Today Many Musical Pieces are So Rich with Electrically Produced Sounds

Posted in: Piano by Madugundu Krishna on June 13th, 2012 | 0 Comments

Artists raging from Stevie Wonder (popular Music) to Herbie Hancock (jazz) to Pierre Boulez (classic music) have accepted technology as an important force in the creation of their works.

While creating music may be an art, the action of sound is a matter of physics. Musicians frequently use computers called electronic synthesizers to store sounds, recall them from memory to have them played, and distort them in new and unusual ways.

                 

 The use of computer technology in creating music is a widespread reality today, and artists raging from Stevie Wonder (popular Music) to Herbie Hancock (jazz) to Pierre Boulez (classic music) have accepted technology as an important force in the creation of their works.

Today many musical pieces are so rich with electrically produced sounds

Musicians use the computer like writer use a word processor, but, instead of words, they store, edit and cut and paste sounds. Today many musical pieces are so rich with electrically produced sounds that it’s difficult for non expert to tell what came directly from an instruments and what was electronically enhanced. The computer plays many other important roles I the music industry today.

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