[情報] John提供未發行單曲免費下載!
經過好幾個月無消無息的官網,一發文就是大放送啊!
John 的 Soundcloud
https://soundcloud.com/jfdirectlyfromjf
數十首未發行過的舊作,全都放在上面,快去下載吧!
然後發了以下長文~
http://johnfrusciante.com/article/hello-audience
Hello audience
November 24 2015
I now have a Bandcamp page and a Soundcloud page and have put up a bunch of
unreleased music of my past. My own name has been taken by several people, so
one is called jfdirectlyfromjf.bandcamp.com and the other is called
soundcloud.com/jfdirectlyfromjf.
我現在有了Bandcamp與Soundcloud專頁,放了不少未發行的舊作上去。
但是我的名字已經被好幾個人註冊掉了(XD),
所以我只好命名為「jfdirectlyfromjf」 (XDDD)
At present, I have put up a 19 minute group of 6 songs recorded on
4-track cassette in May 2010, the instrumentation being 3 guitars and one
drum machine. It is a bunch of weird anti-rock star guitar solos, played
mainly on a Mosrite Ventures guitar, and a Yamaha SG, accompanied by an
Elektron Machinedrum, excepting one song where I used a Roland TR 707, and
another where a 707 was used, but is not in the mix.
I have also uploaded a 37 minute collection of tunes made between 2009
and 2011 which were all recorded in my main studio during various stages of
its development, as well as various stages of my devopment as an engineer.
Furthermore, you will find in these places the full 20 minute version of
Sect In Sgt, my all-sample piece, in its entirety. The version which was
online before, under the name Trickfinger, omitted the first 5 minutes of the
piece.
In addition, there is an interpretation of the song Fight For Love from
the movie Casa De Mi Padre, recorded one sunny afternoon in November 2013 by
Omar Rodriguez and myself, plus Medre, a track recorded in 2008, and a vocal
and guitar only version of the song Zone, from my album Enclosure.
This music is all free of cost to the public, and can be downloaded or
streamed on Bandcamp and Soundcloud. With the exception of Zone, this is all
music which was made purely for the sake of making music, rather than for
having it released and thereby sold. In other words, Zone is the only song
which was intended to be on a record.
When someone releases music on a label, they are selling it, not giving
it. Art is a matter of giving. If I sing my friend a song, it goes from me to
her, at no cost. That’s giving. If I sell you an object, we do not say that
I gave you that object. Recording artists have been “giving” the public
music by selling it to them for so long that we now think of sell-outs as
dedicated musicians who love their audience so much that they aggressively
sell them products, and sell themselves as an image and personality to this
audience on a regular basis just as aggresively. Sell-outs is an antiquated
term which, when I was a kid, referred to artists who love making money more
than they love making music. The word indicated a lack of artistic integrity.
Sell-outs suck, in my opinion. Its a shame its become so normal, expected,
and acceptable to be one. When I was a teenager it was very common for people
who loved music to insult a recording artist for being, or becoming, a
sell-out. I believe that this was a very healthy instinct on the part of
music lovers.
Giving people music for free online being so common these days is a good
reminder that artistic expression is always a matter of giving, not taking,
or selling. Selling is the making money part, and artistic expression,
creation, is the giving part. They are distinct from one another, and it is
my conviction that music should always be made because one loves music,
regardless of whether one plans on selling it or not. Creation is the source
of life, while making money is what people do for food, clothing, shelter,
necessities, and comfort in some cases, and to exercise their greed in
others.
It is my pleasure to give you this music. Sometimes I will announce here
on my site that I have posted music in these places, and other times I will
not. Any music I stream from here on my site will now be linked to my
Soundcloud page.
I also must clear something up. I normally don’t read my press, but I
heard about this quote, recently taken out of context by some lame website
and made into a headline, in which I said “I have no audience”. This has
been misinterpreted, and by no fault of the excellent journalist who
interviewed me for the fine publication Electronic Beats. Ever since I quit
my old band in 2008, I have made music specifically to learn and to make the
music which I want to hear, without an audience in mind. Nevertheless,
between 2008 and 2013, every time I recorded a track, I sent it to Aaron Funk
and Chris McDonald who are my Speed Dealer Moms bandmates, and often to a few
other friends. Early on in this period, I realized that whoever I sent my
music to or played my music for had become my “audience”, ie the people who
I aimed my music at.
Even when you make music purely for the sake of doing it, as I do, it
sometimes helps to have friends who’s ears and taste you have in the back of
your head when you’re making it. But this can also put you in a
straightjacket, just as aiming your music at the masses can. Therefore, in
Jan 2014, I decided to stop having an “audience” in this sense, and so I
stopped finishing songs or sending what I was doing to friends, and started
making a lot of songs at once rather than one song at a time. This freed up
my mind so that I could make music purely to hear it and live with it, in
order to grow in a different direction for a while. This was not a permanent
decision. In fact, I’m already past that phase. Trickfinger is not my final
record, and I never said it was, as was claimed by that silly website.
Obviously I have a public audience. I am aware of them, and they know who
they are. When I said “At this point, I have no audience”, I meant “
audience” in the figurative sense of people who I have in mind when I am
creating, who I intend to send my music to or play it for. In the original
interview I had made this clear in an earlier sentence which was not printed,
in which I recall saying, “There I was(in 2009), trying to make music
without an audience in mind when I realized that Aaron and Chris had become
my audience.” So when I later said “At this point, I have no audience.”,
the journalist knew I was not referring to the public. In the context of the
Electronic Beats article, which was in regards to an album of music which was
not originally intended to be heard by the public, I believe my meaning is
clear.
Reduced to a single sentence, it would have been accurate to say that, at
this point, I have no particular audience in mind while I am making music.
Thinking this way gives me a certain freedom and stimulates growth and
change. It is a state of mind that has been extremely useful to me from time
to time throughout these last 27 years of being a professional musician.
I am grateful that I still have an audience, considering that I do not
make music preconcieved to conform to “what people want”. I don’t think
people know what they want, except that the general public thinks that
artists should sound as their audience expects them to. The general public
did not “want” Jimi Hendrix’s music before 1967. They did not know that
such sounds were possible. How could they have wanted it before they heard
it? Did the public “want” Sgt. Pepper before it came out? That would have
been impossible, because no album had ever sounded remotely like that. Yet
musicians who aim at becoming or remaining popular have gotten into this
stupid habit of attempting to give the public “what it wants”. I made a
good living doing this for years, and in 2008 decided that I would never
cater to people who believe its a musicians job to give audiences “what they
want”, ever again. I have excellent relations with the two independent
labels who release my music, and like me, they are not aimed at the masses.
In mainstream industry jargon, an artist who has a small audience is said
to have “no audience”. I’ve always despised that expression, because it
implies that audiences with uncommon taste are nonentities, rather than
actual people. I certainly do not talk that way. I love people, and do not
like to see them devalued. I’m glad that the people who continue to follow
what I do have kept their minds active and open. And I’m pleased that rock
fans are not the only people listening to what I’ve done. Thank you all for
existing.
--
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※ 編輯: nosweating (61.219.91.55), 11/25/2015 20:40:15
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