Jump to content
Maestronet Forums

Recommended Posts

Posted

It is impressive compared to how some canned sampled strings sounds in playback. I could see this being a useful tool for composers or bands on a budget, but my no means do I believe it will completely replace human recording artists.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
On 5/20/2025 at 4:30 PM, Will Turner said:

Violin playing is as much for the violinist as it is for the audience.   AI will never do that.  

I agree, even in the future when they get everything right, this may benefit composers, conductors and arrangers save a lot of time which probably the main intention, but not for music halls, yet. Thanks for sharing.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I wonder how long it will take before "real" becomes the goal again? :mellow:

FWIW, I much prefer "real", with all it's imperfections (actual or perceived) to "perfect" or even overly polished.

Posted

See the David Pye book on “Art and Workmanship”.  Handmade and artisanal is more interesting that factory made because of imperfections, artistically and skillfully managed.  The same applies to music… the reason Maria Callas was so wonderful, a wobbly voice that was a joy to hear.

Posted

Too bad the drive for"perfection" has become fake. Very depressing, if you think about it.

Posted

^Many decades ago Glenn Gould was splicing his recordings together as if there was no such thing as a piano.  20 yrs ago I watched a Hillary Hahn video of some piece full of edits where her shirt sleeve went from rolled down to rolled up every few seconds.  If there's a camera cut in a video, it's to make an edit, whether it's music on an interview.  The cut back to the interviewer where he nods.  60 Minutes is paying the price now in court for fake interview cuts.  Luckily there is still a remote chance  2024 YR4 will still hit us.  If it does, maybe in ten million years some highly evolved roaches will be playing some good tunes and doing straight interviews

Posted
4 hours ago, Ganymede Piggot said:

60 Minutes is paying the price now in court for fake interview cuts. 

Interview cuts have been standard since the beginning of news interviews including printed interviews. There is nothing “fake” about them.

We are all paying the price in the ongoing destruction of America’s supposedly free press. AI is accelerating it by theft of costly content created by actual human beings.

Posted

^If you punch in a note that wasn't really played, of course the result is a fake.  You can lament America's formerly free recording industry all you want :D.  Same "freedom defense" should apply equally to complete and total fakery (AI) I guess.

Posted
On 7/7/2025 at 10:12 AM, Ganymede Piggot said:

20 yrs ago I watched a Hillary Hahn video of some piece full of edits where her shirt sleeve went from rolled down to rolled up every few seconds.

74 cuts in the 3rd mov. of a very classical concerto with very famous, youngish player, in the 80s. Was there, still feel the pain... SEVENTY FOUR !

Posted
On 7/7/2025 at 2:05 AM, Ganymede Piggot said:

^It's always been about perfection though.  Historically whatever technology is available gets used to achieve it.

Interesting - thank you very much. Different voices sound different to ... different ears. Two singers I could never stomach were Judy Garland and Barbara Streisand.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...