Arpangel wrote: ↑Sat May 14, 2022 7:14 am
It’s the feeling of insecurity, that your music doesn’t really exist, it’s a load of invisible digits, that are at the mercy of all the usual computer related anxiety’s around obsolescence. You don’t have something real, to hold, like a tape.
Throughout history music has been the one art form that doesn’t exist, in the same way as a painting, or sculpture say. You could argue that literature falls into that category too, because music and literature only existed in a form that requires decoding from a page, but with widespread literacy, literature was accessible to many, but unless you could read music and decode it into the played form, it was something you could only experience in the moment while it was being performed.
The advent of recording opens up the experience to many, but in the years up to the phonograph was Bach or Beethoven or Mozart only something that waited for people with the skill to make it real in the moment. (And that moment was different every time due to the subjectivity of the performer)
I guess, what I’m saying, is should music have an ephemeral dimension and should we not get anxious about the permanent nature of tape or drive.
Ok… back to your regular programme folks…