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A Beautiful Compilation from 40+ Artists Shows Support for Japan

Friday, March 18th, 2011

In a more connected world, we begin to understand more profoundly the life we share on a planet that is both fragile and potentially destructive. I remember the sobering feeling of listening to radio reports from Haiti during NAMM last year. There are countless calls for support for Japan, and I hope that, as in any disaster, people do learn more about disaster response worldwide, since any one of us can wind up as its recipient. But without covering every single one of those calls for aid, CDM contributor Primus Luta brings one wonderful musical compilation you may want to enjoy for some time to come. -Ed.

A week ago today a 9.0-magnitude earthquake shook northern Japan, leaving much of the area in utter devastation. For the past week, all eyes have been on the island nation, most prominently due to the affects the quake has had on nuclear reactors in the area. Only one day before the quake, Laurent Fintoni made his annual trip to the place he calls his spiritual home. Laurent is the man behind the Rhythm Incursions site, Original Cultures project and a host of other things in and around the world of modern electronic music. In the immediate aftermath of the quake, he housed up with Rhythm Incursions co-presenters Raid System and started work on a compilation to be released to support the relief efforts. Today, exactly one week after the quake, that compilation Nihon Kizuna has been released with a stellar lineup of over 40 artists including Kode 9, Kuedo, Rudi Zygadlo, Daisuke Tanabe, Paul White, Mux Mool, Ernest Gonzales, Onra and many more.

You can listen to a short mix of the music included in the compilation below or just go straight to the Nihon Kizuna site and purchase the compilation.


V.A. – Nihon Kizuna (日本絆) by laurentfintoni

Updated: TRUE CHIP TILL DEATH has a chip music compilation going, too. I know there are many others, so feel free to add them in comments.
http://truechiptilldeath.com/japan/


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*FRESH* Beautiful Rnb Beat (Fruity Loops Instrumental)

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

If you want to share this on facebook click: www.facebook.com This is my newest Beat its made with fruity loops 9 if you like my music, pls click on subscribe, give me some feedback in the comment section below and share this video with your friends =) youtube.com youtube.com facebook.com soundclick.com yegeda.de fruity loops 10 rnb beat free download fruity loops 10 rnb beat free download fruity loops 10 rnb beat free download fruity loops 10 rnb beat free download fruity loops 10 rnb beat free download fruity loops 10 rnb beat free download
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Part II
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Turn Ordinary Cell Phones into Beautiful Noisemakers

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

In your pocket, or perhaps orphaned in your closet, is a sophisticated piece of electronics going to waste. So, whether you’re suffering from iPhone envy or simply want to put toxic used electronics to useful musical applications, the cell phone noisemaking project at GetLoFi could help make a happier, noisier world.

The ingredients:

  • Software running on the Java virtual machine (good, old-fashioned J2ME)
  • A hack for proper input and output (from the various headset connectors)
  • Sequenced MIDI files

The result: otherwise silent, ordinary cellphones become living musical creatures. Install files, plus information on how to make the circuit for I/O, went up on GetLoFi early in October, but thanks to Michael Una for pointing this my way over dinner recently.

Everything you need:
MIDI Loop Sequencer aka Cell Phone Noisemaker


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Freeware: Niveau filter, PanCake

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Our freeware selection is back. This month’s picks are the Niveau Filter eq from Elysia, and the PanCake, a creative pan modulation tool, from Cableguys.

If you already got the mpressor, you know what we’re talking about. Yes, the Niveau Filter Eq is taken from the beautiful (and definitely not cheap) emulation of one of the most original hardware compressors on the market.
In the creators’ words “add punch to muffled snares, reduce the harshness from active pickups, create some wonderful Dub and LoFi sounds… It’s fast, efficient, and most important: it sounds great!”. The Niveau filter acts changing “the proportions between high and low frequencies. The principle is quite similar to a pair of scales: Dependent on the gain setting around a variable center frequency, the high frequencies are boosted whereas the low frequencies are attenuated (or vice versa) at the same time”.
Get the Niveau filter (AU, VST, RTAS, OS X and Windows) here.

If you like playing with pan and modulations, PanCake is definitely something worth having. It lets you create quite complex pan modulations with ease, drawing curves and adding a few tricks (like reverse waveforms, randomizations, etc.).
Unfortunately no AU version. Oh, we recommend having a look at the other Cableguys’ plugs too, there’s some quite interesting and very fairly priced stuff.
Get PanCake here (VST only, OS X and Windows)

Tell us about your new fav freeware findings, we’re always eager to hear from you…

More here:
Freeware: Niveau filter, PanCake

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Lights and Music: The Harmonic Center of the Universe

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

The Harmonic Center of the Universe from Jesse Stiles on Vimeo.

This beautiful, meditative installation of choreographed lights and sound, by way of Rucyl and Saturn Never Sleeps, is the creation of Chris Harvey, Olivia Robinson, & Jesse Stiles. The Harmonic Center of the Universe evidently narrowly escaped destruction last year during a thunderstorm, but perhaps Art is as much repair as it is creation.

Artist Jesse Stiles specializes in such light shows. There’s a clear connection to the polytropes of Iannis Xenakis, with its own cascades of choreographed light – a reminder that lights can still have a place, even in an age of projection. He also writes experimental pop songs and does sound and music for IMAX films. (Yeah, Jesse, you’re someone we need to meet.)

Along similar lines, we saw the gorgeous balloon and music collaboration of Robert Henke and Christopher Bauder, ATOM, last year in Montreal. What strikes me about all these works it that the lit object and sound appear to fuse to an extent that these become either musical sculptures or a kind of sequencer in physical space. It’s remarkable that the digital can make musical structure more virtual, more invisible, or more physical – almost without consideration one way or another.

More:
Lights and Music: The Harmonic Center of the Universe

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Loomer releases String – Synthesizer

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

1st December 2009: Loomer has announced the release of String, a new virtual instrument plug-in that emulates the beautiful sound of the polyphonic string synthesizer. String’s authentic tone comes from its accurate emu…

Continue reading here:
Loomer releases String – Synthesizer

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