I guess my point is that the distinctions are nuanced; essentially, a mashup is just a more specialized form of remix, involving an additional song brought into the picture.
have you ever tried doing either? try both and come back and say its a "nuance".
I have tried both, before I posted anything here to begin with. The distinctions are nuanced.
you must make a crappy remix or one hell of a mashup.
I may not take one thing you say here seriously ever again....
I don't really care if you do or don't - but I'm fairly sure you can buy one more of my remixes in stores than yours.
I'll concede that my original phrasing about a demonstrable difference between mashups and remixes was poor - but I won't concede that ultimately, the differences between the two are nuanced. Are there differences? Yes. But if you were to explain the two to a casual music fan or somebody who didn't know what either of them were, you'd hit on many of the same points in your explanations. Both are ultimately a way of representing a song in a different form than it was originally presented, with an end goal of creating something new and different that can stand alone.
Can mashups be created on the fly? I'm sure they can with the right equipment. Can remixes? Probably also true. Can both be created in a studio and be way more complicated than that? Absolutely.
How would you explain the Grey Album, Girl Talk, or that godawful Linkin Park/Jay-Z project? Mashups, or remixes? I think either distinction on its own is inadequate.
Oh, and for the record:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mashup_(music)
Mashups are known by a number of different names:
* Bootlegs (mostly in Europe)
* Boots (but not Booty which is a branch of Electro)
* Mash-ups
* Smashups (or Smash-Ups)
* Bastard pop (as in the combined songs are unofficial)
* Blends
* Cutups (or cut ups, a term originally coined by William S. Burroughs to describe some of his literary experiments that involved literally "cutting up" different texts and rearranging the pieces to create a new piece.)
* Powermixing (Usually the pace has to be sped up to allow for more song to be played and thus cannot play any single blend for the full length of the song)
In addition, more traditional terms such as "edits" or (unauthorized) "remixes" are favored by many "bootleggers" (also known as 'leggers).