Where are the electronic musicians who do live performances like the early Jean Michel Jarre stuff?
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- KVRAF
- 8413 posts since 4 Jul, 2012 from Alesia
I'm just curious if people actually still make music like Jean Michel Jarre used to do.
That is, the musician is surrounded by a bunch of analog synthesizers with very limited or no patch recall and basically recreates the sounds on the fly.
This kind of stuff kind of fascinates me.
That is, the musician is surrounded by a bunch of analog synthesizers with very limited or no patch recall and basically recreates the sounds on the fly.
This kind of stuff kind of fascinates me.
- KVRAF
- 2110 posts since 5 Oct, 2015 from Swedish / Living in Hong Kong
I been thinking the same thing. Most famous and successful musicians will have followers that will hook on the same genre, but Jean Michelle Jarre seems to be quite unique to this day.
Win 10 -64bit, CPU i7-7700K, 32Gb, Focusrite 2i2, FL-studio 20, Studio One 4, Reason 10
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- KVRian
- 1317 posts since 28 Sep, 2012 from Norway
Kebu is going strong. Very popular on youtube and does great liveshows. Don't know how he is able to enter that ring of synths or if it is set up around him. 
One example of his tracks, but he does many covers, which often include own interpretations and variations on themes:
Edit: Now I see he is a member here, as well.
One example of his tracks, but he does many covers, which often include own interpretations and variations on themes:
Edit: Now I see he is a member here, as well.
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- KVRAF
- 1618 posts since 15 Aug, 2001 from montreal, canada
I'm more interested in somebody that starts with a blank thing and really makes it on the fly. Not pre-prepared songs. I have nothing against that way, just not as interesting.
Stuck in Aperture Laboratories for a 2nd time!
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- KVRian
- 1317 posts since 28 Sep, 2012 from Norway
In a live concert setting or instructional video?paradiddle wrote:I'm more interested in somebody that starts with a blank thing and really makes it on the fly. Not pre-prepared songs. I have nothing against that way, just not as interesting.
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- KVRAF
- 1618 posts since 15 Aug, 2001 from montreal, canada
Depends on the confidence level.
Stuck in Aperture Laboratories for a 2nd time!
- KVRist
- 312 posts since 4 Apr, 2014 from Home
Spend me the money for analog equiptment (round about 30.000 - 40.000 €, better more!) and i do it for you where you want 
And, of course, someone who will manage the coordination
And, of course, someone who will manage the coordination
Was Große tun, beschwatzen gern die Kleinen.
- KVRAF
- 2175 posts since 10 Mar, 2006
Jarre only did that from 2007 onwards. Definitely not at any other time before that, aside from the supporting musicians and pre-prepared alternative takes/sequences.V0RT3X wrote:I'm just curious if people actually still make music like Jean Michel Jarre used to do.
That is, the musician is surrounded by a bunch of analog synthesizers with very limited or no patch recall and basically recreates the sounds on the fly.
This kind of stuff kind of fascinates me.
Klaus Schulze used to do it live, TD as well. But the public nowadays is way too in-the-mind to let go and enjoy something like that. Most people need alcohol and drugs in order to enjoy music (concerts to the full), let alone abstract and experimental music, which is niche, at least on this world.
Jarre was successful because he was inbetween experimental and pop. Which is exactly the right mixture you need anyway. If you get too experimental, you yourself get lost. Pop provides the link to others.
"The educated person is one who knows how to find out what he does not know" - George Simmel
"I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me." - Jesus Christ
"I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me." - Jesus Christ
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- KVRAF
- 6272 posts since 25 Mar, 2004
Keith Jarrett's concerts (and most recordings) are all completely improvisational, AFAIK. But no synths. Just a piano and that humming. That. Annoying. Humming.
Berfab
So many plugins, so little time...
So many plugins, so little time...
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
Live performance on modular synths is only increasing in popularity right now. Whether or not you actually consider those performances to be music is another debate entirely. As for people performing live with piles of old polysynths, you're probably asking the wrong crowd... Try Analogue Heaven.
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.