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>In a message dated 10/31/2000 6:43:50 AM Central Standard Time, torn scrawled: > >> or, maybe music educators will learn to stay closer apace w/'culture curves', & begin teaching turntablism (! & looping !) in schools..... >for this to happen, music education graduates would have to learn it... >and colleges would have to teach it... and people who have learned it would have to be willing to actually BE teachers. anyone? Then a different DT said: Given my experience in music education, the only way this wil happen in music academia is for the artists top turn white, die, and stay that way for a century or two. <big snip> I remember how freaked out my advisor was when I played a piece I composed for Electric Violin, Effects and Jamman... ------ I just had a discussion with this w my girlfried over a little vietnamese lunch... she teaches high-school art, and faces this same problem. F'rinstance, she's trying to get the school system to approve her grant to teach website design as art, and add it to the curriculum, or at least form an art/computing synthesis. Same point: all these ugly webpages that confuse content with (poor) design. Just like all them damn samplers and drum machines that sometimes substitute for music. anyway, it ain't about what tools you use, as she said: if you have the training in the fundamentals, the classic properties, the basic theories, then you can make good stuff regardless of the tools you use. I agree. (just curious: dt: where, besides the school of All Them Guys You've Played Wif, did you get educated? Formally? I ask you cause you're the highest profile amongst us, visibility-wise, etc.) That brings us back to dead white guys: i often didnt care much for ear-training, sight singing, or counterpoint (but Schenkerian analysis was a REAL eye-opener!!!!), but I confess that knowing these basic building blocks sure makes things work for me today. Most pap involves the simplest, basest stuff, harmony, rhythm, etc., to make it easiest for the McDonald's crowd to hear. Not to say that a simple song in the key of F can't be beautiful also, but it's approached differently, isn't it? When I went to NTSU, (most of) my composition professors had no problem with the weirder things I wanted to do, but often questioned why i did them -- so that i could see my motives. (god, now that I have motives, I wish I could go back easily!) Any school that offered synclavier programming as a composition course couldn't insist on all DWMs. I know that Dan Haerle in the Jazz Dept back there is teaching pretty full-scale courses in MIDI... but I doubt if they've written a book on the turntable yet! Besides, the first step in breaking all the rules is knowing them. BTW, this is IMFA exactly the kind of stuff we oughta be talking about -- how to use this stuff for the purposes of good, not evil... kb