I didn't say you
couldn't learn theory from the internet, I just said it wasn't the best way to do so.
Mogosagati wrote:My formal musical training is next to none. Never had a class on it, and I played percussion in high school band (hardly counts). I certainly know more music theory than Egg, having learned most of what I know from the internet (to contradict what someone said earlier) and from just playing around with midi. But anyway, Egg's ignorance of music theory is irrelevant to his musical genius. He simply lacks knowledge of the formal system of rules designed to help people make pleasing music. He can make pleasing music without following those rules. When he does follow the rules, he does so unknowingly, but that doesn't make his musicmaking any less intentional or meaningful. He knows what he's doing, in a deeper sense, and that matters more than formal training,which is just a helpful tool to help people turn ideas into sound. If he can do it without the tools most people use, more power to him.
And here we come to the crux of your misunderstanding. Your lack of training is ENTIRELY relevant. And it's not about knowing different sorts of chord progressions and whatever else you think theory is all about. It's about the flow of the piece, understanding momentum, and how to focus attention on the important parts.
And saying that Egg only does things right by accident isn't helping your case any. And I AM saying that your lack of training makes your music less meaningful. It doesn't matter how much intention is behind it. If it can't stand up on its own, well, it's going to fall over.
Back in the Thread of Hate, I said
there ... people here who will never really appreciate [your work, but] there are also quite a few who are honestly trying to get you to improve ... you tend to treat the latter as the former...
You claim that's not the case, but whenever someone says that your constructions are rambling/poorly constructed/tedious, you just counter with "well, you're just not paying close enough attention" without ever once contemplating that they might actually be
right.
And claiming that people with years of training and experience are actually going to be
worse at understanding your stuff is so completely inane, I'm not sure how to begin a rebuttal. If you honestly think that, then it's clear you know practically nothing about modern electronic and electroacoustic music. You are not a beautiful and unique snowflake.
Dan-O from Five-O wrote:I'm starting to lose focus and just get caught up in the semantics. My main points stand in the review I gave you, and they're really just reinforcing what a lot of other folks have said.
Bleh. Same here.
In other news, you should read
Silence by John Cage. You'd dig it. Also, give Autechre's album
Confield a try. I heartily reccomend the track Pen Expers.