![]() Fantastically capable though a modern DAW is, though, its operation is optimised more for multitrack recording and mixing. ![]() It has always amused me to think that whilst another pioneer in this field, Pierre Schaeffer, was developing his musique concrète in Paris in the late 1940s, a certain Lester Polfuss was, at the same time, working with similar tape-based techniques in the service of popular music.Īlthough the basic edit functions of Select, Copy, Cut and Insert (and Loop) date back to those early days, the development of the computer-based DAW over the last 20 years or so has enabled us to manipulate sound in ways far beyond the capabilities of even the most sophisticated hardware-based equipment. Although mainstream today, his use of recorded and edited audio (bounced between two wire recorders) overlaid with echo and reverb was revolutionary at the time. One of the pioneers of this approach was the Egyptian composer Halim El-Dabh, who presented his tape-based composition The Expression Of Zaar in Cairo in 1944. The ability to manipulate recordings by physically modifying the carrier medium opened up new creative landscapes, allowing composers to apply techniques borrowed from film editing to the manipulation of recorded audio. Although nowadays we might smile wryly at the apparent simplicity of this setup, it was capable of making millisecond-accurate edits across two to 24 tracks. New versions of Sony's Sound Forge and, especially, the innovative SpectraLayers make possible new ways of editing recorded audio.īack in the days of analogue reel-to-reel tape recorders, an audio editor consisted of a human being, a splicing block, a razor blade and a reel of splicing tape.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |