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By now, (personal) computers have permeated almost everyone's
daily life, and using them to make music has come close to being as easy
as it used to be for a young rock fan to borrow the electric guitar her
or his older brother had gotten tired of and tossed aside to start a band.
As in Europe and America, a multitude of research is now being carried out
by Japanese institutions such as radio stations and universities on the
continuing history of discovery and creation in electronic music. But there
is probably no left who is thinking, "I want to play the synthesizer,
so I've got to go that school!" Those days when synthesizers and computers
were the prized possessions of a limited number of universities and other
institutions are over, and instead, these items can be found cluttering
the tops of kotatsu (a low table with a heat source underneath) in small
boarding houses in these same areas. I myself first came into contact with
computers when the company I worked at bought a Macintosh. During my breaks,
I would play with the freeware I had been given, and I began to get caught
up in the fun of making sounds with the Mac. Eventually, I went ahead and
installed some music applications of my own to "privatize" the
machine, and with the desktop printing (DTP) software made concert fliers
and 'zines. But when they found out, I was shown the door. There's always
one unethical person (laughter) in every situation. So it seemed to follow
that contemporary computer music can be composed, performed, or a CD recorded
in any room with
a kotatsu (actually, it doesn't even have to be a kotatsu).
CDRs (CD recorders) and hard disc recorders have also become
affordable. And if you don't quite have enough money to buy your own, all
you have to do is get to be friendly with someone who has one. You can start
off by providing the entertainment at a party, or at a small nightclub,
or even someone's basement or garage. While you're waiting for someone to
discover you, you can make cassettes of your work and send them anywhere
in the world. Before you know it, you might have your own fans. You can
find plenty of people to send them to just by doing a search on the Internet.
Yes, just by using the Internet or exchanging e-mail with people, it is
surprisingly easy to find people who you think might take an interest in
your music. Especially since I published my book, Cyber Kitchen Music, my exchanges with these sorts
of "home tapers" have increased markedly. Of course, this is because
my e-mail address is included in the colophon.
I get mail from people I've neither met nor seen who offer
their impressions of the book. If the sender is also involved in making
music, we exchange addresses and send each other our tapes. The ease with
which this is carried out is no doubt the result of the Net culture. Using
e-mail, which allows you to make contact with strangers in a comparatively
relaxed manner, gives you the chance to get to know a larger number of musicians,
regardless of where they are in the world, than you could in the past. |
Personal Computers are the Rock 'n' Roller's
Electric Guitar
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