
Dr ZEE
Anti-Pro Circles Insider
Beck said:I couldn't disagree more. By the time a musician/composer/producer/engineer is well-versed in the fundamentals of acoustics, electronics, impedance, gain-staging, mic placement, equipment knowledge, mastered an instrument or two, etc, he has spent as much time and effort as a med student has with anatomy, physiology, pathology, treatment options – equipment & drug selection, etc. Then on top of that there are the things you can’t learn but with years of doing.
Knowing how to push PLAY, REC, etc or what jack to plug a cable into is fine for assistants, but they are there to perform a simple task under direction.
This all sounds good. ... on the surface so.
Same time, same effort spent? - Yes, maybe so. But for what reason? What was the goal?
The way I see it: there IS a fine line between an artist and a professional service provider. Can the same person be be both? I'd say - yes, maybe, but unlikely at the same time at the same place.
If you look at recording as it is a professional service, then you heavily rely on all the knowledge of fundumentals and all the experience. But your goal is to provide service - to satisfy a client. Satisfying a client can remotely relate to the art of recording, but in practice the two are rather unrelated in not contradicting.
To express yourslef in a form of art may or may not need and most definitely does not rely on knowledge and experience of "fundamentals". Knowledge and experience may or may not be in present. It is not required. More to that, knowledge and experience may act as an obstacle on the way of an artist.
If it was otherwise, then a person who has collected enough of knowledge and experience would become a perpetual producer (unstoppable source

If it was otherwise, one would never be amazed and mesmerized by a drowing of a 4 year old boy (just like the one on your visual) , while be completely and hopelessly bored by a heavy paintings of a 50 years old professional illustrator.
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Somehow I do not worry about a "kid" who has no experience in recording business at all, comming to a recording forum and recommends a spring reverb (or what ever) because it was great at what he was using it for one time. And on the other hand, I don't see an advice from an experienced professional in regards to the very same spring reverb (or what ever) more valid. I just don't.
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Now, when one is talking about something he/she has no idea about in reality while pretending like he/she does - that a totaly different metter. Immatures and proffesionals - both kinds - do this from time to time. Some people just do it.
I'm not sure about this. Also, I guess, depending on exact situation and depending on how exactly you say it.Beck said:For me to say to do something a certain way just because Tim Beck does it … now that would be arrogant and condescending. That’s why I prefer to open a window and let some light in rather than be that light myself.
But when someone sais :"This is so and so, because that's how I did it and that's how it works for me" - I see nothing arrogant about it. A person speaks from his/her personal experience, that's all. That's what I call : "Knowing what one talks about"
As a matter of fact, when I read something like: "This is so and so, because of that's the way Madonna did it" - sounds to me worthless of paying attention. All I can say: "So what? Who gives a crap?"

And, ano more thing, Sir

Academic knowledge is a knowledge, but it is a knowledge of Academia. And, in a sense, Academia is just a form of a well established bulletin board

/respects