Support |
I have to say that additional software and programs greatly enhance the pleasure received when buying a CD.Two very good examples of this are Cold Cut, who included a program written by the duo on their last album which called Vjam and Soundgarden, who released a follow-up EP to their "Superunknown" album which included additional live footage, commercial videos and other assorted stuff. Vjam was definitely an interesting toy. IT allows you to program certain keys to play small AV samples which can be blended together to form an interesting montage. Jonathan O'Riordan -----Original Message----- From: Steve Burnett [SMTP:sburnett@webslingerz.com] Sent: 22 August 2000 08:16 To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Subject: Re: (almost) free Acid (almost) On Tue, 22 Aug 2000 SketchyJoe@aol.com wrote: > Very cool! > > This gets me thinking as to a possible way of releasing material > (particularly for those of folks who enjoy manipulating loops (nobody here I > suppose)). Why not include some sort of program with a CD. After all, it > seems as though MP3 will change our medium of choice. This way the user > (listener, consumer, sentient being...) can both enjoy an artist's creation > and easily remix the piece into a new piece. I know other artists have > touched on this before, but I figure that since "enhanced" CD's are becoming > more common, why not add something special to the method of data storage. > After all, DVD's are supposed to be great because they add a whole new level > of "interactivity" to one's viewing pleasure. > > Just some insane ramblings... Not that insane. I cannot be the only person on this list who's seen the King Crimson concert DVD "deja vroom" with the wonderful feature "21st century schizoid band". For those of you who don't know what I'm talking about, the specific feature provides 12 time-synched tracks of their work "21st Century Schizoid Man" song in the following grid: rhythm, vocal, solo 1969 1969 1969 1971 1971 1971 1974 1974 1974 1996 1996 1996 so you can choose any of the four versions of each of the three tracks. So you choose which rhythm track, then which vocal, then which solo. Press play and you get the remix of your choice. Go through the choices again and hear a new version. I may be missing your point entirely, but even if I did, the above is a cool way to release a song. regards, Steve Burnett -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Steve Burnett Admin, webslingerZ sburnett@webslingerz.com http://www.webslingerz.com/sburnett