User:Bensac/sandbox

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DIGILIVE
 Live Music''' Live music has existed for as long as humans have been communicating—that is, since the dawn of man. Here’s a quick history. 100,000 years ago: First prehistoric performances. Humans “perform” by mimicking sounds in nature, meteorological phenomena, or animal calls. 40,000 years ago: The first musical instrument is made of animal bones. The earliest-known flutes are thought to have been used for “recreation or religious purposes,” experts say. 8th century B.C.–6th century A.D.: Ancient musical performances. In ancient Greek and Roman societies music performance becomes common at marriages, funerals, other religious ceremonies, and within theater. Middle Ages: Churches become the main music venues in the Western world. Pipe organs are installed in big cathedrals with natural acoustics, adding a spiritual and imposing character to the music.

Digital Music Digital audio is audio, or simply sound, signal that has been recorded as or converted into digital form, where the sound wave of the audio signal is encoded as numerical samples in continuous sequence, typically at CD audioquality which is 16 bit sample depth over 44.1 thousand samples per second. Digital audio is the name for the entire technology of sound recording and reproduction using audio signals that have been encoded in digital form. Following significant advances in digital audio technology during the 1970s, it gradually replaced analog audio technology in many areas of audio engineering and telecommunications in the 1990s and 2000s. In a digital audio system, sound of an analog electrical signal is converted with an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) into a digital signal, typically using pulse-code modulation.

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DIGILIVE MUSIC
''' Recently, there have been many artistes that composes songs through the blend of playing Live Music and Digital Music. Therefore the meaning of "DIGILIVE" is implying fusing digital musical programming with Live musical play recording. For example playing live guitar (lead/bass), piano, wind instruments or horns (trumpet/sax) but using a software to program the Drum beats or the vice versa. Examples of songs that fuses both digital and live instrumentals is a song by Camara Bill titled "I Love You". The term DIGI-LIVE was invented aiming to popularize songs that are composed through the fusion of digital music programming and live music playing to make a song sound more like a live recording rather than a semi digitized song production. The first album to be recognized as DIGI-LIVE project is the I LOVE YOU. However, there are numerous of albums and singles in and outside Ghana that has already done this but do not have a name for this style of song production.