Originally posted by Dave2002
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A couple of things
1: MIDI is only a way of one thing controlling another. It doesn't make a sound, in some ways it's got very little to do with sound at all
2: It was a bit of a happy accident that the Atari 1040 St had MIDI ports fitted which kickstarted all sorts of experiments
3: You are assuming that the "goal" is to be predictable ... what Gershwin said
4: You are also assuming that music is "note-based" and synthesis always aims to create versions of acoustic sounds OR emulations of electronic instruments.
5: Two of the dullest things I can do with my computer are a: Fill in my tax return and b: Try to make it sound like a piano !
I've just done a 30 minute online gig.... I was playing (in Audiomulch)
1: Some recordings of bass clarinet improvisations (which I manipulated live )
2: A recording I made several years ago of the gamelan at the SBC which I played with live
3: The sound of bees (not live this time but sometimes I do stick microphones under a beehive)
4: A live stream of a South Indian singer who was improvising with what she could hear coming back (with a 14 second latency delay)
I was controlling the volumes and some of the filters and other parameters using a MIDI controller (knob box)
I wasn't (today anyway) playing any "notes" ... last time I also played the Flugelhorn live into the system but not today
This is fairly typical of how many folks use technology in performance
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