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	<title>PublicSpaces Lab &#187; Lo-Fi</title>
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	<description>Releasing fine electronica since 2007</description>
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		<title>Of Lo-Fi, 8Bit, and the Circuit-Bent&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://publicspaces.me/lab/2009/11/of-lo-fi-8bit-and-the-circuit-bent/</link>
		<comments>http://publicspaces.me/lab/2009/11/of-lo-fi-8bit-and-the-circuit-bent/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Nov 2009 06:07:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mr. Bitterness</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Editor's Corner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[8Bit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Circuit Beding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lo-Fi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Recording]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[As a newly minted editor of PublicSpacesLab, I suppose I should take a moment to introduce myself. My name is Mr. Bitterness.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As a newly minted editor of PublicSpacesLab, I suppose I should take a moment to introduce myself. My name is Mr. Bitterness.</p>
<p>Okay, enough of that shit.</p>
<p>I wanted to talk about some of the more low-tech corners of the electronic music world. I&#8217;ve been a musician for about 25 years, since I was 12 (that makes me 37 in case you were stuck on the math). At 16, I started taking the Electronic Music course at the local community college. Our main synths in our &#8220;studio&#8221; was the brand new Korg M1, the Yamaha DX7, a Roland D10 and an Alesis drum machine. I knew those synths like the back of my hand.</p>
<p>I knew that the strings on the Korg were on patch 7 (symphonic) and that there was a piano on 41 (I think). There was a lot of power for those days, but things were somewhat accessible, you knew where to go, how to get there, and could flesh out an idea pretty quickly. I&#8217;ve spent the years since then being on the bleeding edge of technology (in my day job doing server support and development) and in being a frustrated, undiscovered singer-songwriter.</p>
<p>Things have progressed to more and more impressive quality, power, fidelity, and with the advent of VST&#8217;s and a new breed of MIDI controllers, there is virtually nothing you can&#8217;t do on your slightly better than average home computer. That&#8217;s fantastic! <strong>It&#8217;s also the problem</strong>.</p>
<p>You can now musically masturbate for hours on end, trying to find the perfect bass and snare combination. Five hours of screwing around later, you have a headache, you&#8217;ve totally lost the idea that you sat down with, and you realize that the entire time you&#8217;ve been sitting in front of an open window without any pants. I digress.</p>
<p>I find myself these days drawn to the 8bit/Circuit-Bent scene because of it&#8217;s low-tech, hands-on immediacy. In some ways all this power has made things too abstract. While I was among the first to embrace the power of &#8220;in the box&#8221;, I more recently find myself enjoying taking a childs toy, plugging it into a mixer and seeing what I can accomplish.</p>
<p>The other thing I really love, and the main point I wanted to make with this post, is that many of us who grew up with this technology, riding the wave as it matured, have become the status-quo. While we were downloading 100&#8242;s of &#8220;FREE VST&#8217;s&#8221; (a four-letter word if ever there was one), a bunch of kids and other technological ne&#8217;er do-wells picked up the technology we discarded years ago and started doing some amazing things with it.</p>
<p>With Gameboys and Speak-n-Spells and Atari 2600&#8242;s that have been modded and hacked, they are creating music that <strong>doesn&#8217;t </strong>sound perfect, that <strong>isn&#8217;t</strong> perfectly recorded and multi-sampled, and thank fucking god for that! (I pick no particular god here, so choose whichever god on whose behalf you would like to be offended).</p>
<p>While there is nothing at all wrong with pursuing the cleanest, purest engineering/recording, there is something oddly exciting about the sound of broken machines and electricity run amok. By way of example, I was pleasantly surprised by an odd-sound I came across playing with a Commodore 64 emulator (okay, technically a VST but with a lo-fi sound) and tried to create something interesting out of it. (You can hear the results <a title="Breaking Down" href="http://soundcloud.com/mr-bitterness/breaking-down" target="_blank">here</a>.)</p>
<p>Amongst other things, in future columns I hope to highlight some of the musicians and scenes I&#8217;ve stumbled across while looking for inspiration anew after so many years of pursuing my muse.</p>
<p>Thanks for the space, PublicSpacesLab!</p>
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