i've been going out far too much in the past 25 years, thank you very much, playing in various clubs all over europe and produced far more tracks that made it on dancefloors that i could remember. that plus being an early pioneer of british early 90's underground rave culture. the fact that i stopped working in that 5 years ago might be indeed connected to my ignorance of the current ''flavour of the month''. plus fame, talent and money are not necessarly connected, since you seem to emphesize a lot on the ''big bisness/money'' side of things. it's like saying Britney Spear is a great singer, just by looking at the numbers.Image-Line wrote:Then you need to get out more or expand your horizons. EDM is big business in the music industry these days. The comments you followed this statement with reinforce my impression that you have no idea how important EDM is and how much money is being made there.Chopper wrote:I do not know any of the artists mentioned.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/zackomalley ... -continue/
http://www.forbes.com/electronic-cash-kings/
there is indeed good quality dancefloor-oriented music. you posting the names of simplistic, formulated and easy to swallow ''artists'' that are making big money is not necessarly working in your favour in that argument. you do not seem to see my point, so let me put it differently: I AM NOT ATTACKING YOU HERE.
as someone already quoted my signature, let me say it again: it's not what you use, it's how you use it. i've been attacked by many of me collegues for many years at the end of my career for using plugins. now let make this straight: i wasn't a bedroom EBM ''producer". i was working in a 4 floors studio complex, owning 3 studios in said building, recording, mixing and sometimes mastering world famous artists that everyone would know, whatever your musical preferences. having racks of massenburg eqs and yet prefering to use plugins is not a practice remotly tolerated in what is ''the industry'' (i am talking about the music industry here, not the ''EBM industry that makes big money''). and yet, i was doing just that. even sticking some good quality freewares on some records that still sold truckloads. IT'S NOT WHAT YOU USE, IT'S HOW YOU USE IT.
i do understand the user and its knowledge is more important than the tool and it is perfectly possible to produce a rock album that would be nicely received solely with FLstudio. now, the issue here, is many people criticize your product for being awkwards for proper multitracking (and i agree it's not it's strongest asset), and geared towards EDM producers who work mostly with softwares/plugins only. you reply on the defencive by posting the name of famous EDM producers and talking big money makers. that seems a bit paradoxal, don't you think?
i sort of misquoted you. let's say that i was trying to make a point that you actually made with your reply.Image-Line wrote:Don't misquote me. I was making the point that 'entering notes into a Piano roll' is exactly what Mozart did. Re Avicii and classics? 474+ Million views shows he is doing something right.Chopper wrote:comparing Aviccii to mozart? really? classics of their generation?
I get the feeling your post is in bad faith.
Regards Scott
474millions views.
if you think he must be doing something right, then I am sure you must be thinking that McDonalds is doing something right everytimes you are having a proper 5 courses meal in a real restaurant.
i didn't post in bad faith, but i have the feeling you replied in bad faith.
once again, i am not attacking you, but merely pointing out to you that your arguments might not be the best if you want to present your product as a valid DAW.