Tim I agree with many things you see as usual but you’re also right in that here it is the use of the word synthesist separated out for those who aim to move away and distort from live music as sonic goals that creates the confusion and a misdirect for me because getting back to the reality what we are all doing is synthetic all the way once we record and modify the signal and change to various states of mechanical and electrical states along the way. I don’t know if the distinction of artificial helps but might.
I suppose I’m just suggesting for us that synthetic is a part and parcel of any design for everyone… but that doesn’t mean that what we synthesise can’t be aimed at being reflective of the original. That is the distinction I was trying to draw and why the word may not be the best for me. That some aim for authenticity within their synthetic approaches.
I agree very much that those putting systems together who don’t use live acoustic music as their sonic compass will more likely end up with a (for us perhaps wrongly) obviously synthetic sounding outcome because the compass is re-directed away from the original experience. So I was also then expanding to perhaps what for me is the bigger truth that all that we do is synthetic in this and we shouldn’t malign the word completely. This just the more encompassing domain of actual process in any recreation. But definitely where we are most completely aligned is that the successful (in my use of the word) synthesists will use live acoustic music as their benchmark and leave the obvious traces of their less natural distortions behind.
I suppose I’m just suggesting for us that synthetic is a part and parcel of any design for everyone… but that doesn’t mean that what we synthesise can’t be aimed at being reflective of the original. That is the distinction I was trying to draw and why the word may not be the best for me. That some aim for authenticity within their synthetic approaches.
I agree very much that those putting systems together who don’t use live acoustic music as their sonic compass will more likely end up with a (for us perhaps wrongly) obviously synthetic sounding outcome because the compass is re-directed away from the original experience. So I was also then expanding to perhaps what for me is the bigger truth that all that we do is synthetic in this and we shouldn’t malign the word completely. This just the more encompassing domain of actual process in any recreation. But definitely where we are most completely aligned is that the successful (in my use of the word) synthesists will use live acoustic music as their benchmark and leave the obvious traces of their less natural distortions behind.
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