Hey,
Thought I'd chime in here...
It's the same thing in the techno community, everyone thinks that techno music is made BY computers, like someone sits down, turns the gear on, hits the 'Make Club Track' button and it does the rest of the work. It bothered me to no end that people got on my case about me not 'playing' my instrumets, that I was letting the synths do the work.
You guys have brought up some interesting points:
1. For the most part, electronic musicians go light years further than traditional musicians when looking for new sounds. I'm not talking about the technical ability to whip out some crazy solo or scale runs; I mean either creating sounds from scratch or taking existing ones and messing with them until they're completely new ones.
Guitarists I think are the worst at innovation. It's still just a guitar, a mic and an amp, and it has been for the past 60 or so years. The design of the electric guitar hasn't changed much at all, people still look for that fuzzy overdriven sound that makes my ears hurt in bars.
2. Electronic musicians also have to learn about other sides of audio production, such as programming, recording, engineering, mixing, arranging, etc. And computers!!! A lot of traditional musicians are only good at performing with their instrument, they can only play with a group or with someone else's music in front of them. And how many of them even know how to use a computer?
3. Electronic musicians tend to try to push the boundaries of their gear as well as the genre of music they work in. This is why I find older hip hop so exciting; there were all sorts of new styles being created, all sorts of classic stuff being released. It seems though nowadays hip hop has taken a step backwards...
4. Electronic music is relatively new and not as accepted as a 'real' form of music because traditional music has revolved largely around the performance. There's not a whole lot of performing in hip hop, most of the time it's a couple of guys in the studio hitting away at buttons. This will change as people's ideas about music change.
5. People don't understand fully what electronic music is. Case in point, the preacher's comments about the whole 'record-player mixing thing'; he's a preacher, his job is to be God's representative on earth, not to know the in's and out's of turntables and samplers. As far as he's concerned, they're all one and the same because there aren't any pianos or guitars in it. I've tried time and time again to explain to my dad what a 'remix' is, he still doesn't get it!
My two cents,
Nick