking about samplers,
    		but couldn't the same argument be made about sequencers?
    		It really is what you do with them that matters (or
    		doesn't).  They're just tools.
    
    Wright?
    Bill Allen
1767.9Can you hear what I'm thinking????ANT::JANZENTom LMO2/O23 296-5421Fri Nov 11 1988 14:543
    it's cheating to use instruments; we should just send out our
    music telepathically!
    Tom
1767.10It's a lot like graphics....DDIF::EIRIKURHallgrimsson, CDA Product ManagerFri Nov 11 1988 15:1640
    Time for my favorite recent analogy between electronic music and
    computer graphics....  I don't really think that sampled waveforms
    are cheating--tell me the difference between that and additive
    synthesis based on Fourier analysis.  The manual approach is just
    less accurate, not qualitatively different.
    
    Sampling today is a lot like digitally scanned images in the graphics
    field.  You get a more natural seeming result than using a synthetic
    approach, but it costs in a number of important ways.  Like scanned
    images, samples have no structure.  You can't pick up some aspect
    like a complex attack and move it to another sample any more than
    you can cut one tree out of an image of a forest and make other
    trees in other images look like it.  Much like images, samples
    require more memory and bandwidth in the processing hardware.
    Much like images, sophisticated DSP hardware and software will
    make things much more flexible.
    
    I'll become a lot more interested in samplers when I can get one to
    analyze a loop, and abstract from it a reasonable formula for the
    spectrum over time--so that I can edit/compress/extend the animation,
    add/subtract/multiply just this computed function with another sample,
    etc.  Imagine being able to apply note number as an input to this sort
    of resynthesis function and not have to do multi-sampling.  (Aside: I
    actually like multi-sampling, and the cracks between samples making
    adjacent notes sound different. I like quirks like that.) One thing
    that I used to use on my modular system was an envelope follower.  It
    would be a really useful, very simple thing to move envelopes between
    samples. etc. 
    
    Getting back to my graphics analogy....Today's samplers are essentially
    a slide show.  A synthesizer with a good performance interface (or
    an advanced sampler) is more like a light show.  And tired old hippies
    will go for the light show every time :-)
    
    	Eirikur
    
    
    
    
    
1767.11SALSA::MOELLERProton Spin Memory supportFri Nov 11 1988 15:2121
    Sampling per se is not cheating.  Sampling from someone ELSES' music
    may be cheating.  If you sample one note, that's not cheating, it's,
    uh, borrowing timbres.  If you sample an entire phrase and use it 
    intact, like these rappers and hip-hoppers do James Brown, now that's 
    cheating.
    
    I recently rented the video '2010'.. hi-fi stereo, some of the
    spaceship environments and outer space sound environments (yeah
    I know there's no sound in a vacuum) were hip, and I was VERY tempted 
    to tape some on a cassette and use later in some sort of sound 
    collage/composition... but I couldn't do it.. THAT would be cheating.
    
    So as others have said, a sampler is just a tool, a digital recorder
    with a short memory.  It's what is done with it, and where your
    personal ethic lines are drawn.  I personally don't have a problem
    'lifting' single notes; snare hits, sax notes.. 'sound bites'. 
    It's when the sample uses recognizable phrases from someone else's
    work that I have a problem with it.  Didn't the Beastie Boys use
    a measure or two of Zep's John Bonham thru an entire tune ?  Thumbs
    DOWN.
karl
1767.12SALSA::MOELLERProton Spin Memory supportFri Nov 11 1988 15:3122
    < Note 1767.10 by DDIF::EIRIKUR "Hallgrimsson, CDA Product Manager" >
>                       -< It's a lot like graphics.... >-

>You can't pick up some aspect
>like a complex attack and move it to another sample 
    
    SURE you can.. even without graphical help, I can graft one sample's
    attack portion on to the sustain/decay of another.  Classical barking
    piano.  Singing drums.  Musical technicians.
    
>    I'll become a lot more interested in samplers when I can get one to
>    analyze a loop, and abstract from it a reasonable formula for the
>    spectrum over time--so that I can edit/compress/extend the animation,
>    add/subtract/multiply just this computed function with another sample,
>    etc.  
    
    I think you should read up on the EMAX' 'SE' software architecture.
    It allows two or more samples to be resynthesised harmonically.
    There's a large writeup on this at home, if I remember I'll bring
    it in..

karl    
1767.13draw the lineSRFSUP::MORRISSend Lawyers, Guns and RosesFri Nov 11 1988 16:4328
re:.11
    
>            I personally don't have a problem
>    'lifting' single notes; snare hits, sax notes.. 'sound bites'. 


    Aw geez, this is probably the worst offense of all!  I mean, 
    James Brown can sue Yes, and other bands that have lifted identifiable
    chunks out of his music, but Stewart Copeland would have little
    legal recourse if ssomebody were to sample his "trademark" snare
    sound, and key it in during a song.  Same with something like a
    David Sanborn legato note.
    
    I have a bunch of songs that are in a weird key (well, not E, A,
    G or D  :^))  , so I'll sample my electric bass, so I won't have
    to use weird tunings or make really difficult fingerings.  This
    to me is the purpose of sampling.  Using smidgens of my voice to
    simulate a chorus or a simmons tome is okey doke.  
    
    But taking someone elses stuff ain't cool at all.  In my younger
    days, I admit that I got one of the orchestra hits off of a copy
    of the Chicago Symphony doing Beethoven's 5th.  This is (in my book)
    a definite no-no, now.  Oh well... (good thing nothing I used it
    on got airplay, huh? :^))
    
    Sampling isn't cheating.   Stealing is.

    Ashley
1767.14You're drawing the wrong line!CTHULU::YERAZUNISDo you know what's in the trunk?Fri Nov 11 1988 19:1136
1767.15take my $0.002LEDDEV::HASTINGSFri Nov 11 1988 19:144
    I agree with .7
    
    	;-} Mark
    
1767.16What him say?WEFXEM::COTEThe Ether BunnyFri Nov 11 1988 19:316
    My terminal won't display whatever it is you represented with those
    bass-ackward question marks, so I don't know what to think.
    
    ...but I'm probably against it.
    
    Edd
1767.17"BtEH" ethic explained hereSALSA::MOELLERProton Spin Memory supportFri Nov 11 1988 20:3339
1767.18I think there's a "value judgement" here.CTHULU::YERAZUNISDo you know what's in the trunk?Fri Nov 11 1988 21:0032
1767.19can't define boring across peopleDDIF::EIRIKURHallgrimsson, CDA Product ManagerFri Nov 11 1988 21:089
    Methinks you won't get a definition of boring, as boring is "not
    interesting" and what is interesting, or "emergent" in the gestalt
    psych. sense is a function of the total state of the listener.
    
    Pity we can't swap a lot of that internal state stuff around yet.
    I think it would be good for society.  Ramble....
    
    	Eirikur
    
1767.20um, ah, I see what you mean ...MIZZOU::SHERMANLove is a decision ...Fri Nov 11 1988 23:495
    Hey, don't you love it when somebody that hates electronic music
    tries to reinforce their arguments by playing something for you
    on the stereo ...
    
    Steve
1767.21A sample is boring tooNORGE::CHADSat Nov 12 1988 17:076
A raw sample is usually boring too.  A little LFO, or filtering (like on a
synth -- gee, wasn't this the sample <> synth question) etc. makes it much 
more interesting.  Then add some DSP like reverb, flanging, or whatnot.

Chad
1767.22And I promised to give my soapbox a restDREGS::BLICKSTEINYo!Mon Nov 14 1988 12:3228
    Since I have no idea of the domain of discourse here (if it can even
    be described that way) , I can only comment on one thing: what does 
    or does not belong on a Commusic tape.
    
    IMO:
    
    What does or does not belong on a Commusic tape, should be determined
    by what Commusic tape listeners want to hear.   I believe that whatever
    it's title, that was the true purpose of doing these tapes.
    
    I believe that what most people want to heard are the serious efforts
    of other Commusic noters.   It is my hope that what folks want to see
    on the tape is  not determined by stylistic or qualitative criteria.
    
    There have been things on the tape I didn't care for, but I was glad
    they were there so that I may associate some MUSIC with noter.
    
    Perhaps you should argue instead that the Commusic tape is misnamed.
    I'd certainly buy that.
    
    Perhaps you can complain that the Commusic tapes have been "taken
    over" by non-computer music.  I'd probably have to grant you that
    too.
    
    But I don't think there's a single contribution you can point to
    that I would agree "doesn't belong".
    
    	db
1767.23just a thoughtTALK::HARRIMANThirty minus OneMon Nov 14 1988 13:1820
    
    
    re: computers and music
    
    
      Gee, I thought my EPS had two microprocessors in it. My 'recordings'
    are all 'recorded' as MIDI events. My drums are digitally recorded
    'samples' managed by yet another computer. I process the analog
    signals generated by all these computers with (you guessed it) yet
    more computers, dedicated to processing analog signals. My non-samplers
    are still class-B computing devices. 
    
      And my music sounds conventional, or so I've heard. What gives?
    
    Might it be that the state of the art now allows those of us who
    have been around this stuff a while to forego the obvious avant-gardism
    of earlier 'computer music' and apply the technology to our various
    interpretations of our art?
    
    /pjh
1767.24(tm) eventideANT::JANZENTom LMO2/O23 296-5421Mon Nov 14 1988 13:3519
    re: "obvious avant-gardism of earlier computer music"
    Computer music still has an avant-garde thread; it just never gets
    discussed here.  I imagine that the reason that early computer
    music was expressionistic and often serial was that the 
    musicians with access to computers were university music professors
    with friends in engineering faculty, and until recently there were
    no rock or pop music professors in universities, although there
    were jazz professors after some date.  these expressionistic
    university composers believed in the hegemony of expressionism and
    serialism, and also couldn't get any performances, so a computer
    slave performer was a dream come true.
    The second rockers could use computer electronics in music, they
    did.  
    But experimental composers still count among their ranks
    computer musicians making non-pop non-traditional music with computers.
    There is also a vast array of non-computer experimentalists, but
    they often use microprocessor-based processing devices, such as
    delays and harmonizers.
    Tom
1767.25This Sentence No Verb? Has No Subject?DRUMS::FEHSKENSMon Nov 14 1988 14:534
    Uhm, what is this note about?
    
    len.
    
1767.26'intellectual property'? You what?MARVIN::MACHINMon Nov 14 1988 15:046
    Samplers don't cheat. 
    
    Records are just presets for your sampler, sometimes stored
    inconveniently.
    
    Richard. (phnar phnar).
1767.27{yawn}DYO780::SCHAFERBrad - back in Ohio.Mon Nov 14 1988 15:067
    Uhm, seems to me that EH has one (or more) Mirages on their
    submissions, no?  So yank 'em off ... &*}

    Same dumb discussions went on when bow/arrow & spears gave way to guns
    & gunpowder, or when horse/carriage gave way to automobiles. 

-b
1767.28Thass why doctors call em samples...MARVIN::MACHINMon Nov 14 1988 15:2011
>      Same dumb discussions went on when bow/arrow & spears gave way
>    to guns
>      & gunpowder, or when horse/carriage gave way to automobiles. 
 
    Careful -- none of these are particularly pleasant developments!
    
    How about 'when measles gave way to vaccine'?
    
    I agree, "yank 'em off and be damn'd". 
    
    Richard.
1767.29I have never been a "clipper"...CTHULU::YERAZUNISI lifted my uncomprehending eyes to the heavens.Mon Nov 14 1988 15:4924
    re .-a few
        
    	Sorry, no, EH doesn't own a single sampler.  Not even a rusted
    Mirage.  We have recently acquired two broken PaIa modular synths,
    however.  Both are equipped with the patented PaIa UltraDrift
    oscillators.  We will be touring with them in the near future :-).   
    
    -----
         
    Uh, we were discussing whether samplers were "cheating" (whatever
    cheating is), in the context of the electronic music esthetic (whatever
    that is).  We weren't defining any terms, to make it easier to argue.
    :-) 
    
    -----
    
    No rockers in Engineering universities?  What about the professor who
    had the office across the hall from me?  His name was John Tichy, PhD,
    and besides several textbooks on supersonic airframes, he also played
    bass guitar for Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen (check out
    the credits for "Hot Rod Lincoln"). 
                                                                 
    	- Bill
                                       
1767.30Couldn't have said it better, TomTALK::HARRIMANThirty minus OneMon Nov 14 1988 16:0510
    
    re: Janzen, .-1
    
       I rest my case. When electronics got easier to use, more people
    used them. 
    
       You should hear my early stuff. I used to be avant-garde, but
    it got boring when nobody listened.
    
    ;^)
1767.31I Caught My Sampler Cheating..NYJMIS::PFREYMon Nov 14 1988 19:563
    It got into my stash of Pepperidge Farm "Milano" cookies...
    
    PFrey
1767.32Rappers and sampling...MASTER::DDREHERTue Nov 15 1988 14:4524
    Re:  Rap music and Samplers
    
    Rap music is very raw and "anti-establishment", sort of like early
    Rock'n'Roll (which ripped of blues riffs).  Rappers are heavy into
    samplers, and they make collages of sound with them.
    
    It's defiant to use other peoples sounds and put them into such
    a crude, raw, aggresive context.  Do you think a poor, black,
    uneducated kid from the ghetto cares about white establisment
    music business "ethics"?  The whole point is to rub establishment
    the wrong way while energizing thier peer group.   Rap music is
    an attitude and a statement.
    
    I was in Digital, Atlanta last week and some black kids had a rap
    tune crank in the parking lot.  Some business suits got out their
    car and said "What the hell is that noise?".  Teen defiance, off
    course!
    
    James Brown is the god of rappers.  His stuff is sampled alot.
    
    Rap music is getting more sophisticated.  Some rappers are very
    good programmers as it developes as an art form...   
    
    
1767.33New life in dead recordsMARVIN::MACHINTue Nov 15 1988 14:5211
    RE .-1
    
    I read an article on Bomb the Bass. It was suggested he may be ripping
    people off -- notably the much-sampled James Brown. He said that
    he does, in fact, pay royalties to James Brown's record company,
    but in fact his records provoked a repressing of the original Brown
    records as punters played 'find the sample' with them.
                                                                 
    Not so much parasitic as symbiotic.
    
    Richard.
1767.34r r r rappin'ECADSR::SHERMANsocialism doesn't work ...Tue Nov 15 1988 15:359
    Last month's KEYBOARD is devoted to rappin'.  I don't personally
    care for it, but there's money to be made, I guess.  Most of it
    strikes me as kind of dumb and morally warped, in the same class as
    WWF wrestling, sitcoms and soap operas.  There is probably some good, 
    intelligent rapping going on, but I have yet to hear it ... maybe some
    old Blondie (nawwww...) ... once heard something called the White Boy
    Rap that was moderately funny.  
    
    Steve