Remembering history
Downtown revitalization
Fix, don’t dump
No Herbie? No problem!
Electronic creativity
Electronic creativity
New sounds, new frontier
On a warm summer evening at the Abbey, a small group of musicians file into the back room with laptops in hand. They take their seats in a darkened corner next to a film projector and a sound system. 
DJ Scott Matelic, left, along with DJ Paren, is one of numerous DJs redefining electronic sounds in the city.
Means of production
While underground parties at warehouses might have been popular around town 10 years ago, seeing a DJ perform using strictly a laptop was practically unheard of. But since then music software programs have flooded the market to the point where analog gear like synthesizers, turntables and samplers are no longer the only options.
Like the software group that meets at the Abbey, many software interfaces around today are modeled off of old mixing boards and rack-mounted synths from the ’70s. Instead of turning knobs and dials with your hands, a simple click of the mouse now does the same thing.
Initially, this proved a cheaper alternative for veterans who couldn’t afford an expensive analog setup. But for younger musicians getting into computers, both the software interfaces and the original gear they’re modeled after are completely foreign. Still others have never found a computer necessary.
“You’ll always have purists,” Daubenspeck said. “It’s a matter of taste. But these days they’ve advanced digital so much there’s not a gap in sound quality like there was. The old analog gear wasn’t self-explanatory, and the new digital is easier. Anybody could use Ableton. You sit down and not know a thing and walk away two hours later having made a song.”
Other musicians at the Abbey agreed that the hardware and software debate boiled down to different strokes for different folks.
“I don’t think the learning curves are different with hardware or software,” Kenneth Rehm said. “Every tool is different. With hardware a 909 has a different learning curve than an MPC, and Ableton has a different learning curve than ProTools.”
But DJ Shiva added that price tags can play a role.
“For a reasonable price anybody can get a computer and learn to make music,” she said, “which sometimes results in really good stuff coming from unexpected places and sometimes results in absolute shit — that’s the exchange. I like that it’s more accessible. Some kid who never had the opportunity to make this music may be a genius and for under a thousand bucks they can start producing music.”
Cheap as it may be, most agreed that music software would never replace records and turntables — it would just augment them.
“It expands the possibilities of the possibilities of sampling records,” DJ Shiva said.
But when it comes to live performance, some contend that using analog equipment is more difficult.
“If someone comes out on stage with only records, samplers and analog stuff they get more respect,” Daubenspeck said. “It’s harder work than just using a laptop and software.”
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