
By Ian Canefire
Fri Sep 07, 2012 3:37 pm
I voted no I plan on keeping my 4000.
What I have learned/noticed over the years. Music seemed to reach its peak in quality at some point in the 80's. "Thriller" was an amazing album it had musical perfection, technological perfection, engineering perfection and artistic performance perfection in that Michael Jackson was great enough to pull the whole thing off. So many great albums came out in the 80's and the artists were great as well....hip-hop included.
Then something changed...the 90's was good, but it did not have the WOW factor. Hip-Hop went more mainstream and a few groundbreaking artists emerged. The production process was getting easier. I witnessed it first hand, as guys I knew were in their basements making music and then getting signed easily. RnB was, in my opinion, not as deep as it was in the 80's or 70's when it was called soul music. Case in point Boyz to Men one of the top groups in the 90's to me does not move me like Luther Vandross, or Stephanie Mills. The production if you remember was getting very digital at this point.
Now we are in a time when everyone can buy three items and they are able to make music without any quality checks. Sure enough the quality is lacking, money can be obtained for ones effort but the musical landscape is paying the price. Artists are not perfecting their chops on an instrument, and many producers are not making new sounds...some can't even play an instrument, or understand the theory.
Why do I write this? Simple because when the greatest selling album of all time (Thriller) was made Qunicy Jones stated that he wanted to "resurrect the music industry". That album was made in 8 weeks he used live musicians, drum machines like the Roland TR's, 2 inch tape, engineers with experience, experimented with rock guitarists, and painstakingly went over every second of every sound.
Instead of worrying about what else needs to be purchased, do you have the vision, the desire or the "openmindedness" to resurrect the genre you are involved in?
I challenge you to focus on uniqueness, strive for quality, perfect your playing chops and shun the marketing.
Cheers,
Ian
What I have learned/noticed over the years. Music seemed to reach its peak in quality at some point in the 80's. "Thriller" was an amazing album it had musical perfection, technological perfection, engineering perfection and artistic performance perfection in that Michael Jackson was great enough to pull the whole thing off. So many great albums came out in the 80's and the artists were great as well....hip-hop included.
Then something changed...the 90's was good, but it did not have the WOW factor. Hip-Hop went more mainstream and a few groundbreaking artists emerged. The production process was getting easier. I witnessed it first hand, as guys I knew were in their basements making music and then getting signed easily. RnB was, in my opinion, not as deep as it was in the 80's or 70's when it was called soul music. Case in point Boyz to Men one of the top groups in the 90's to me does not move me like Luther Vandross, or Stephanie Mills. The production if you remember was getting very digital at this point.
Now we are in a time when everyone can buy three items and they are able to make music without any quality checks. Sure enough the quality is lacking, money can be obtained for ones effort but the musical landscape is paying the price. Artists are not perfecting their chops on an instrument, and many producers are not making new sounds...some can't even play an instrument, or understand the theory.
Why do I write this? Simple because when the greatest selling album of all time (Thriller) was made Qunicy Jones stated that he wanted to "resurrect the music industry". That album was made in 8 weeks he used live musicians, drum machines like the Roland TR's, 2 inch tape, engineers with experience, experimented with rock guitarists, and painstakingly went over every second of every sound.
Instead of worrying about what else needs to be purchased, do you have the vision, the desire or the "openmindedness" to resurrect the genre you are involved in?
I challenge you to focus on uniqueness, strive for quality, perfect your playing chops and shun the marketing.
Cheers,
Ian
Roland VS2480 MC909 FantomS VSynth SonicCell Aira TR-8
Akai MPC4000 Z4
http://mightyhip.tumblr.com
http://MightyHip.com
Akai MPC4000 Z4
http://mightyhip.tumblr.com
http://MightyHip.com
Last edited by Ian Canefire on Fri Sep 07, 2012 4:17 pm, edited 4 times in total.






