Personally, I get bored watching the same dvd or same sequel or same Gilligans Island episode over and over. I expect artists to come up with something new. That is much of the point of experimentation.Markleford wrote:However, they must still ask themselves if their uniqueness, in the end, is worth anything more than the challenge itself. But I certainly hope that my words won't disuade anyone who thinks they have it in them if they think they have *fun* with it.
That's something like the theory behind synthesis, no?And let it not be said that "Cotton Eyed Joe" by Rednex wasn't original, but I think there's a reason for that.I imagine one could come up with innumerable permutations of genre-crossing, "A meets B", to create something "original".
Like "To Kill a Mockingbird" or "Twilight Zone" or "In the Heat of the Night" ..."Rebel Without a Cause", the first punk bands, the first Synthpop bands, etc.As for myself, however, I'll try to stay out of the novelty act bin.
Originality's originality... This practice of calling everything derivative simply to prove a point {whatever the point of it is} has gotten to be a real bore.Still, setting out with the explicit goal of "I'm going to create something 100% original" is a bit of a lark, no? Genuine, *listenable* originality evolves from small growths rather than grand gestures.
- m
The mere fact that Persona and La Dolce Vita are both black and white doesn't mean that they're the same movie. There are all sorts of shades of grey in between.
Who cares if it's %100 original or not... the idea is that the artists that made those films strove to give us something new and fresh and personal and creative and meaningful and as un-Gilligans Island-like as possible.


