I'm neither pro or anti CGI, nor Auto Tune, etc. They are just tools. My thought is that many people get way too excited about the tools instead of the creation. Instead of thinking "I have this idea, what tool can I use to get it done?" the process for many becomes "I have this cool tool, I'll spit something out with it". This works for some people because the technology is new and unique, but once the newness wears off it may not fair too well.IAMLFO wrote: ...So the question is, would you rather have technology progress so you can have your Lord of the Rings or not have technology so you never see Cloverfield? (The NYC monster movie.) I'll take the former, thank you. (And a *huge* plug for the reinvented Battlestar Galactica. Plenty of CGI and the deepest character development, plots and subplots TV has ever seen!)...
-Kevin
I think the Lord of the Rings movies are a giant exception. They had the resources to do everything right. There are also, IMHO, few cases like that, were the piece could not be done without the technology. When people start saying "this is great, now I can create X", I wonder if it was really the lack of the proper tool stopping them from creating X before.
The new Melodyne will indeed be very useful for a lot of people. Depending on how well it works I may have to get it. Have to. I'm not "excited" about it anymore than I would be about a new screwdriver, less maybe because it's more expensive, mostly because I'm not seeing the huge creative possibilities that others are, any more than with Auto Tune or the original Melodyne. Auto Tune has saved me MANY hours of work. But this new Melodyne looks like something I might need once a month or two, maybe? I'm mean, how often do you have an out of tune chord that you couldn't just fly another chord from somewhere else in the tune?
As far as sampling and retuning other works, well that's still sampling and is not going to be any different. If you've got the money to license the recordings, I guess go for it. I will "steal" a sample if I mangle it beyond all recognition, but that wouldn't really be the case with this product. It's not going to be OK to use someone's recording just because you retuned some notes. Couldn't you just create a similar sound and do your own piece? Why does it need to be that specific sample?
I'm sure this is coming across the wrong way, but I assure you I'm not bummed out by the idea of this product. Most of my own music is "artificial", I use a lot of manipulated audio. I make about a third of my income tuning vocals with Auto Tune. I have no problem with the morality or the politics of it. I don't make much distinction between something played and something created on the computer. I just see this new Melodyne as a fixit tool and not much of a creative tool. I'm sure someone WILL do something creative with it, but that will be the exception, not the rule. Kids do creative things with toilet paper tubes, but that's not their main use.
It's a totally amazing technological breakthrough, I'm just not sure how much I need it.
bb