Friday, 30 April 2010

Free plug in time again


This time it's from Elysia - it's the niveau filter, which is taken straight from the filter section of the Mpressor plugin (which I've had a play with recently, and it kicks serious butt!).....
Bit of a strange one to get to grips with, but essentially it's a hi-lo frequency balance control. Comes in AU, VST and RTAS formats, for both Mac and PC. Head to their website to register for your free download!


"Free plug in time again" > read the full post

Soundgarden are back!

But calling themselves nude dragons? .......
Never mind, here's a vid!




"Soundgarden are back!" > read the full post

Wednesday, 28 April 2010

Korg Monotron, most hackable synthesizer

"Good news for circuit benders. This is the most hackable synthesizer ever."

Denkitribe pairs the Korg iElectribe for the iPad with the new Korg Monotron analog synth. Check out the video.......




"Korg Monotron, most hackable synthesizer" > read the full post

Dreamcast arcade stick as MIDI controller



What? One Sega game controller, one USB adapter, one Max/MSP app called "MultiControl" (runs via runtime if you don't have Max), and some MIDI into whatever application you want. An easy formula to follow if you happen to have any similar controllers around (or if you get lucky at a garage sale). I would imagine other sticks for consoles (e.g. Xbox 360) would work as well.

Check out the video......



And if that wasn't cool enough already, check out this second example, with Monome:



Feel free to leave comments with your thoughts!


"Dreamcast arcade stick as MIDI controller" > read the full post

Binder clips make good cable organisers





"Binder clips make good cable organisers" > read the full post

Sunday, 25 April 2010

FIND SOUNDS - A free collection of sounds

Check this out.......

FindSounds.com is an online sound bank, offering a large selection of real sounds. You can begin by setting your minimum resolution, sample rate, and maximum file size requirements, and then browse through the collection directly or by using the search function.

Good for creative production! If you've got something like the QuickTime Pro plugin (or any other dodgy audio-ripping method) you can benefit from this eclectic collection.


"FIND SOUNDS - A free collection of sounds" > read the full post

Saturday, 24 April 2010

Glossary for sound engineers

Here's something else I randomly stumbled across: a glossary for sound engineers. If you're really geeky (sad) you can even print out all the pages alphabetically and compile your own hard copy glossary, to take with you to the park on a sunny day, etc.

My favourite definition has got to be:
Balls
1) The depth and thickness of a sound, usually on the bottom end of the EQ (as in "needs more balls").
2) The strength of the voice on the mic (as in "check it like you have some balls").



"Glossary for sound engineers" > read the full post

Digital Musician dot Net - music collaboration



DMN = digitalmusician.net: a community of musicians connecting and collaborating on music projects together.

Is this thing well known? Has anyone tried it out yet?



"Digital Musician dot Net - music collaboration" > read the full post

Music has reached its zenith.....

We can all go home now.........

"Music has reached its zenith....." > read the full post

In B flat 2.0 - a collaborative music / spoken word project

(I don't know how, but) I stumbled across this online... It's cool and calming, and good for imagination. Check it out.


"In B flat 2.0 - a collaborative music / spoken word project" > read the full post

350 posts and counting...

This is post #350

I will celebrate this with a video of a guy (a talented one) playing 'Flight of the Bumblebee' on a iPad in front of a bemused orchestra and crowd. It's at the bottom of this post.

If you like this blog please link to us from your website, facebook, blog etc.

Thanks to our readers and contributors and now back to work, looking for something else to write about.






"350 posts and counting..." > read the full post

DIY wireless midi from ADAFRUIT



Two videos here

The first is a demonstration of an inexpensive wireless midi kit which you can build with a kit and instructions from the lovely people at ADAFRUIT Industries (makers of my amazing xOxbOx tb303 clone, among many other things).

The second is an interview with the founder of Adafruit, Limor Fried.
It's worth watching just for the zen enjoyment of wide open space, uncluttered emptyness that you can sense in the presenter's head. Watch her eyes as she tries to keep up with Limor, or when she looks at a circuit board.



This takes a while to appear, slow server I imagine. If you don't see a video below this paragraph, just wait.



You can get more details (full step by step instructions in fact) from http://www.ladyada.net/make/xbee/midibee.html

This interview instead comes from www.rocketboom.com – go there to watch more pretty people talk about technology while wishing they had a job at MTV reporting gossip.



"DIY wireless midi from ADAFRUIT" > read the full post

Free Instrument time again!


How does a free Symphonic Orchestra from EastWest sound?....
Head to this page to fill in a questionnaire, and get yourself a rather cool plugin. Share and Enjoy!


"Free Instrument time again!" > read the full post

Thursday, 22 April 2010

EZmix - Mixing, the easy way



Toontrack (in partnership with Overloud) have recently released EZmix, which appreas to be a kind of channel strip, but one that places emphasis on ease of use rather than tweakability. Read on......

The idea is that you insert an instance of EZmix into a channel in your DAW and then select a preset in the plugin, depending on what type of channel you are processing (e.g. drums, bass, vocals, etc). The plugin has 3 sliders which control different parameters, depending on the preset you are using, so e.g. a vocal preset might have adjustable delay time, delay mix, and compression threshold.

While this approach may not be to everyone's taste, there are undoubtedly times when a rough and ready mix is required but you haven't got time to get lost in the minutia of detailed plugin editing, and for those occasions, EZmix presents itself as being ideal.

Available to buy now from the Toontrack website, EZmix comes in VST, Audio Unit, and RTAS, for both Windows and Mac OS X, at a price of £45 including VAT.


"EZmix - Mixing, the easy way" > read the full post

Wednesday, 21 April 2010

Turn your iPhone into a Tenori-On style matrix synthesizer



Whether you are an experienced musician or don't have a musical bone in your body, you can make good(?) music on your iPhone or iPod touch, with Aurora - a pattern based, Tenori-On style musical sequencing software.

No details on pricing or release date have been announced yet. Stay tuned for updates, and check out the (very rough) demo video........




"Turn your iPhone into a Tenori-On style matrix synthesizer" > read the full post

iPad controlling Reason and Record

While still convinced that on its own the iPad has too many limitations to ever justify its place in my living room, as a host for useful apps it's already a winner and it certainly creates some interesting competition for a lot of people.

As far as we (music making geeks) are concerned it is now the best alternative to the awesome Lemur – it certainly doesn't match it, but there are practical applications where the extra latency and inferior coolness factor are not an issue.

In these two videos...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWQO0CVsS5I
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zg4m-hXOPmQ&NR=1

...we see the first application of an iPad as a remote control surface for Reason and Record.

In reality the interface we see is a based on an open source format so it is not exclusive to Propellerheads software, it could have been used for Live, Logic or anything else that supports some midi mapping (you will probably find many more examples on YouTube by the time I have finished typing this). And for the same reason, it's not yet the brainless solution we'd like to have, as in 'get an iPad, connect to computer, done'.

But there is little doubt that having two iPads sitting on your desk instead of a traditional mixer/controller is now a very attractive thought.
Not caring at all about 3G, we can look at the price of a couple of iPads (why two? well why not? I like living large, and have one for faders and one for something else) and see that it's still way more affordable than a traditional dedicated controller.

At the same time I also believe that touch screen have great advantages but also great disadvantages, and I will always prefer some faders and knobs that I can grab and feel.
So I won't be convinced that iPads or Lemurs are the only thing I will ever need, but a hybrid combination of both is the way to go.

In any case, expect to see one or two iPads at London School of Sound very soon. You know, for testing purposes...


"iPad controlling Reason and Record" > read the full post

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

John Cage Scores



Some interesting graphical stuff...



Avant garde composer John Cage, he of the famous "prepared piano", wrote out his scores in increasingly eccentric patterns until they became interesting works of art in there own right....or "arse gravy" as our lecturer Mark dubbed them...apparently he had a nasty experience with an amorous music teacher when he was a lad back in Eire.

If you click on the pictures they will enlarge:












maningrey



"John Cage Scores" > read the full post

Free MIDI Step Sequencer for Pure Data



High-Pass Filter has a free MIDI step sequencer for Pure Data available for download. Read on....

The sequencer is locked to playing 16th notes, but the tempo and number of steps can be varied, and the pattern can be transposed. It also comes with a random pattern creation system, ideal for creating that "dead batteries in a 303" style sequence.

The top right window displays the pitches for the steps, selectable between -12 and +12 semitones. The centre-right window displays the velocity - where 0 means no note is played. The bottom window shows the currently playing step.

An audio demo is available at the site, as is the patch download link. Go here.


"Free MIDI Step Sequencer for Pure Data" > read the full post

Free Open Source Lead Sheet & Improv Tool



Impro-Visor is an artificially intelligent jazz improvisor tool... with a bit more to it. It can be used to make lead sheets, to experiment with jazz harmonies and solos, and as a teaching tool (by asking human students to fill in their own parts). It continues some of the legacy of Band-in-a-Box but it seems to be more in keeping with current generation software, it supports more platforms, and it's free and open source. (It even runs on Linux).

Rendered in low-fidelity, unaltered General MIDI soft synth sounds, I'm not sure you'll be tossing your Jazz numbers in favour of the computer's attempt. However, looking past the superficial quality of the sounds to the musical content, the software is pretty impressive in what it does, and, because it is a multi-purpose jazz tool and all-round lead sheet utility, I could see all sorts of uses. Read on........

Impro-Visor, by Prof. Bob Keller and students at Harvey Mudd College

Impro-Visor (“Improvisation Advisor”) is a software tool designed by musician and computer scientist Bob Keller to help jazz musicians work out, hear, and record solo ideas, including studying the work of others. It provides a notation capability for lead sheets that consist of a single melody line and chord changes. Melody content can be entered by a point-and-click interface, typed text, or a MIDI keyboard. Chord progressions are entered by typing the chord names or loading from an existing text file. Using the point-and-click interface, notes are sounded with the corresponding chord background as they are entered. Visual feedback is provided by an optional coloring scheme: chord tones show as black, color tones or tensions show as green, chromatic approach tones show as blue, and everything else shows as red.

A typical use of Impro-Visor is to ask students to compose a solo of one or more choruses over a tune being studied. By working out lines for the solo, a better understanding of both the tune and of line construction is acquired. In addition to the visual and audio feedback described above, there are various ways of getting suggestions for ideas, such as using scales, cells, licks, idioms, and quotes. These are part of Impro-Visor’s vocabulary and are automatically transposed to the chord of the moment. The user can then tweak the melodies as desired or choose alternatives. Ideas can be saved in the vocabulary for later reference. In one use, students submit their solos to the instructor, who then collects them and projects and plays them in the classroom, for mutual critique.

Another feature of Impro-Visor is the ability to generate brand new licks over a chord progression selected by the user. Lick generation is based on a specific “grammar”, and different grammars can be used to get different styles. Grammars can also be used in conjunction with Impro-Visor’s play-along capabilities to support trading fours or eights with the user playing in real time. Looping over the entire chorus or a small segment is supported. The accompaniment is generated automatically from the chord changes, and various styles can be specified. Grammars can be learned by Impro-Visor from a set of one or more transcribed solos that have been entered as leadsheets. A large collection of chord changes for standard tunes is available in leadsheet form from the Impro-Visor user group. Users can also create new styles, enter voicings using a keyboard interface, etc.

Links to browse, if you're interested:

Main Page

Tutorials

User Group

Solo Samples


"Free Open Source Lead Sheet & Improv Tool" > read the full post

Sunday, 18 April 2010

Free T-shirt!


Rode are giving away free t-shirts....
Just head to this site and sign up for their newsletter.


"Free T-shirt!" > read the full post

Saturday, 17 April 2010

Mflow: The Social Music Store



Proposing a new, free access to music business model, this ad-free music-based social networking site promises to fuse the best elements of iTunes and Twitter in one site with a new approach - and potential financial kickbacks for its users. Read on.......

You can follow the profiles of friends, artists and record labels and receive full-length previews of any tracks they decide to "flow" your way. Flowing is a "click and recommend to your followers" process, which they say provides better results than the computer-based "related artists" or "genius" systems used by other competitor services. And with this particular community, if a follower buys a track you've flowed their way, then you get a financial reward! 20% of the purchase price is credited to your account and can be used against your own music purchases.

The full-length previews are a great feature and a host of respected labels have already signed up to the service - including Sony, Universal, and respected indies like Domino, Skint, Freerange, and Wall of Sound. A mobile version is due to be released later in the year, which should also help aid your musical digestion. The only slight downside is that, for the time being, the site is available to UK users only.

Mflow went live on April 15, 2010. Check it out.


"Mflow: The Social Music Store" > read the full post

iPad USB Audio Interface, Coming Soon?



The Apple iPad could soon support USB audio interfaces, according to a posting on the Apple Core Audio API Mailing List from Apple software engineering manager William Stewart. According to Stewart, class-compliant USB audio devices will be supported through the USB dongle from the iPad camera connection kit; the iPad will support USB-Audio 1.0 class specification only, supporting full speed; iPad docks may be able to support USB audio device I/O; low-power audio interfaces will be able to run off the iPad (you may otherwise need a powered hub / device power); and the interface will support 16 bit audio (24 bit may be supported later).

At this point, USB audio support on the iPad is just a rumour - no official announcement has been made. Nevertheless a lot of people are excited about the idea. (Generally, camera accessory kits aren't a way of providing audio expansion!).

It's definitely one to watch.





"iPad USB Audio Interface, Coming Soon?" > read the full post

Friday, 16 April 2010

Make Music Online With Friends in Realtime



Exciting times ahead! Plugin developer Ohm Force (known for their plugins like effects Ohm Boys and Frohmage) recently tease an upcoming collaborative host. It looks like the sort of thing Apple could have done, but hasn't (when you see the video you'll know what I mean.. especially the whole "time machine" similarity... as well as the GarageBand-style MIDI and audio editing pane, etc. etc.).

It's an interesting - if not great - idea... one I think we'll see more of as connected applications become more popular. Ableton had promised something like this with Share, and then fell off the radar. Imagine-Line had a collaborative tool called Collab for its FL Studio, then abandoned it. The most significant competition comes from tools like Indaba. Indaba's edge comes from being powered by Web tech, allowing users to do all their editing right in the browser; serious users can then keep using their host of choice and just bounce out audio. While Indaba has an offline editor too, the addition of plugins in Ohm Studio is a big change. Read on.......

The real future here is collaborate editing in the "cloud" - sessions are uploaded to a server, which keeps track of versioning. The changes are realtime, though usually the trick to allowing international collaboration over the internet is to make things delayed enough that everyone stays in sync.

There's also an accompanying Web community for connecting with collaborators. Everything else about the product - detailed features, pricing, and specifics of how it all fits together - is as yet unknown. Mac and Windows are both supported.



http://www.ohmstudio.com/

What are your thoughts? Leave a comment!


"Make Music Online With Friends in Realtime" > read the full post

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Record Store Day - Support The Independants!!



To fight the good fight against the evil empires of HMV and Amazon et al, Record Store Day has been created to raise awareness about the little record shops everyone knows and loves....read on




Originally set up as a celebration of the unique culture surrounding over 700 independently owned record stores in the USA, Record Store Day has since spread internationally. In the States all sorts of events will be run with prizes and barbecues, I am not sure if UK stores can be arsed with all this Yankee hoopla (or are even aware of it) but either way it's a good excuse to wander down to your favourite vinyl emporium and buy an armful of over priced, scratched copies of records you already own on CD anyway. Support the little guy!!!!

We covered our favourite record stores in a previous blog entry by
Maningrey and we have a few recommendations on the LSS website as well.

However there are three great places we forgot to include that are worth checking out:

Intoxica on Portobello, vinyl only kitsch cavern of psych and 60's surf music.

Flashback in Islington, a friendly local store (for local people) that has a varied and every changing stock.

People's Sound Records on All Saints Road, this is the HARDCORE place for rare reggae, another bonus is you will probably run into Paul "did you know I am a painter now" Simonon there.

Happy hunting!

maningrey



"Record Store Day - Support The Independants!!" > read the full post

Bowling with Jimbo







Some crazy acid casualty (see above) has arranged a berzerk tribute to the Lizard King (also above)...read on




Kill Your Idols are preparing a Jim Morrison (and The Other Three) themed evening featuring a tribute band, Doors karaoke, a DJ set of classic 60's bozo psych and....bowling, which we all know Jim just loved to do between spouting his "poetry" and getting blown by jail bait...

This "jimboree" will be held at what is general considered the temple of world bowling, the Bloomsbury Lanes on Friday 16th - 8pm - 3am, £5 On the Door...which you could spend on a copy of LA Woman to see if its your thing...








"Bowling with Jimbo" > read the full post

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

Free Ableton Live Pack from ESKAMON



ill.Gates introduces a new free Ableton Live Pack: Fine Objects, created for Eskamon - a collaboration between Amon Tobin (Ninja Tune) and Eskmo (Warp, Planet Mu, Ancestor). Read on.....

"Fine Objects" is the result of the pair's unique take on sonic exploration and the manipulation of field recordings. From the onset, the two went out with a recorder, gathering sounds from around the house, yard and studio. Material recorded out of the studio included sounds from a parking garage elevator, a broken harp and the droning tones from a discarded piano. These were combined with more home-centric sounds to form the central theme to the song.

With lumbering alien bass and intentially dry, off-kilter percussion, "Objects" quickly grew into it's own symbolic representation of taking "odd pieces" and allowing them to grow into something a bit more "refined and ablaze."


As part of the release ESKAMON released a free WAV sample pack of the sounds created in the song (they want your email address first, then you can download for free). From these original WAVs, an Ableton Live pack was also created by ill.Gates for the project and give out for free with the release as well. This video is the tutorial ill.Gates shot to help explain the features he made on the Ableton side of the project.

Check it out and leave a comment with your thoughts:




"Free Ableton Live Pack from ESKAMON" > read the full post

Free Production Masterclass from Apple



A Grammy winning producer will be giving a free talk at the Regent Street Apple Store....read on




An Apple Made-On-A-Mac Masterclass with Grammy-award winning producer Kipper & producer/musician Phil Taylor will be running at the Apple Store on Regents Street.

Kipper will take attendees through an entertaining journey explaining how he works creatively with Logic Pro to create music for artists such as Sting and James Morrison.

The masterclass opens with a performance of the Sting track '1000 Years', co-written and produced by Kipper, with the creative journey explained using the original recordings and including never-heard content discarded in the creative process (including a recording by the London Symphony Orchestra).

Other topics covered include composing for film making in Logic, internet recording, remixing and backup.

The class is highly revealing and entertaining, with live performances by Kipper and Phil including a track especially written for the class. Along the way you will learn how award-winning producers work both creatively and technically with invaluable advice and tips for any aspiring or established producer, musician or recording engineer.

The event will run on Tuesday 27th April, 3 - 5pm and entry is FREE.









"Free Production Masterclass from Apple" > read the full post

Friday, 9 April 2010

Maize Sampler v2.0 - Create Your Own Virtual Instruments



Maize Sampler 2 is a new cross-platform tool for sound developers that lets you create sample-based virtual (VST and Audio Unit) instruments. Read on.....

Maize Sampler v2.0 is now available for $89. You can download a demo for free, and the license unlocks its full feature set. More details and the demo download link are available at the MaizeSoft site.

If you've used it, leave a comment with your thoughts.


"Maize Sampler v2.0 - Create Your Own Virtual Instruments" > read the full post

Thursday, 8 April 2010

Get The Party Started!...In a 70's bearskin rug kind of a way.......



I am vaguely thinking of hiring a lesbian bar and doing some DJing. What the friends of Dorothy will make of my selections I dread to think but I have a penchant for oily 1970's funk and if I wanted to cut a rug or munch some carpet here is what I would play....




1) M.F.S.B - Love Is The Message (Danny Krivit Special Edit)

This song has been remixed by all sorts of disco geniuses including Tom Molton, but Danny Krivit's version really hits the musical G Spot like stroking a 1970's hirsute pudenda. Its actually a blend of the original track, The Bottle by Gil Scott Heron and Oh I Love It (Love Break) by The Salsoul Orchestra into one seamless soundtrack to an evening of MDMA, jacuzzis, bubble bath and lady friends...Swiss Tony would approve.





2) Brass Construction - Movin'

Eight massive minutes of snaking synth, chicken clucking guitar and those huge soaring horns. Funk as designed by Richard Rodgers; if they ever made a blackploitation version of The Fountainhead (obviously unlikely I admit) this would be the soundtrack. You just strut to the bus stop with this on your 'phones, as if you were wearing a knee length chinchilla coat and platform shoes with live fish swimming in the heals.





3) Barry White - Let The Music Play

A classic from the walrus of love. Barry's best tracks are those with him talking or a little story line, this is about poor Barry having problems with "her indoor". She keeps lying on his bear skin rug and using all his baby oil so he has to go out to the local disco to dance his pain away.....and probably take a few grams of coke and get a blowy from a tranny.





4) James Brown - Papa Don't Take No Mess

On album this lasts fifteen minutes, this is the longest cut on YouTube I could find, but you can dig out the original and get lost in the hypnotic bottomless groove. If my son wrote a song this long and intense about me I would be like "right on sonny jim!"





5) The Fatback Band - Are You Ready (Do The Bus Stop)

I presume "The Bus Stop" is some kind of dance? It probably involves you standing gloomily in the freezing cold, reading an indicator that says 1 minute when in fact it means 15 minutes and then when the bus finally arrives not being able to get on after foolishly letting a Polish woman with five kids and two buggies get on in front of you.





6) Average White Band - Cut The Cake

I think the "cake" in question is a vagina but I could be wrong. These guys were all pale, freckly and Scottish so maybe it really is about cake??





7) William de Vaughn- Be Thankful for What You've Got

A silky smooth understated one off, after this hit the thoughtful Mr de Vaugh become a priest. It was for a long time the track I would use to slide into an evening of narcotics. Also covered by Massive Attack...it was roobish....Bonus points if you can tell me if he is brandishing a paint brush or a really long thin lipstick on the cover? If its lippy maybe a sign of his future calling?


>


8) Donald Byrd - Places & Spaces

Awesome cinematic jazz funk monster. So many fantastic moods and colours like Niko Niko's cart wheel sized £60 sushi mixed selection plate...Am I the only person who wants to eat that much sushi in a sitting? If anyone wants to help me polish it off contact me at the LSS office with the code words "Buurrd?...Yeah!"





9) Gene Ammons - Jungle Strut

Some hipper than hip soul jazz to cool the evening off as you start to wonder if you should take that extra line you promised yourself you wouldn't do....as covered by Santana...it was roobish.




10) Detroit Emeralds - Feel The Need

Fucking amazing in its original form, mustachioed remix wizard Tom Molton just did the simple trick of making it much much longer....and God looked down and said it was good.





Bonus tracks

11) The Trammps - Hold Back The Night

As all albums seem to have a useless "bonus" track tacked on these days I decided to break the mold and add a good one. This one is to be listened to as you take the first of many night buses home, drunk, depressed you didn't pull despite having made a point of cleaning your ears with cotton buds and knowing you will have to talk to a very hyper skin head about Hitler all the way to Old Street.





If you don't like any of these tracks...its your choice, but at least do me the favour of not voting for David Cameron.


maningrey


"Get The Party Started!...In a 70's bearskin rug kind of a way......." > read the full post

Monday, 5 April 2010

We're Jamming....



The Friday night jam session at the London School of Sound studios is starting to become the "in" place for virtuoso musicians...and the LSS students...




Check out the links below for clips of our last sessions chaotic free-for-all. Maningrey briefly joined in before heading to the pub, suitably chastened by his inability to play more than three chords while jazz fusion mayhem and poly-rhythmic world beat surged around him...

Our producer, Str8face himself gets all jiggy as the more tcehnicaly adept members of LSS run the voodoo down:



Groovy tabla and conga rhythms spoilt by your friends hamfisted slap bass which drowns out everything good being played by the others, including the singers lovely voice...



Here's hoping for more happy sessions in a room full of sweaty men and fragrant women...

maningrey




"We're Jamming...." > read the full post

Saturday, 3 April 2010

Rock's Greatest Photographs - free exhibition

I have been alerted to an upcoming free exhibition of some of rock's most memorable images that will running at the new Maiden Gray gallery in Soho this April. I have selected a few of the most famous photos in rock history as a taster....read on



1) Iggy Pop by Mick Rock

The aptly named Rock caught all the primordial fury of The Stooges at their peak in this image of Iggy Pop. His untamed, almost bestial stage presence is vividly portrayed. From the famous gig at the Scala in 1972 where he covered himself in silver glitter, cut his chest with broken glass and then vomited onstage.



2) Jim Morrison by Ethan Russell

A classic study of the leather clad lizard king himself, Jim Morrision. All the brooding drama of rock's premier poet before the drugs and booze reduced his feline beauty to a bloated Kraken.



3) Mick Jagger and Keith Richards by David Bailey

Their rivalry and also their creative closeness is intimately portrayed in this black and white study. The contrasting personalities of the Stones creative team are searingly apparent, Mick open and showbiz, Keith, troubled and in the shadows.



4) Elton John by James Fortune

Big glasses, big platforms and lots of glam! Fortune covered Elton in full flow during his first tour of the States, wowing the teeny boppers with his outrageous flamboyance. Here however is the calm after the storm as Elton recovers from a show, a brief moment of reflection in his whirlwind career.



5) Paul and Linda McCartney by Henry Diltz

Committed vegetarians Paul and Linda share an intimate moment. Taken in the garden of their opulent mansion in Surrey, the love and support each gave the other after the difficult period following the split of The Beatles, is clear to see in this striking portrait.



6) Bruce Springsteen by Ron Pownall

No collection of rock's most memorably moments would be complete without a photo of the Boss rocking the house. Bruce's reputation was built on his incendiary live shows which Pownall records in all its sweaty, exuberant glory.



All these images are featured in the new show so check this link to Maiden Gray galleries for more information. See you there!

maningrey




"Rock's Greatest Photographs - free exhibition" > read the full post

MusicTechTeacher.com - Quizzes, Games and Worksheets

I'm not quite sure why this calls itself Music Tech Teacher...it's certainly not focused on tech stuff, but rather on music theory. I find it's a great way to waste time, so much fun!!!

"MusicTechTeacher.com - Quizzes, Games and Worksheets" > read the full post

Collection of Curious Sound Objects



Here's something I saw on Vimeo that caught my eye/ear. Random but cool.....read on.

Georg Reil puts together an arrangement of six "exhibits" of sound/acoustics. Processing is used for recording live audio input, modifying the playback and generating digital sound according to sensor data.




"Collection of Curious Sound Objects" > read the full post

Korg iElectribe - for the iPad



Korg's ELECTRIBE·R has been reborn as a dedicated iPad app - the Korg iElectribe virtual analog beatbox! The regular price is $19.99 but a special introductory price of $9.99 is being offered until June 30, 2010. Obviously, it's not equivalent in capabilities to a $300 Electribe, but it's still pretty powerful.

Check out the video.......



Here is the iTunes Store link.


"Korg iElectribe - for the iPad" > read the full post

Friday, 2 April 2010

Bargain Music


A new series of cheapo reissues caught my eye...read on




Original Album Series and Original Classic Albums are super cheapo compilations
of five "classic" albums by various artists for around £11. The packaging is bog standard and some of the artists and albums stretch the word "classic" to breaking point but it is a great way of getting a shed load of good "reference" music for sampling or acquiring a whole catalog of a band you may have only dipped a toe into, such as I did with Earth, Wind and Fire. A good range of genres are represented as well, from funk and jazz to AOR (shudder) and country.

My picks are:

Original Classic Albums

Miles Davis
Duke Ellington
Nina Simone
Lonnie Liston Smith
Isley Brothers

Original Album Series

Dr John
Aretha Franklin
Bootsy's Rubber Band
Little Feat

Unless of course you prefer Ted Nugent, Kansas or The Cars....in which case please stop reading this blog.

Maningrey













"Bargain Music" > read the full post

Ableton Live displays Twitter Feeds

Just a quick and weird one here: Artist/Scientist Cassiel uses his mighty brain to get Live + Max for Live + MXJ + Jython (the last two, no I don't know either) to capture a real-time feed from every public Tweet in the world and display it as clips in Ableton Live.

And yes, that's all that it does. No point in it at all, except showing off Cassiel's ginormous skills; he immediately regrets it as soon as the utter banality of tweets takes over his screen.

While we'd rather see something that makes Ableton cure cancer (the only thing Ableton users don't seem able to do with it is some decent music, and I am one of them) one has to marvel at this particular achievement of genius and geekiness.

Here below the link to the video (yes, humiliate yourself and admit that now you WANT to see this, so much so that you have to click on the link to READ THE FULL POST)

http://www.vimeo.com/7552259

Check Cassiel's other videos for more regular Monome futility, lots of impressive stuff.
Seriously, if this guy could think about using his mind for something like world peace...


"Ableton Live displays Twitter Feeds" > read the full post

iPad DJ app - MIXR



Mixr - the first ever professional DJ application for the iPhone and iPad. Casual and professional mixing all in one.......

The multi-touch app features cross-fading, equalizing, cue, drag and drop tracks, and full effects such as delays and auto filter.

Here is a sneak preview:



No word on a release date yet, but stay tuned for more details on the developer's site.



"iPad DJ app - MIXR" > read the full post

Snoop Dogg Remix Contest



Remix Snoop Dogg's "That Tree" feat. Kid Cudi to win a VIP flyaway to meet Snoop (for you and a friend), £££, and more! Read on.....

Remix submissions are due by 30 April 2010 at 17:00 EDT - and that is when voting starts.

For more details, and to download the stems, click here.

Courtesy of Indaba Music.


"Snoop Dogg Remix Contest" > read the full post

Thursday, 1 April 2010

iPad Music Score Application


This is the first of a series of apps which will make the iPad worth having.
While you could argue that Kindle or other eBook readers could do an even better job of displaying score sheets, the fact that on the iPad a developer can build an interface optimised for a particular use makes all the difference.

Now imagine this....


2011, New Year's concert, every member of the orchestra has a stand with an iPad to contain every piece of music they will play that night, including personal annotations, and – for good measure – a few hundred other compositions, just in case the Encore goes on for more than expected. Maybe not in 2011, but it can't be long before the players realise that it's much more fun to have an iPad to play with before the show than their Nintendo DS (they are all addicted to Brain Training)

To clarify, this software does not allow you to write score, but only to read it. This however is what most players will need to have, in a convenient interface.

The app also offers a visual metronome (clever), and the best part is that instead of using a proprietary format it is based on standard PDF files.
All you need then is to print your music as a pdf file from your favourite software (Finale, Sibelius, Logic, Cubase, they can all print score and it's easy to choose the option to 'print to PDF' from your operating system without the need for special PDF support from the music software).


http://www.forscoreapp.com/



"iPad Music Score Application" > read the full post

FM Synthesis Video Tutorials

Brian Trifon presents a 3-part video series of FM synthesis tutorials using Native Instruments FM8. Great videos, and very helpful for anyone interested in FM synthesis, or synthesis in general. They can be easily applied to other synths as well (i.e. not just FM8).

Read on to watch the videos........










"FM Synthesis Video Tutorials" > read the full post

Java Digital Audio Workstation - javaDAW



MIDIWorks has just released version 1.2 of javaDAW - a Java Sequencer for playing and manipulating MIDI files.

javaDAW is completely built in Java and uses the VST plugin and ASIO solutions of Martin Roth. The source code is not available yet but apparently it will be in the future "when everything is stable." Read on.....

In javaDAW you can create MIDI clips and add MIDI notes to each clip with a (double) click of your mouse. Insert a MIDI track, assign a VST plugin to a track (F3) and hit the play button (space bar) after inserting a MIDI file of course. You can also create and import audio clips. Apparently, several bugs have been solved since the last version, and more features added.

For more detail on javaDAW's features, and to download it, click here.



"Java Digital Audio Workstation - javaDAW" > read the full post

SynthInvent - design your own monster synth



A new version of SynthInvent (free!) has just been introduced, read on......

SynthInvent is a free (Windows only) program that lets you design your very own monster synth by dragging and dropping modules into cabinets. Systems can be saved and shared, exported to a spreadsheet, or made into a web page.

You can download it here.

Features include: you can select from 9 styles of cabinet, drag and drop modules into cabinets, you can either start with a standard system or create your own from scratch, you can add controllers, patch cords, etc., and it automatically prices the synth for you (imaginarily of course!)

Unfortunately I am not a Windows person so I haven't had the chance to play with it yet. But if you do, please leave comments with your thoughts!


"SynthInvent - design your own monster synth" > read the full post