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MathOfInsects

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Posts posted by MathOfInsects

  1. 9 hours ago, Iconoclast said:

    Went to the single Sam Ash in Glendale (Phoenix AZ) yesterday.

    Things are not really discounted at all. In fact many things were quite a bit more than the advertised prices I was easily able to find at GC or SweetH2O.

    The employees felt blindsided; they thought their store was going to survive. Supposedly will be open for another 6ish weeks.

    But if they don't drastically slash prices, they're certainly not going to move any thing they weren't moving before.

     

     

    1 hour ago, Doerfler said:

     

    I had the same experience. I wasn't looking for anything in particular,  just randomly looking around but nothing I couldn't get for the same price for anywhere else


    Same here. I'll wait until doomsday is closer and try again.

  2. I bailed on Joel pretty hard after his first couple of albums. Occasionally something would slip through to make me think he still "had it," more often stuff would slip through to make me want to hurt bunnies. No, Billy, you didn't start the fire, but you sure made me want to with that atrocious song. 

    His weirdly clueless piano solo in River of Dreams was another of those moments. It's like someone handed him the song, said, "We hear a piano solo here," and he poked around to find something to play because he didn't naturally hear anything, and then they kept the poking around. 

    FWIW, I also think Elton John's best work was early on. All the 80's stuff felt off-keel and bloated--largely when he switched to writing his own lyrics for awhile. But in terms of groove/rhythm/musicality, I'm #teamelton all the way. I think Billy Joel has incredible chops, but I always feel like I'm being played AT somehow.

    • Like 1
  3. 4 hours ago, Anderton said:

    I guess what makes me uncomfortable is when machines do something "good enough" and the world accepts that, instead of going the extra mile for something exceptional that's crafted by humans. The only problem is that humans do that as well. It's not just a machine thing.

     

    My main concern is that AI will be music on the web x 1,000,000 -  a flood of so much crap it's hard to isolate the exceptional stuff, whether made by machines or humans. 

    Each previous potentially artist-ending advance--phonograph, videos, synths, drum machines, MIDI--has only led to greater and greater creativity in the end. Artists use whatever the available technology is, and make it into something new. 

    I'm excited to see how people incorporate AI into their art. It's already made stemming and noise reduction way easier, and even the best mastering engineers I know now use AI for certain elements of their work, even when the rest of it is done by hand/ear/slider. 

    As you hint at, if it's really that easy for the public to imagine that a "good enough" AI track is made by "real" musicians, then the answer will have to be for musicians to raise their game. I am here for that. 

     

    • Like 1
  4. 15 minutes ago, Anderton said:

    Well, I would consider it transformative, regardless of whether it was done by a human, or a human inputting instructions into an AI engine. But I'm not a copyright lawyer or judge.

    I'm not really asking about the legality of it, though. To me that's a whole different issue. I'm probing to find out where people's discomfort starts--where the line is that something needs to cross to make them fear or dismiss it. 

  5. 20 minutes ago, Anderton said:

    It depends...a lot hinges on whether the work is judged as transformative.

     

    https://blogs.uoregon.edu/appropriationartfieldguide/warhol/
    https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2023/may/18/andy-warhol-copyright-prince-paintings-lawsuit
    https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/lawandarts/announcement/view/112

     

    It also seems a lot depends on whether someone actually wants to sue or not.

     

    spacer.png

    For sure—that line was Warhol’s provocation. But I’m thinking more of these types of works:

     

    image.jpeg.3a651a9366f36f87da273b3811882b74.jpeg

  6. On 4/28/2024 at 12:23 PM, lightbg said:

    Tony Paladino sat in for Joey at the rehearsal. Nice job there.

     

     

    That was so great to see. First of all, props to Paladino for copping Joey's style and almost directly predicting certain moments of Joey's playing. A great couple of choruses from him. And interesting to see that Schaffer had essentially prewritten his solo. It's a blues in F and he's certainly got the chops for it. I wonder what prompted him to go that route. Maybe just intimidation from the three guys he invited onto stage? Maybe he should have gone first, in the end...?

  7. A classic clip.

    Having come up through one of the country's most avant-garde programs, and being a huge Zappa fan, I've always been bummed at how much the fool they were playing "Mr. Zahpa" for here. I mean, I know it's not like it's so mainstream to use a bicycle as a sound source. And he's spoofing them almost as much as they're spoofing him. But I've always sort of wished they just wouldn't have put him on, rather than make him a punchline. 

  8. That was bloated and unnecessary and hella fun. I wish PS had STFU for 12 seconds so we could hear everyone play. Yeah, Paul, they know they're getting another chorus, and yeah, we remember the name you just told us. They're famous, we know who they are.

    I enjoyed hearing how everyone approached their playing after hearing what the previous guy did. Joey D in particular made a point to slow the pace down and let something build before doing those crazy 16th-note triplet arpeggio runs. I couldn't tell from his expression if he was enjoying PS's playing or bemused by it. 

    • Like 1
  9. On 4/27/2024 at 8:14 PM, miden said:

    tbh, and seriously no offence meant at all to anyone, but why is it always so important to try and categorise keys players (or any instrument for that matter) into best and worst?

     

    And there are a couple more threads along these lines in the forums as well.

     

    They are all different and they all bring something unique to the table....I personally don't care if they play a thousand notes a minute or 10, as long as it is musical and with passion they've got me....don't care if some poll or another, or some critic or another or whatever and another decide they are not the best.

     

    First, I 100% agree with you and don't favor the "music olympics" approach to our field.

    But I do think some of the "X or Y" conversations are about something different than competition; they're really a conversation about people's aesthetics or preferences, and in that sense they can be interesting and helpful. 

    • Like 1
  10. I always feel like I shouldn't admit this, but: I'm a good LH bass player as long as you don't also want a great keyboardist. If I'm really paying attention to being an effective bass player, I'm way less of a keyboard player. Sometimes that's a good thing! I've gotten better over the years, but when it comes time to really separate the two hemispheres--say, during a solo--I have to concentrate very hard to keep the bass doing what it's supposed to be doing while my right hand is doing what it wants to be doing. 

     

    However, I will say that the times I've had to be LH bass for groups that normally have a bass player, my relationship with those songs is way deeper when I'm back to being keys-only on them. 

    • Like 5
  11. 5 hours ago, D. Gauss said:

    Worth pointing out that before super-stardom, Elton was an in demand session pianist for a fair amount of big artists' hits including: The Hollies (He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother), Tom Jones (Delilah), Jackson Browne (Redneck Friend),  and others.  Joel? Not so much, though very early he may or may not (there is some dispute) have played on the Shangri Las (Leader of the Pack/walking in the sand). 

    Fun fact: Elton, believe it or not, was almost the keyboardist/frontperson for both of the prog rock bands Gentle Giant (he got fired early on), and King Crimson!

     

    Hmmm. Ok, definitely a Honky Cat vibe on those chops in Redneck Friend. Obviously channeling Nicky Hopkins there, too.

    BUT I don't hear a note of piano in Delilah. And I barely hear one on the Hollies tune--maybe twice really on some distant chords in big moments, unless that's also piano in the right speaker. (But it sounds more like guitar.) So maybe the takeaway is that he was the guy playing parts that people ended up not using...?  😀

     

    The BJ tunes...yeah, could be anyone. No wonder he's not sure. 

  12. 1 hour ago, D. Gauss said:

    Worth pointing out that before super-stardom, Elton was an in demand session pianist for a fair amount of big artists' hits including: The Hollies (He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother), Tom Jones (Delilah), Jackson Browne (Redneck Friend),  and others.  Joel? Not so much, though very early he may or may not (there is some dispute) have played on the Shangri Las (Leader of the Pack/walking in the sand). 

    Whoa, cool. I didn't know that (either of them), or forgot it if I did. I'm going to listen to all these tunes with that in mind a bit later. 

     

    As for BJ remembering which notes he played on a session when he was 14...? I mean...maybe? But does he really? There's been a lot of shall we say "impeding" done to his memory in the years since then. But still, cool bio item. I wonder if anyone's alive who could say definitively it was or wasn't him.

     

    https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-shangri-las/leader-of-the-pack

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