The first Deadmau5 song I heard was strobe, and it was quite a while after the song’s release. What really captivated me about the song was the flow of the composition and almost intricate story that the song was trying to convey that is hard to find in mainstream EDM. Looking at the current landscape of edm performance it’s quite evident that artists who are talented in making good drops and build-ups in a sonic sense really dominate the scene (eg: Sara Landry or Oguz in the dark techno genre). These artists also play almost identical sets at different venues. And as the reading suggests the logistical advantage of a predefined set at a large venue is an attractive upside.
I feel that while DJs create an atmosphere that attracts audiences with pre planned sets. They can use things like strong track selection and manipulation of the tracks to really make a compositional performance. Almost like when an opera singer, who would be singing the same song every interaction but different aspects of the performance would express the singer’s identity better. For example some mainstream Djs like Patrick Mason incorporate extreme dance moves (for a DJ at least) to bring a different dimension to performance that most likely is prerecorded.
I feel that live coding due to its unique position as a field that is not yet mainstream, but has a rich culture and community position itself in the middle of “free” improvised as seen with Derek Bailey and mainstream Djs who just press play.
Live coding provides the performer with a larger range of tools through the computer to manipulate what might be a pre-prepared work. A performer can come with basically a vibe or a raw idiomatic motive (for example like “ I want to make every here at the club to feel euphoric today because I remembered a nice memory from my childhood”) that they want share with the audience and then write a few lines of code or even change the current preparation so drastically with a few modifications to steer the expression of the performance,