Friday, June 8, 2012

A fellow called BNJMN, whose music I know not, proposes in a FACT interview some routes to  originality/innovation/artistic distinctiveness:

1/ relative ignorance

"’I' m really into dance music, but I’m still quite naïve about the whole thing, which is why it comes out quite different...  Being open and naïve can help you create something completely original. If I knew a whole lot more about dance music, and all the different types of sub-genres, I’d probably start making music that sounds like other people. But because I don’t really know too much, it just ends up sounding like myself"

2/ relative ineptitude


"The more I got into electronic music, the more I found out about people like Theo Parrish and Efdemin, and it just made me want to create that kind of music. A lot of it is just failed attempts at making Theo Parrish tunes that sound nothing like him!"

"unachieved mimesis"--flattery that falls short--is a classic syndrome - postpunk musicians trying to sound like Nile Rodgers and producing something a lot more serrated and spindly, etc -- miscopying as creative error

the getting-it-wrong is closely related but not exactly the same (it can also include non-mastery of an instrument, or deliberately not learning to use a synth or a guitar in the manufacturer prescribed way)

knowing too much about other music can be paralysing, because it all feels like it's been done before

knowing the correct way to play or program an instrument or machine or piece of software can be paralysing, because you're just following well-worn paths

 (c.f. the post on Ry Cooder and session musicians as a non-creative class)

but how do you preserve and protect ignorance in this knowledge-saturated environment?

1 comment:

  1. A lot of artist specialized in a genre declare that they don't listen to other people making same kind of music. It's like they stopped building their listening knowledge to a point and then they start making music. This is good for someone aiming to be a composer, to get some influence in the youth and then closing out all the inputs from external world (at least partially). This may start a sort of reliving a past through memories and unconscious references may happen. For example why I put a certain pattern or a certain bass line into a tune, it is because I've assimilated it in the past but I don't remember who it is and when it happened. And it may not sound exactly the same.

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