And it is just because this IS a friendly competition that I feel nit picking about what FX are okay and what FX are not is silly. Again, if we all have access to the same FX, what does it matter?Parduz wrote:I got your point, and mine is that the rule is perfectly right. It needs to be arbitrated by us (the contestant) or by a "referee". To me it make perfect sense, as it is a (good, imho) compromise between the desire to EQ a single instrument or a whole tune to get something pleasant to hear and vote, and the desire to let the synth sound being "the star" without being altered by something else.wagtunes wrote:My point is, and I guess I should have made this clear, is I think the rule itself is stupid.Parduz wrote:Well, i'm in OSC from #71 and i always had used EQ to transform white noises in snares and hihats by band-passing low freq and enhancing mid / hi freqs. (uhm, no, i did a single track without added effects.... well, not important). Should i been banned?
I agree that the rule is stated for ppl using common sense, and can't stand in a debate with rule lawyers, but c'mon. It's eq'ing! Can't we just have fun? Have we to open a poll for each OSC to vote which tracks are to be banned from the contest?
If someone find a track violating the (foggy?) rules just PM BJPorter and i'm sure he will handle the case in a way that will please the great majority of us all.
So i'm happy to use a parametric EQ and fine with not using any resonant filter or modulating effects (despite the fact that i feel like making footing without a shoe).
I dunno, as I said i'm here from 4 or 5 months and i havent got any problem after perhaps a couple of question. I don't think i'm an alien. Jeez, i even have to read the things 3 times 'cause i lack formal english school.wagtunes wrote:If we're going to use anything to alter the sound of a synth (because that's what we're doing regardless of what FX we use and how much or little we use them) why bother having the rule at all? It still puts everybody on a level playing field if we limit FX to what can be downloaded free or what comes with your DAW.
Want to put distortion on your synth to get a screaming lead guitar? Go for it? Who cares if everybody else is allowed to do the same thing? Not everybody's track is going to want to have a screaming lead guitar. But is it really any different from creating a formant vowel on a synth that can't produce one any other way?
Because the rule can be abused and because there are so many gray areas with it, it's a rule that is pointless to have, unlike the no resampling, splicing, etc of the synth because that literally turns it into another synth or something else.
In short, if FX are going to be allowed to be used, then ALL FX should be allowed to be used, from distortions to phasers to whatever.
Otherwise, we have entrants walking on egg shells wondering "Is this going to be okay or will I be flagged for it?" because there are so many gray areas.
Gray areas cause nothing but problems which is why we're having this discussion in the first place. The problem will not go away until the gray areas go away.
To make an example:
Have you ever played skirmish tabletop miniature games? There's some ruleset made for friendly games, and ruleset made for international challenges. I'm perfectly fine with both of them, as long someone don't tries to enforce rule lawyering in a friendly game, or friendly "rules" (or better: "let it be that way" behaviour) in an official competition.
OSC is clearly a friendly competition, more geared toward showing of some skills, get feedback and learn from the others than becoming famous and winning the price. So to me the rule is'nt stupid at all: it works most of the time, and if sometime one feels that a rule was breaked there's a referee. I can't ask (i won't ask) for anything more than this.
Sorry i have'nt been clear. I was not answering you directly, just talking out loud about the mood that i don't understandmehum wrote:I'm not interested in rules lawyering or banning anyone either. It's not what I mean. And EQ was specifically what I said should be allowed
Essentially, I feel the most important rules are the ones that put everybody on the same level so that the only advantages are gained through actual learned skill and not technology such as synth programming, musical composition, mixing and mastering.
What actual tools you use should not be factored into that equation if we truly want to make this competition about skill.
