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It is very interesting indeed, to watch the changes that the Internet and technology bring to our world of music. Found today were two articles that glaringly point this out:
The first article is titled "Times change, so does the music" dated 10/2/2006 by Dale Roberts.
This article relates Roberts' discovery on how things have changed since he last entered a recording studio. His insight speaks volumes pertaining to - do all these changes necessarily make things better? Music, to Roberts, is meant to be played and shared amongst the living, breathing fellow humans. The emotion of the moment.
The second article is "Indie band hopes to be a real hit in virtual world" dated 10/2/2006 by Adam Sherwin.
Sherwin tells of an all-female British band called the "Hedrons" that will soon host a virtual online fantasy world concert on Second Life. A new way for the indie and unsigned to market themselves? Quite possibly. On Second Life, http://secondlife.com/, users (currently numbering 740K) can create animated characters...of themselves...Thus, the Hedrons will play live in the studio and have the recording synchronized with the animation for a "live virtual" experience. An interesting concept for up and coming artists.
Read both articles, it’s a fascinating world we live in. Where will the music take us?
The first article is titled "Times change, so does the music" dated 10/2/2006 by Dale Roberts.
This article relates Roberts' discovery on how things have changed since he last entered a recording studio. His insight speaks volumes pertaining to - do all these changes necessarily make things better? Music, to Roberts, is meant to be played and shared amongst the living, breathing fellow humans. The emotion of the moment.
The second article is "Indie band hopes to be a real hit in virtual world" dated 10/2/2006 by Adam Sherwin.
Sherwin tells of an all-female British band called the "Hedrons" that will soon host a virtual online fantasy world concert on Second Life. A new way for the indie and unsigned to market themselves? Quite possibly. On Second Life, http://secondlife.com/, users (currently numbering 740K) can create animated characters...of themselves...Thus, the Hedrons will play live in the studio and have the recording synchronized with the animation for a "live virtual" experience. An interesting concept for up and coming artists.
Read both articles, it’s a fascinating world we live in. Where will the music take us?