Making records from previously-existing components (via editing) is obviously easier than writing, performing and recording music made up from scratch. It is easier in the same way it is easier to play a piano than it is to build one and then play it. I don't think even the loudest defenders of this idiom would deny this.
Electronic music makers often allude to this, in many cases dismissing or even deriding the "dead" skills of using instruments.
This is all fine, of course, and I pass no judgment on people who make their music this way. That's their thing, whatever. It remains that it is orders of magnitude easier to fiddle with existing sounds using software than it is to imagine, perform, record and then present music from scratch. In the sampling/manipulating method, one can pick and choose from elements with intrinsic charm, often culturally and aesthetically pre-loaded, sometimes ordained with iconic significance. These are rare, fragile and hard-won qualities in the physical realm.
Anybody making an equivalence between the two idioms (physical music and computer/editing music) by saying they are "just as hard to do" is talking out his ass.
What these people mean is that this music can be made with serious intent, in the same way that other music can, and its practitioners spend a lot of time and energy making it "just so." I don't doubt that at all.
This looped/sampled beep-beep music incorporates an element of scavenging, though, and induces a mentality that nothing is worth defending as the unique provenance of the people who originated it. This is probably why computer-electronic music has so easily been incorporated into the advertising industry. It shares the worldview that everything can be taken and manipulated, and its inherent appeal co-opted for commercial purpose.
It also comes from club music and club culture, both of which I despise, primarily because I despise the vapidity of club people. I guess these must be the same people who are inspired to make this music. I am guessing, of course, but it makes sense, because it sucks in the same insistent, style-over-substance way.
It is tempting to dismiss my criticism of this music (and some of you have already been so tempted) by suggesting that I don't understand it, and therefore have no standing to criticize it. While it is true I don't know the names of the artists and the myriad sub-genre taxa (and I dislike this music enough that I am unlikely to pursue it in detail), I do know what about it strikes me as both phony and horrible. I understand that part of it pretty good.
Musical concern: Burial
61steve albini
Electrical Audio
sa at electrical dot com
Quicumque quattuor feles possidet insanus est.
Electrical Audio
sa at electrical dot com
Quicumque quattuor feles possidet insanus est.