Learn To Make Hip Hop

...Learn to make hip hop music. become a true beatmaker today.

british

...now browsing by tag

 
 

British Mode

Monday, December 5th, 2011

During the development of notch filters and tone adjustments. American amplifiers and mixing units used a pre gain stage before applying eq. This produces a sharp response in tonal adjustment. British amplification and mixing systems apply the eg before the pre amplifier. As a result the affect of t
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Good Watching: Synth Interviews, British Synth Artists, Musical Pioneers from Detroit to Berlin

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Pour some port, find a comfy spot on the couch, and fire up the YouTubes. A surprisingly-rich raft of terrific documentary video for synth and electronic music enthusiasts has been making the rounds.

In our queue: Analog Suicide interviews a legendary vintage synth spot in Berlin, an hourlong documentary features not only Richie Hawtin but a range of techno pioneers, as well as other shorts from T-Mobile (yes, the phone company), and the BBC scores more history of the British side of the synth revolution in music. Sit down and get ready, because here we go.

From Detroit to Berlin and Back: In-depth Interviews with Pioneering Artists

At top: an hour-plus documentary produced for T-Mobile’s Electronic Beats series follows the rise of techno legend Richie Hawtin, including some terrific Detroit footage with artists like Derrick May, Kevin Saunderson, and of course Magda. Love him or hate him, Richie’s impact on electronic music is formidable, and it’s great to see coverage finally return to a tale of his roots. It seems the perfect way to get ready for Detroit’s Movement Festival, starting May 28. Via the astute music coverage on the XLR8R blog, here by Ken Taylor.

There’s quite a lot more Electronic Beats TV on the YouTube page:
http://www.youtube.com/user/ElectronicBeatsVideo

Here are a few of my favorites. Kangding Ray of Raster-Noton is framed by signature, hypnotic minimal visuals. He has some wonderful things to say about the beauty of materials in sampling. Then there’s some beautiful footage of TESSEL, a morphing architectural form which really deserves some separate coverage here. Have a look:

Thomas Heckmann looks at machines, vintage and circuit bent, and talks about working with their idiosyncrasies in musical production.

From the role of machines to the role of humans, Moderat talk about collaboration as therapy, and what it does for them … and then go parachute jumping. I think people falling from a plane makes the perfect soundtrack.

Conversations for Synth Lovers, via AnalogSuicide

AnalogSuicide’s Tara Busch is one of our favorite journalists covering synthesis, and a great artist to boot. This week, she visits the legendary vintage synth destination Schneiders Beuro in Berlin. Via Synthtopia, who, like MatrixSynth, I think has an alarm that goes off when videos hit YouTube with certain keywords – incredible.

On the producer side, massively-accomplished producer Gareth Jones (Depeche Mode, Wire, Erasure) makes an appearance, too:

Lots more where that came from:
http://www.youtube.com/user/tarabusch

Synth Brittania

Via our friend and Chicago producer/nerd fashionista/writer Liz McLean Knight comes a BBC Four documentary that covers British synth artists in the late 70s and early 80s, including Joy Division, Human League, Kraftwerk, Cabaret Voltaire, and Gary Numan.

There’s just too much goodness here. I want to sit down with the past and present staff of Keyboard and watch this one. Watch it while the Beeb lets you.

I’m personally gratified in that I believe technically and artistically, we’re entering another of these sorts of ages. Who knows what the cultural impact may be, but at least for those passionate artists and technologists who are involved, something’s happening. And these videos are a great place to begin for inspiration.

So, now that you have those to watch, I guess I really need not write until Monday! See you then! (joke … sort of.)


AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Ableton Amp: Amplifier Add-on for Live Goes Minimal, Dirty, Integrated

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Dirty and minimal – that’s how I’d describe first impressions of Amp, the just-announced Ableton amp modeling add-on for Live, available a la carte or free with Live Suite. It appears at first glance to be just what you’d expect: it’s a radically simplified user interface for modeling amplifiers (“Amp”) and cabinets (“Cabinet”). (Hey, shouldn’t that have been Amp and Cab, or does that make people think of wine and taxis?)

Or, as Ableton’s press release puts it, the aim is to “get good dirt, fast.” What you get in the add-on:

  • Live-styled, minimal UIs, emphasizing essential parameters
  • Inserts you can use to dirty up guitar tracks, clips, drums, synths – anything.
  • 7 amp models, covering “Clean,” “Boost” (think tremolo British), “Blues,” “Rock,” “Lead,” “Heavy,” and “Bass.” Names have been changed to protect the innocent… trademarks.
  • Cabinet, which instead of offering lots of mic positioning choices and the lot chooses the “optimized” positions for you you’re most likely to use.
  • A Live Lesson to get you started.
  • Integrated goodness, with Instrument Racks, Effect Racks, Live Clips, and 400 presets.

As with previous recent add-ons, Ableton chose a collaborator to bring in expertise. The developers are Swedish outfit Softube, who have done development work for the likes of Abbey Road Studios, TC Electronic, and even work on Marshall’s new JMD:1 hardware/software guitar amp. Their specialty is modeling vintage analog circuitry.

I asked Ableton’s Daniel Büttner, Sound Product Manager for Amp, to explain why we should care. “It’s fully integrated in Live,” he responds, “it’s extremely simple to use and you can get results quickly, and (a subjective observation – ) it sounds wonderful.”

And, says Daniel, Amp is built to be part of the Suite. “Amp greatly enhances the existing Suite instruments. Check out the preset “Bass-Mosh Pit Bass” for example – it is a rather thin sounding Tension preset run through Amp. The result is amazing.”

What Amp isn’t, it seems, is direct competition for guitar packages like IK Multimedia’s AmpliTube and NI’s Guitar Rig. Instead of tons and tons of tweaking and different models, it focuses on the basics. As such, I can certainly see it appealing to people who are deep into the Ableton way of doing things. And with clips and racks and such, while guitarists may insist upon more extensive toolsets in dedicated packages, this appears to be a more producer-friendly option for those who find the big guitar suites overwhelming.

US$129 as the add-on, but it seems more likely as a way of sweetening Suite; once you have Suite, it’s a free download. That means, Suite users, you can go grab it right now with 8.2.

http://www.ableton.com/amp

Read the original here:
Ableton Amp: Amplifier Add-on for Live Goes Minimal, Dirty, Integrated

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Randall RT503

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Many people associate Randall with its artists. Dimebag was a long-time user of the company’s solid-state amps and co-designed the Warhead. Likewise, Kurt Cobain used a solid-state Commander to record Nirvana’s debut, Bleach.

But Randall knows a thing or two about valves, too (take Kirk Hammet’s use of his RM120KH to inflict crippling high-gain tone), and is now offering its pure valve designs at a more affordable price with the RT Series, a family of traditional valve amps aimed at valve first-timers.

There are four amps in the range: a 50-watt, two-channel head and combo, and a pair of three-channel heads available in a 100 or 50-watt format. The latter RT503, our review model, gives you the full three-channel design (clean, OD1 and OD2) with separate EQs per channel for a more manageable output level.

It comes fitted with a pair of US staple 6L6 output valves, but these can be swapped for EL34s if you’re after a more British flavour. Biasing valve amps is usually best left to the experts, but the Bias control on the back of the amp lets you replace, swap and bias the valves yourself.

Randall’s clean sound has been divisive, but the RT’s dedicated clean channel goes some way towards remedying this. Boosting the preamp all the way for pushed sounds can get fizzy; it’s better to let the 6L6s do the work by keeping the preamp gain below three-quarters and pushing the power section. The reward ranges from spiky funk with our Strat’s singlecoils, up to a slightly driven jangle with humbuckers.

The clean channel’s bright switch is subtle, but once you’ve cranked the output you’ll notice the extra bite. Tipping OD1′s gain control just above zero results in a solid ‘in between clean and dirty’ tone. Above this things get progressively heavier with almost enough gain for metal at the top.

Select OD2 and you might as well don a poodle wig, bust out the pentatonics and write an album that becomes known by its sleeve colour. This is ‘Tallica territory. Where OD1 is fairly wide and open sounding, OD2 is tighter, meatier and, to our ears, more scooped.

The sub £1,000 price bracket has become a regular stomping ground for amp builders. While this amp does an admirable job of providing a range of sounds for different genres, Randall’s heritage rightly implies a penchant for the heavier end of the spectrum, and the RT503 seems happiest when you really allow it to wail.



Read the rest here:
Randall RT503

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

MXL Drum Microphones

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

MXL microphones are manufactured by American technology giant Marshall Electronics (not to be confused with the legendary British guitar amps). Well known around the rest of the world, MXL mics are now being distributed in the UK by Bedfordshire-based pro recording specialist musictrack.

For review, musictrack sent a selection of four mid-range models, all of which are suitable for miking drums. Mark Gordon of musictrack describes the mics as being robust enough to cope with live situations yet providing a quality of sound that would stand up in a studio.

“The mics gave our kit a warm, natural and clear sound, so the drums had a polished presence front-of-house.”

The four mics are the A-55 Kicker, which lends itself to bass drums and other low-end instruments, the chunky-looking multipurpose Cube, a pair of 603 overhead mics and a V67n small diaphragm condenser mic.

Of the four, only the A-55 Kicker is a dynamic mic, with the other three models all being condenser models. With its large diameter, black metal casing and protective front mesh, the A-55 Kicker looks ready to spend its working life in close proximity to a bass drum. A second glance at its name reveals a barely coded reference to its claimed butt-shaking capabilities.

Part resembling a vintage vocal mic is the Cube. Its square-sided housing conceals a condenser element with a gold-sputtered diaphragm. Sputtering is a process that applies an incredibly thin layer – in this case 6/1000th of a millimetre – of gold to the surface of the diaphragm. This makes the diaphragm rigid while leaving it capable of agile movement, so making the mic sensitive and efficient. MXL recommends the Cube for all types of percussive miking duties.

The pair of 603 condenser mics have been designed to be used as joint overheads above a kit, but MXL claims that they can also be used for miking vocals, strings, piano and even guitar amps.

The green and gold V67n is described as being similarly versatile and able to record a variety of different instruments. Both the V67n and the pair of 603s also feature a 6-micron gold-sputtered diaphragm.

Unlike the 603s, the V67n contains a transformer, which, Mark Gordon explains, imbues it with subtly different tonal characteristics.

Hands On

We tested the mics at a gig. The bass and snare drum were close-miked with the A55-Kicker and the Cube respectively, while the pair of 603s covered the rest of the kit using the overhead miking method pioneered by Glyn Johns (one mic overhead aimed down at the snare, with the other at 90

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Waves PIE Compressor

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

Eddie Kramer, the veteran engineer/producer with a CV that reads like a who’s who of rock gentry, has given his personal thumbs-up to a couple of vintage model plug-ins from Waves: the HLS Channel and this, the PIE Compressor.

Back in its day, the Pye compressor was broadly acknowledged as one of the best bus compressors around. It was a 1960s solid-state British design made in Cambridge by Pye TVT as part of their mixing console range. This was prior to the advent of the SSL bus compressor that became ubiquitous during the ’80s, making almost all precedents a faded memory.

Bus compressors are the ones intended to be inserted across a stereo mix to ‘glue’ the whole track together. Their quality is in the transparency, so when they’re doing a good job, it’s not always obvious because you’re not hearing common compression artifacts such as pumping and breathing. What you’re looking for is a tight, warm sound, a controlled dynamic and a cohesive mix picture.

The controls on the PIE are straightforward and very literal in their recreation of the original. It’s a dead ringer for the real thing and the VU ballistics are spot on, too.

A Threshold knob sets the level at which compression starts, and a Ratio dial sets the amount of compression that’s applied to the signal once it passes the threshold. It’s a fixed attack device, so there’s no control for that, but you can set the Decay Time (release) from 100ms to 3.2secs.

Finally, an Output knob enables you to set the post-compression makeup gain.

The only real departure from the original’s control set is a switch to toggle analogue hum/noise, which can work on either a 50Hz or 60Hz mains frequency. While this accurate recreation is appreciated, as with many plug-in emulations of old gear, it’s a shame that it’s not possible to break free of the original’s limitations.

Here, for example, variable – as opposed to stepped – release, threshold and ratio controls would have been welcome for more precise control. And why not toss in adjustable attack and a sidechain option?

Mmm, PIE…

As ever, though, it’s the sound that counts, and this is without doubt a great-sounding compressor that’s very easy to set up and use. The beauty is in the solidity, warmth and detail that it brings, and the lack of undesirable side effects.

The tightness and definition in the lower mid and mid ranges really make this a spectacular processor. This doesn’t need to just sit on a bus either: it comes in mono and stereo versions, and it’s perfectly suited to natural dynamic control of vocals or instruments.

One thing to note with PIE is that it does subtly subdue the very highest frequencies.

Overall, PIE compressor is a very faithful emulation of the original unit. It’s simply a great-sounding compressor that’s perfect for overall mix compression, sub groups or individual sounds.

Listen to our audio demo to hear what the PIE Compressor can do:

Vocal – uncompressed

Vocal – PIE compression

Mix – unprocessed

Mix – processed

Related Stories



The rest is here:
Waves PIE Compressor

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Mesa/Boogie TransAtlantic TA-15

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Mesa/Boogie doesn’t do kneejerk reactions when it comes to amp trends. On the contrary, the now legendary Californian brand quietly boasts something of a stellar track record in helping to redefine both musical and technological boundaries.

Its Mark series amps power countless players to new levels of gain, volume and portability, while its Rectifier stacks helped in no small way to reinvent the whole metal genre. The company’s next focus is the increasingly popular – thanks to the Orange Tiny Terror – micro amp market with the impossibly cute TransAtlantic. Two channels, five modes and up to 25 watts of blue-glowing fun.

“In a straight fist-fight, the TransAtlantic trounces Orange’s standard Tiny Terror for volume, headroom and flexibility.”

The TransAtlantic gets its name from the classic British and American sounds that inspire its dual channels. Channel one begins in traditional Vox tonal territory and has two modes; normal for the cleanest tones, while top boost adds more gain. Channel two has three modes: Tweed for clean to break-up, then Hi 1 and Hi 2 for more gain.

Adobe Flash Player required to view this video. Get Flash Player.

Like many Mesa amps, the channels are footswitchable but the modes are not – in the interests of maximum versatility, the gain and tone differences are very wide between modes, so it’s not simply a case of flicking a switch – you need to make other adjustments. That said, each channel’s controls – volume, bass, treble and cut/ master – are so blissfully simple it takes but a few seconds to tweak things between songs if you need a radically different sound for a specific part of your band’s set.

Channel one also has a tone ‘cut’, just as you’d find on many Vox AC30s: you cut presence and high-end as you turn it clockwise. Pull it out and it becomes a master volume for channel one, presetting the ‘cut’ value to around 11 o’clock on the dial.

(3 pages; go to page: 2 3)



View post:
Mesa/Boogie TransAtlantic TA-15

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Magix Vandal

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

The Vandal guitar/bass amp simulator first saw the light of day as one of the included plug-ins contained within Magix’s Samplitude DAW for PC. Now it’s available as a separate product, and what’s more, it’s available for Mac, too – a first for Magix.

Like most amp simulators, Vandal provides a variety of virtual amps, cabs, miking configurations and effects. Unlike many of them, though, it uses physical modelling rather than impulse responses to calculate the behaviours of the speaker, cabinet, recording space and microphones.

Installation is via a single disc, and a download version is also available from the Vandal website (the boxed version includes Samplitude Silver for PC). There’s no standalone version: Vandal is a VST/AU plug-in, with a single-screen interface.

The positioning of components in the UI follows the route of your signal. The strip at the top is where I/O levels can be set, presets loaded and MIDI control managed. Each patch in Vandal comprises four complete setups (aka scenes) and these are intended for creating variations for use throughout a song – eg, to bring in a delay effect during a solo, or switch to a clean sound and so on. Annoyingly, however, there’s a digital click when you switch presets – it’s not loud, but it’s noticeable. Hopefully this problem will be cured in an update.

Magix vandal

There are about 80 presets and, as well as a bunch of generic ones, there are folders for some that mimic real amps (US Hotrod Stereo, Brit800 Lead, etc) and thinly-disguised song-mimicking patches (eg, Smoking Under Water). Many of the presets feature multiple scenes, too.

In detail

The amp section is where Vandal starts to diverge from most of its competitors. It’s not based on any real hardware and, in fact, there’s ‘just’ one guitar and one bass amp. Magix’s philosophy is that, owing to the flexibility of the two amps, you’ll be able to dial in a tone for any occasion, and there is indeed plenty of variety to be had.

You can choose your preamp model (Modern High Gain, British, Classic), select a channel (Clean, Crunch, Lead) decide on Class A or A/B power amp and dial it all in with typical amp-style controls. The Voicing section’s Freq and Curve controls introduce an EQ curve throughout the amp circuitry, giving dramatic tonal variations. The bass amp has different controls and includes an opto-compressor.

The speaker, cabinet, room and mic are the physically-modelled components of Vandal, and are thus potentially its most interesting assets. As well as 12 speaker types ranging from 10″ to 15″ cones in numerous sonic flavours, Vandal offers a small choice of cabs: five guitar, two bass. This leads to a lot of possible combinations, including artificial ones like placing 15″ speakers in a 12″ cab.

(3 pages; go to page: 2 3)

Related Stories



Visit link:
Magix Vandal

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Amedia Old School Series cymbals

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

There seems to be a small but vigorous population of traditionally-trained cymbalsmiths in Istanbul which every few years launches a new name onto the market. Amedia was established in 2005 as a family company to produce cymbals in the age-old way.

With a small factory in the centre of Istanbul owned by Ahmet Baykusak, himself a cymbal hammerer with 15 years’ experience, production is under the watchful eye of the Zilcan (Zildjian)-trained Eremya Arzat, who has trained many Turkish cymbalsmiths over the past 28 years.

For a young company we’ve never seen so many different series of cymbals – we counted 22 on the website. No, really, 22. Not only that, but Amedia offers a massive range of sizes and weights in any of the series, which makes Amedia potentially the most diverse company of them all.

“There is a large and increasing constituency of drummers who want the traditional dark and dry sound.”

Amedia is new to the British market and is distributed by Handmade Cymbals over here. Handmade’s intention is to offer “exceptional products at competitive prices”.

Build

Old School is one of the most recent of Amedia’s many series. The first thing is that all Amedia cymbals are hand-crafted from cast B20 bronze in the traditional style which has been synonymous with Istanbul over the past century and has roots going back at least to the founding of Zildjian in 1623.

The Turkish K Zildjian is the prototype on which jazz was founded. The transplanting of Zildjian to America opened up the path of the modern cymbal’s colossal evolution, but there is a large and increasing constituency of drummers who want the traditional dark and dry sound. Old School aims to provide that.

The cymbals look most distinctive – a rich coffee brown with raw hammered, leopard spot bells and thickly grooved upper and lower surfaces. Amedia says the colour is due to the Old School’s unique, secret, alloy. The blood red logo and denomination add to the distinctive look.

Amedia old school series cymbals

There are no computer-guided lasers involved in the rolling, just the experience of Eremya Arzat. Each cymbal is handhammered on an anvil at least 5,000 times. A supplemental knurling process creates the unique finish. The tone grooves are cut into the top and underside by a skilled lathe-man, again working entirely by hand and eye. A second lathing is followed by a hand polish before leaving the cymbal to cool for several days.

Finally each cymbal is played (and signed) by Ahmet Baykusak before leaving the factory.

Hands on

Old School are certainly traditional sounding – deep, warm and dry. Although we only got a minimal set to review, the 19″ ride, 16″ crash and 14″ hats sat together perfectly well.

(2 pages; go to page: 2)



Original post:
Amedia Old School Series cymbals

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Jaden Rose Original ‘Custom’ Hardtail

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

With just three years of guitar-making experience under his belt, Cambridge-based Jaden Rose is a newcomer to the British guitar luthiery scene. However, with 25 years of guitar playing credentials, not to mention extensive prior experience as an engineer and woodworker, his CV ticks all the right boxes.

Rose has clearly used the classic Ibanez RG as a start point here. While that might have some of you tut-tuting, it actually means that from the moment you open the branded Hiscox case you know where this Original series guitar is aimed.

The proportions look right, access to the highest fret is easy, it’s light in weight and virtually disappears on the strap – it looks and feels familiar. Yet this is no RG copy.

As an example of a custom build, the body has a centre-joined basswood back, with rib-cage contour, topped with a two piece spalted beech top that’s subtly carved on the lower bouts with pronounced almost reptilian ridges along those skeletal horns.

The woodworking is impressive; there’s nowhere to hide with an oil finish that here has a beautifully satin-like sheen. Four cleanly recessed screws sit in cupped washers on the contoured heel and hold the neck firmly in place – the body/ neck fit is close and tight.

Slightly more neck pitch would have increased the string height at the fixed, hardtail, Strat-like bridge – as it is, the treble side saddle’s height adjustment screws protrude a little uncomfortably.

The back-angled, six-a-side headstock is scarf-jointed under the first two frets and, depth-wise, the neck is skinny but not super thin (18mm at the first fret, 21.6mm at the 12th) with a typical classical profile. It has quite a flat back with full shoulders that by design feels comfortable with thumb-behind positions, a little chunkier for thumb around.

Jaden original 'custom' hardtail headstock

However, the fretboard’s edges feel new and a little sharp, not helped by an almost triangular fret section, which might help intonation but doesn’t aid smoothness of touch. But this is quite an early example – you’ll now find fret and ‘board edges smoother, and the rather sharp body edges will also now have a little more radius.

The set-up is low and fast, the black side dots provide strongly contrasting position marks, while the subtle offset abalone dots enhance the understated class. It’s a great job.

Dual DiMarzios screw directly into the body (with minimal height adjustment), and the pickup routs are super sharp, like the inset rear string ferrules that anchor the strings on the back of the body.

Both volume and tone sit a little further away from the bridge than the more Strat-inspired placement of an RG – a plus in our opinion: close enough for little finger volume swells, but there’s little chance you’ll accidentally knock your volume back in the heat of battle.

The three-way toggle switch, which like the volume and tone sits in a sharply machined recess, would get in the way for more strum-tastic right-hand styles, but for a right-hand position that’s concentrated over the bridge it’s an easy movement to change pickups.

Rear-mounted volume, tone and toggle switches sit in a foil-screened cavity with recessed plastic coverplate; access to the side-mounted recessed barrel output jack, that’s sensibly placed to throw your lead through your strap by the base strap button, is via a separate rear cavity. Time to plug in…

(2 pages; go to page: 2)



Visit link:
Jaden Rose Original ‘Custom’ Hardtail

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks