Hip Hop Artists Developing Open Source Beat Making Software 192
First time accepted submitter caseyb89 writes "Beat making software is incredibly expensive, and the high price limits usage to those who can afford it. Two professors at UNC have a dream of allowing all artists access to beat making software, regardless of income level. They are rallying the community on a project to create open source beat making software. The two professors double as DJs and hip hop artists, and they recently spoke at Rio+Social."
Nice Idea (Score:5, Funny)
But Hip Hop artists just pirate whatever software they need. The only real expense are decent microphones, mixers, preamps and speakers.
full disclosure: I am a sound engineer living in NC who works with hiphop artists.
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But Hip Hop artists just pirate whatever software they need. The only real expense are decent microphones, mixers, preamps and speakers.
full disclosure: I am a sound engineer living in NC who works with hiphop artists.
This.
Though their producers at least make some effort now to reduce their legal exposure by seeking the rights to the sample or knowing just how much they can get away with, rather than blatantly ripping off an drum track from another artist -- lest they end up in court coughing up all of their profits.
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How in the world did we ever get musical beats....before computer software?
Hmm........
Re:Nice Idea (Score:5, Insightful)
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A piano really isn't a technological marvel and never was. Even at the time, it was seen as a fairly straightforward improvement upon the harpsichord and the clavichord, the main difference between a piano and the latter being that the piece that strikes the string does not remain in contact with it. The mechanism was a definite improvement, but it was very much an incremental improvement over existing technology, the fundamentals of which are merely a more modern version of the hammered dulcimer/santur,
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"Technology" generally refers to this kind of product of incremental advancements. I enjoyed the little spiel, but all you didn't do was demonstrate your point.
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What you're missing is that electronic synthesis is an incremental advancement relative to other computer technology and to some extent relative to audio recording technology, but it is not an incremental advancement relative to other musical instrument technology. It is an entirely different way of producing sound that pretty much spontaneously appeared in the past century out of nowhere.
For tens of thousands of years, musical instruments produced sounds because of a player striking something, plucking s
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For tens of thousands of years, musical instruments produced sounds because of a player striking something, plucking something, or blowing air over or through a tube (sometimes involving a reed or human lips simulating a reed) in some fashion.
I honestly think you may have been overlooked a critical thing
We are talking about "music", right?
Since the dawn of homonoid civilization, where-ever "music" was played, it was played live
The presenters and audiences were all gathered at the same spot, so to share, or add to, the soundwaves that were at that place
Since the beginning of sound-recording, the advent of (wireless) radio-transmission of sound-recording, this thing we refer as "music" had already been changed
The digitalization of the soundwave (i
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I don't think that's a meaningful difference in terms of invention. Hearing a simple oscillator, even the most casual musician would surely realise an instrument could be made from it. A lot of ingenuity went into the designs from that point, but again, it was a gradual evolution of ideas.
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You can't shut off your ears, and they're connected directly to your brain. Unlike other art forms where people direct their attention at what they want to absorb, the waveforms you see in music are already recreated inside your brain before you begin appreciating them.
I think you're hung up on the distinction between musicians and composers.
Musicians play music. Composers use instruments to play people.
One can be both.
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Yeah, that no-talent hack Mozart had the audacity to write music for scores of instruments he didn't know how to play!
List of available open-sourced Beat / Drum Machine (Score:5, Informative)
Okay, here's the list that I can find:
Hydrogen
http://www.hydrogen-music.org/hcms/?p=main [hydrogen-music.org]
OrDrumBox
http://www.ordrumbox.com/ [ordrumbox.com]
OpenBeatBox
Mac
http://mac.softpedia.com/get/Audio/Open-Beat-Box.shtml [softpedia.com]
Linux
http://linux.softpedia.com/get/Multimedia/Audio/Open-Beat-Box-4095.shtml [softpedia.com]
Koblo
http://koblo.com/beta [koblo.com]
Free Cycle
http://freecycle.redsteamrecords.com/ [redsteamrecords.com]
Anymore?
Please feel free to tag on ...
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Re:Nice Idea (Score:4, Funny)
I thought hip hop artists just ripped off other peoples beats?
Honestly, they're the people, on the receiving end who most embody Marx's "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need", as they need beats, bass tracks, synth riffs, etc. But try to get them to pay for, or even credit the original artist, ah, that's where they become capitalists.
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I thought hip hop artists just ripped off other peoples beats?
Honestly, they're the people, on the receiving end who most embody Marx's "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need", as they need beats, bass tracks, synth riffs, etc. But try to get them to pay for, or even credit the original artist, ah, that's where they become capitalists.
methinks you haven't paid attention to the liner notes of hip hop albums since the 80's. Sample clearance has become a lucrative stream of income for many a washed-up musician with catalogs that do nothing for them at the moment. They get credited and get paid for the samples all the time though there are some that simply won't allow it (Prince comes to mind).
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Please Define (Score:4, Interesting)
FWIW, Hydrogen [hydrogen-music.org] is free.
Re:Please Define (Score:4, Informative)
Hydrogen is not a pro level piece of software. We tried it, and ended up hiring a drummer instead.
The results are far superior, at least for our style of music.
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Re:Please Define (Score:4, Funny)
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Pfft. Getting a robot to throw up is easy. Getting it to choke to death on vomit? That's where it gets hard.
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The results are far superior, at least for our style of music.
A human is alwasy far superior, for any style of music (except maybe techno).
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Also, LMMS [sourceforge.net].
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tracker.
what I assume is that they're after is a tracker/voice generator coded by them that they somehow get paid to produce.
anyhow, if you can afford a fucking nintendo ds you can afford a beat making thingy.. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjUy8C4iqPM [youtube.com]
but really wtf, they should import some demoscene over there, they got booty & drugs - shouldn't be too hard to coerce people to visit.
Re:Please Define (Score:5, Informative)
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It's FL Studio now, but yeah, it's amazing how powerful it's become. Oh and by the way, free updates for life! Though they do sell harder/better/faster/stronger plugins as well.
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FL Studio for iPad requires an expensive gizmo, but it's pretty full-featured for a tablet app.
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Stop speaking about what you know nothing about.
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So is that beiber kid.
Both are design by committee "artists".
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The difference between good hip-hop or electronic music and the bad stuff, is how much care and skill went into it's creation.
You can tell when something was made without any effort, or was automated. Unfortunately stupid teenagers seem to be deaf to the difference.
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There are programs that compose classical music that the average listener could probably not discern from the real thing, and I don't see many people seriously making the argument that Bach, Mozart and Beethoven didn't write "real" music.
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Two weeks ago I enjoyed a little demonstration of the latest, most professional and rotten expensive piece of "music prototyping software" at my co-producers projct studio. Don't get me wrong: it's a fine app for certain tasks in -commercial, primarily movie sound track- composition that will make a real composer's life a lot easier. But if you let it just compose by algo, no matter how well elaborated your parameters are, the output is just utter crap.
In this special field -autonomous composition- there ha
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"Beat making software."
This just confirms my theory that "Hip Hop" is not a real form of music.
What do you think of Beethoven, Bach, and all the other composers of the world then?
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You're missing the important element for selling hip hop - the arrogant thug-life frontman. Without that attitude, you aint gonna sell shit.
Arrogant and Thuggish enough for you? [stripes.com]. Just got to program it to say "bitch" instead of "sir" when a person walks by.
Seriously though, we are going to see the emergence of "virtual pop stars" designed by committee to be appeal to as many people as possible appear in the next few years. Electronically produced music makes this goal a hell of a lot easier (a robotic arm that can play the guitar or piano as well as a human is probably a long way off).
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Seriously though, we are going to see the emergence of "virtual pop stars" designed by committee to be appeal to as many people as possible appear in the next few years. Electronically produced music makes this goal a hell of a lot easier (a robotic arm that can play the guitar or piano as well as a human is probably a long way off).
We already have them. Every single aspect of Justin Bieber / Britney Spears / Beyonce's projection in public life has been fabricated, test marketed, and refined down to the microscopic level. Every non-controversy, image makeover, life-changing interview and comeback has been preprogrammed to push the maximum number of buttons to gather the most attention and make the most profit for the entertainment industry celebrity complex. Why develop a computer program to be a virtual pop star when you have living
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Whilst I don't disagree with this at all, a complete fabrication they still need a human being at the centre of it, a human being that will still have issues, problems and more importantly a personality that will need to be worked around.
Whilst that real person is necessary for the fabrication they are just fake,
HIP-HOP ?? SUX !! (Score:1, Insightful)
It's like disco all over again !! Only by people who can't play, can't keep a tune, and make farm -animal noises !! It truly SUX !!
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Oh, come on, dude! What the world needs now is MORE BEATS! MORE!!!
Actually it needs more cowbell.
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un-tsss-un-tsss-CLANG-un-tsss-un-tsss-CLANG
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Every genre has it's good and bad. Listen to modern country music and tell me you don't find it just as shit-tier as hip-hop and I'm calling you a liar. She think's my tractor's sexy! [youtube.com] Yee-fucking-HAW!!!!
Then of course there's The Bieb and Lady Gaga's garbage. And Guns 'n' Roses' and Van Halen's new garbage. And Metallica's garbage. And Skrillex's garbage...
It goes on and on. Hip-hop doesn't have a monopoly on shitty music at all...
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Matrix-y background graphics... Lyrics about being a slashdotter, I think. Is a steel guitar and fake draws all that's needed to classify as country music?
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It's like disco all over again !! Only by people who can't play, can't keep a tune, and make farm -animal noises !! It truly SUX !!
It's also for people who are extremely bad at poetry, but want to express themselves and get $$$ anyway.
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>It's also for people who are extremely bad at poetry, but want to express themselves and get $$$ anyway.
There are people who are well paid for good poetry?
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Yeah, as opposed to masterpieces such as 'Purple Haze':
Purple haze all in my brain
Lately things just don't seem the same
Actin' funny, but I don't know why
'Scuse me while I kiss the sky
Purple haze all around
Don't know if I'm comin' up or down
Am I happy or in misery?
Whatever it is, that girl put a spell on me
Help me help me
Oh no no... no
Yeah
Purple haze all in my eyes
Don't know if it's day or night
You've got me blowin, blowin my mind
Is it tomorrow or just the end of time?
No, help me aw yeah! oh n
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I agree, I've always said that hip-hop is 21st century disco (even if hip hop did start in the 1970s but was underground for two decades).
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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They did. [scoreahit.com]
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...IMO, that type of music is so generic anymore, I'm surprised some mathematician hasn't created an algorithm to generate hit songs on command...
I don't need an algorithm to tell me Autotune is the one who should be taking credit for the singing today, not the prepubescent pretty face on stage taking dancing lessons who can't sing for shit.
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I don't need an algorithm to tell me Autotune is the one who should be taking credit for the singing today, not the prepubescent pretty face on stage taking dancing lessons who can't sing for shit.
I always thought it would be fun to run Autotune in reverse: take a completely synthesized voice (Siri singing Led Zep's greatest hits), let De-Autotune (TM) screw it up, and run the audio equivalent of the Turing Test on the output.
Vocaloid (Score:2)
take a completely synthesized voice (Siri singing Led Zep's greatest hits), let De-Autotune (TM) screw it up, and run the audio equivalent of the Turing Test on the output.
They did that. It was called Vocaloid, and it created a monster [youtube.com].
No, it is not. (Score:4, Interesting)
I've struggled with LMMS for years. I give a try quite often and the end result is torturous. It tries hard to be FL Studio, but "different" but lacks so much that making anything is just entirely too awkward. I've considered contributing to the project but simply don't have the time to invest in it.
I stick with FL Studio and Cubase for my hip hop work (with ProTools M-Powered strictly to send out sessions to studios).
Re:No, it is not. (Score:4, Interesting)
It's free... if you can afford Cubase/Pro Tools. Then yes... use those. But this guy doesn't want to pay... so why would something like LMMS not be good enough to teach someone to make a beat? We're not talking about producing a track for Dr. Diddy, or Jay Snoop.
Why does it seem like, when it comes to software, people don't apply the "beggars can't be choosers" mentality?
"I don't want to pay for it."
"Ok, here you go. I did this in my spare time!"
"That's not what I wanted... this sucks. Spend more of your free time and make it better."
" ... ?"
If's not about whether or not it's "free", it's about whether it's functional or not. Your argument is a typical cop-out whenever the functionality of a FOSS app is called into question. If you've made the decision to write something like this and release it for the world to see, then you need to be prepared to address issues people have with the software. Yes, we could always go out and buy another piece of software instead of using that which you wrote for free, but we're giving your stuff a shot to look for that alternative so being receptive to criticism is part of the process. If the authors didn't want anyone to speak ill of their software, they should have kept it to themselves. Part of the open source process is people contributing to it's usability by giving input like "Hey, maybe you could make plugin selection a bit more obvious to the end user, it's a pain to deal with right now". We all may not have coding skills, but our input on workflow is just as valid.
I've tried Rosegarden under Linux and it works pretty well but several key VST plugins I use simply don't work. Were it not for that, I'd recommend it all day long.
FWIW, FL Studio's basic package costs only $49, with a more functional version at $99. While I understand that some people believe that they can't afford $99, if you're really serious about music you will save for it. Same for Cubase: Steinberg offers an entry level version of Cubase for $99 that's rather well featured for the price (serious music can be made with the "Elements" package). EnergyXT is not only cheap (€59), but also cross platform, working on Windows, MacOS, AND Linux!
For the musician on a budget, there are options. FOSS is one of them if you can find an application you like. LMMS is just not that package for me.
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Energy/XT is pretty darned nice for the cheap price tag! I use it quite a bit for music projects. I like the ability to wire up synths and effects in a visual way that hearkens back to my patch panel days.
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Yeah really, that Michaelangelo guy, all he did was move a brush over a surface. ANYONE CAN DO THAT!
If it's that easy, why aren't you out there doing it? The answer is that, in all reality, it isn't easy. It's actually really fucking hard. If it's that easy, you should go ahead and try
SoundTracker/NoiseTracker (Score:3)
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Didn't we make beats in NoiseTracker
The source code for NoiseTracker was used as the basis for Renoise [wikipedia.org], which is cross-platform including Linux, but not free. It's a reasonably popular host for composing songs / beats that obviously appeals to a fairly specific group of users due to it's tracker heritage. Most musicians prefer the piano roll for editing MIDI, which is used in most other hosts including Cubase, Ableton Live and Logic (none of which are available for Linux, and Logic is only available on Mac).
As for the cost: Renoise [renoise.com] is aroun
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Didn't we make beats in NoiseTracker (remember Mahoney & Kaktus) on the Amiga back in the late 80s? So the sound sucks by today's standards,
Chiptuners [youtube.com] would disagree. I guess, like all standards, it's more like a guideline?
Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
Why the hell does this make slashdot?! So we have people with a dream and they are calling for others to help them... Why would anybody do that if they could just as easily help the guys behind great stuff like Ardour, LMMS, Rosegarden, Miep, Hydrogen and the many other applications that aim to do somewhat exactly what these people dream of?!
Why don't these dreamy people join any of the existing projects?
Re:Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
Because those programs you mention are tuned towards actual composition, not hip-hop "beats" creation.
(translation: too complicated)
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No, it's not. I've used it, several other open solutions, and several commercial offerings.
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Because they might not like any of these programs. Isn't that the reason why many pieces of software were started in the first place?
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"Many pieces of software" were started because programmers just started writing them. They proved their worth and got help. I see no code here. Why would anybody capable of writing such software join a bunch of people that have basically nothing to offer but their dream? And, especially, why would these people make slashdot headlines? I'd rather see some more attention to projects that actually have code than projects that are nothing more but an idea.
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Two words: Open source.
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Yes. /. 3s open source so it got posted. :P
already been done! (Score:2)
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It's called a drum. That's what keeps the beat in music. It's open source too, just have to buy a little hardware.
The most original and impressive drum album ever - Drums of Passion [wikipedia.org] Stop playing around with Hip Hop and learn to compose and play like this and you will be legend.
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Its a little too broad to say "beat making" soft.. (Score:1)
linuxsampler dropped the ball (Score:4, Insightful)
BULLSHIT (Score:1)
Beat making software is FREE or near-free. Audacity doesn't cost a dime. Paying to clear samples, well that's a topic for another article. As far as making your own sounds, there are tons of free and inexpensive software synths, and free or inexpensive WAV collections (samples or loops). I own a bunch of $2-$5 beat making apps for my iPhone. Native Instruments iMaschine costs $5 and allows you to sample and compose songs using your own recordings/samples. I'm not sure that 'beat making' needs to be much che
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Of course, they could suck it up
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Hydrogen Drum Machine (Score:1)
And what about the Hydrogen drum machine software, isn't that what they would aim for? So, why reinventing the wheel?
But admittedly I'm not an audio professional so maybe all this free/opensource software is missing key features I don't know about, which only commercial tools are providing so far...
Really? (Score:2)
Did they even look? Rosegarden does exactly what they are after... There is even a OSS version of Fruity Loops.
Ridiculously expensive? I think not. (Score:2)
$60 for Reaper and a slew of free as in beer plugins is not ridiculously expensive, and Reaper's anything but crippled.
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Good luck with yet another DAW
Digital Audio Workstation. Solving the world energy crisis one unnecessary Google search at a time!
You lost me at "Hip Hop Artist" (Score:4, Funny)
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In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
University professors teach Congolese youths how to make beats.
It ain't all bad (Score:2)
A lot of the comments have been hating on hip-hop, and well, I can't say I blame them. Most of the stuff you hear is just the same old shit. Some boring harmony over a lifeless beat and some lyrics that are so dishonest that it's almost offensive. But then you get some people who take hip-hop and turn it into something wonderful.
There are/were quite a few jazz guys who are taking the chill groove of hip-hop and fusing it with jazz, adding beautiful harmonies and some honest expression. In the 90's there was
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Not to mention other crossovers like Beck, the Beasties, Japanese gu
Rosegarden and Buzztard (Jeskola Buzz) (Score:4, Informative)
there is nearly-free software out there (Score:3)
CM Studio is inadequate? Every issue of Computer Music [musicradar.com] comes with a DVD, CMStudio being the centerpiece, with loads of samples etc.
No, not free. Usually about $15 in the US, £6+ in UK, more elsewhere I bet.
If you don't wanna pay $15, well, have at it.
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Then you are free to use the free software that doesn't exist.
Hip Hop stars and Professors... (Score:2)
If we can get one to take up race car driving and the other to take up medicine, I think we can do a sequel to "Buckaroo Bonzai"!!!!
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Open Source works better for some types of software more than others.
Audio software requires using audio engineers and guys who know a lot if math if you want to produce something that can be used professionally. This isn't the type of tasks that the average programmer can tackle.
Holy crap, you are stupid (Score:1)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin_(operating_system) [wikipedia.org]
"It is composed of code developed by Apple, as well as code derived from NeXTSTEP, BSD, and other free software projects."
https://developer.apple.com/opensource/index.html [apple.com]
"Apple, the first major computer company to make Open Source development
a key part of its software strategy, continues to use and release significant
quantities of open source software."
Their 'first' statement is questionable, but does nothing for your argument either way pilgrim.
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riaa will try to shut them down better have a big legal fund
Why would RIAA do that? They love people creating the stuff, as long as they get a cut of the action.
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Why would RIAA do that? They love people creating the stuff, as long as they get a cut of the action.
That's the problem in a nutshell; nobody needs the RIAA to record and album any more, nor to popularize it. That's why the RIAA was always against CD burners and file sharing sites; they are used by RIAA labels' competetion, the indies.
When my daughter was a teenager (she's 25 now), she bought very little RIAA fare, instead going for indie stuff and even local bands (she was into ska and punk, like her frien
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Then again, if you were willing to spend the money on turntables and records, getting a vinyl controlled mp3 solution wouldn't be a huge jump. And I think a lot of artists do just that....
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LOL what??? GarageBand costs like $40 and comes pre-installed *free* on every single Macintosh.
and yeah you can make hella sick beats using just garageband and some imagination. damn.
I wouldn't really consider that free, considering you have to buy an obscenely overpriced computer before you can so much as install it...