Support |
>caliban@darklock.com writes: >>I tend to think it's more of a generation gap. Each generation of >>technology provides simpler ways to make music. The previous generation, >>being jealous, claims the music isn't "real". I have to agree with David. I took a 10 year break in school after a year of The Institute of Audio Research, and returned to find that I was by far the most technologicaly advanced student in the school. No doubt in my mind. Sure, it was Syracuse University, but it was chock full with downstaters and people from suburban NJ and Conneticut. There were a few others doing electronic music, but if they were any representation of "your generation," it would seem to me that the "kids" are not embracing the new technology. Is that totally true? Of course not. I'm sure there are pleanty of people at all ages using technology and ignoring it. I know that I would not have had the cash for this gear when I was in highschool. (btw, turntables, although they seem new, have been around for a while ;^0) One of the weird things is that most of the people I meet, who are into undergound or progressive music, tend to be 30 and up. An 18 year old S.U. student that used to tease me about my age (I'm 36) came to me one day and announced that she found out that I was the same age as her music hero Trent Reznor. <nelson> ha ha </nelson> Since Syracuse, I moved to the SF Bay area and worked in the digital media lab for The San Francisco Art Institute, one of the best art schools in the U.S., and I found the exact same thing there. I bit more students seemed to be comfortable in using computer technology in the visual and aural arts, but not a whole lot. In my private life, it seems like most of the people doing tech based music that I know are in "my" generation (smash guitar) Now pipe down or I'll wack you with my cane! Mark Sottilaro (36) hey, let's take a looper's age poll!