encryption format so that sound libraries can also be
"commercialized":
And here we have the tendency towards a thoroughly "freeJeffLearman wrote: Wed Jun 28, 2023 8:37 pm
A lot of people use commercial samplesets. It would be nice to have those samplesets in a more future-proof format. If SFZ supported encryption, then more commercial samplesets *might* be in sfz format. Thus providing more future-proofness for those commercial samplesets.
format" that draws its strength from accessibility, and that
everyone can and should use:
This is a contradiction that occurs in many areas of our world andaudiojunkie wrote: Wed Jun 28, 2023 9:50 pm
I ... believe that encryption would do more harm than good with the
format. The chief redeeming feature of SFZ, in my opinion, is the open
nature of the format—the very opposite of encryption.
causes controversy: Some people would like to convert everything
into a huge shopping world in which everything and everything is
valued in dollars or euros. And the other would like that everything
- as well as the air to breathe - remains free for everyone.
The child in every human being, and so also the artist in one, should
actually vehemently advocate that everything remains "free".
Because art itself also happens out of freedom:
Art - and with it music - happens out of free creativity, out of the
childish desire to change and shape things. Every marketing
consideration, efficiency consideration or deadline would immediately
stifle the free creation of the individual. Any boss who enforces order
in a military manner, who puts pressure on the team and lets everyone
"run in one direction" in an efficient manner, buries any impetus for
art and free creativity.
And it's the same with the music and the sample libraries: do you
want the world to turn into a giant shopping mall, where every piece
of shit has a price, and where really everything is measured in
dollars or euros?
Or do you want a free world where the individual can still breathe
air freely, water is free to drink and sample libraries are free for
everyone?
-------------------- Now some say: you are exaggerating!
No, I do not think so. Of course we are all part of the world where
everything around us is measured in dollars or euros, because we
all have to shop and pay our rent. We all need to submit in a job and
obey the boss in order to generate our income and also to exist
financially in the commercial world. Submitting oneself, earning
money, looking at prices and spending money, consuming, all of
that is a market economy and part of our civilization.
But art and music - music mostly practiced by us as a hobby in the
evening or at the weekend - are a kind of refuge in our personal
freedom, where we pursue our need to create something "freely".
It's sort of our niche for "personal freedom", for actual "being human".
I would like to keep this niche free - also from all the commercial
quirks, from all the price tags and efficiency considerations of my
boss. I don't want this retreat niche to be commercialized either. And
that's why I find "free software", open source, and also free formats
like SFZ so attractive and beautiful. And it is precisely from this that
free formats derive their special suitability for art - for free creation -
for music.
