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Tracker Tracks: Winners of the Efficient Music Competition Span Genres, Moods

Friday, November 20th, 2009

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You know, tracks. Tracker. Photo (CC) Roey Ahram.

So much energy is spent reflecting on the merits of different tools, or re-hashing tired debates like the comparison between analog and digital, often with the assumption that you can hear the tool in the finished work. But the real value of an expressive, creative tool is that it can produce wildly different results in different hands; it’s the measure of its versatility. And the measure of music is the music itself.

That makes it doubly satisfying listening to the results of the Efficient Music Competition CDM hosted with the Renoise production software and Linux-powered Indamixx netbooks and software suites. While tracker applications have been conventionally associated with certain styles, there’s music here from every possible genre. There are contributing artists at a wide variety of different stages in the development of their craft and creative output – just as all of us are growing and changing. There’s even a spoken word piece with a cow in a can (one of my offbeat favorites). I’m sure you’ll hate some of the music and love some of the rest; some will think the voting results were spot-on and others will be surprised and find the results upside down. Such is taste.

You can download all the entrants in the original Renoise file format, which you can play on any Mac, Windows, or Linux machine even with the free demo version. They’re ranked by popular-opinion vote.

http://www.renoise.com/competitions/indamixx/results.php

On the main competition page, most of tracks have SoundCloud players, which means you can also connect with artists you like at that community:

http://www.renoise.com/competitions/indamixx/

Remember that all of these tracks are Creative Commons-licensed, meaning they’re ripe sources of samples and sounds you can use freely in your work. If you need them for commercial purposes, you can contact the artists.

Taste aside, though, it’s fantastic to hear the range of activity going on. And keep in mind that the challenge of the competition, as sponsored by the software Renoise and Linux netbook vendor Indamixx, was to do more with less. As lovely as it is to have ever-growing computational resources, this is proof you don’t need them all the time. Even an affordable Atom-powered netbook is capable of real production, which says great things about the ongoing mobilization and democratization of computer music technology.

We have more than just a one-dimensional set of results. The contest judges offer lots to hear, including commentary on the tracks. And I’m pleased to share my own CDM pick and honorable mentions.

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Tracks in motion. Photo (CC) Phil Hilfiker.

CDM Picks

Now, for my own personal Editor’s Choice selections. Keep in mind, these are governed exclusively by my own taste; your mileage may vary.

My pick: After a lot of listening, I’m naming the official Top CDM Selection dvoraktunes’ Tangeble, by Dave Smith-Hayes.

The track didn’t make it into the top popular selections, which is another reason to highlight it here. Sure, it sounds chippy, but it isn’t fondness for chip music and raw, digital sound that prompts me to give it honors. I thought some of the sounds here were the freshest in the bunch. It makes nods to breakcore but manages to parody it in an intelligent, inventive way. (“Chipbreak” is an apt name, as it’s something that, well, happens to chips.)

Discover Simple, Private Sharing at Drop.io

Catch it on its drop.io page:

http://drop.io/dvoraktunes8190

Here’s what its creator had to say about the track and the software:

It’s one of the first few tracks I ever made in Renoise, I decided it had the best breaks and best instrumentation. It’s a chipbreak track that uses two drum loops (the amen and a Ryan Gruss break) and two simple waveform tracks. Along with filtering, delay and chorus effects. Everything is native to Renoise, no use of VSTs or third party plugins. It should be more than adequate for a netbook.

Generating Drum Kits in the instrument mode is definitely something some one should look into if they’re slicing beats like an old school tracker (fast-tracker II? It’s before my time, that’s for sure). It’s definitely helped me plug in breaks super fast. And learn your effect columns! They can help you achieve some of the coolest sounds that I find are really hard to emulate outside of Renoise.

Honorable mention:

The work of Cornelius Noll (aka 84 Caprice) is easily one of the highlights of the event. It’s worth a visit to the Audio Cookbook site for the track and a lot of background on how it was produced.

http://audiocookbook.org/audio_news/84-caprice-featuring-prof-karma-the-uh-oh-beat/

[indamixx]_84_Caprice_feat._Prof_-_Karma_the_uh_oh_beat.mp3

It did (rightfully) make it near the top of the competition, but it’s worth mentioning that Atte André Jensen’s Længere væk (“further away”) made exquisite use of vocals on Renoise – even if vocal production is not normally associated with trackers or netbooks.

(Working on grabbing the MP3 file, but until then, it’s in the contest results.)

I love Transient’s self-described “abstract hip-hop” on Green Butter:

green butter by transient

ASCII Death Star is a thumping, tasty track:

Discover Simple, Private Sharing at Drop.io

http://drop.io/asciideathstar

Sometimes, what’s nice about these sort of contests is listening to a track and hearing a musical voice that isn’t your own, that isn’t expected. The cut “Mole” seems just wildly quirky to me, like soundtrack material, and I got to play it while auditioning tracks as I drove along the I-5 in LA:

Mole by aksn

There were many, many worthy tracks, and polish was clearly rewarded in the top five, but at least I’m able to note a few that might otherwise have been missed.

Finally, I’ll shout out a couple of tracks for being especially topical:

chunter deserves recognition for inventing a name for this (“compact electronic desktop music”) and then using an open-source, Linux vocoder to sing it:

Compact Electronic Desktop Music by chunter

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Vigier GV Wood

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Vigier’s first single-cut model is named after Patrice Vigier’s father, Georges, who passed away in July 2007. As part of that meaningful tribute, the GV’s main thrust is sustain, and the desire to be different.

The singlecut body is alder, capped with uniquely contoured bookmatched flamed maple and it weighs in at just 3.3kg – that’s less than even the noticeably lightweight Gibson Les Paul Axcess. At just 38mm at its edge it creates a welcome change from some other overly heavy and bulky singlecut designs.

Vigier has long utilised its truss rod-less 10/90 system that involves carbon fibre being inserted into the neck wood – flamed maple that’s been dried for three years in this case – in order to improve stability.

“In full humbucker mode the neck pickup shimmers with a lovely glassy character and, irrespective of the amount of gain, sustains for ages.”

Here oversized tuners, a custom-designed bridge and a Teflon nut keep everything anchored securely, without increasing the weight.

Surprisingly, considering the guitar’s obvious heritage, the neck is bolted on rather than set. Why? “Because it [a set neck] is useless,” says Patrice, controversially.

“I considered using a through-neck for a long time as I still think it’s state-of-the-art, but it doesn’t bring a plus to the sound. And it’s the same with a set neck.”

Even the fingerboard is different: Phenowood, a synthetic material intended to offer similar benefits to maple or rosewood but with added stability.

“It’s primarily made of cellulose, like natural wood,” explains Vigier. “The difference is that it’s impregnated with a phenolic resin and it brings sustain to the guitar, as well as more stability and reliability.”

Along with 22 medium frets we get Vigier’s customary zero fret with an exemplary and low set-up; it’s not quite in Shawn Lane Signature territory, but way down there nonetheless.

The pickup choice – two German-made humbuckers from Amber – continues the leftfield specification. “When I try pickups I make sure I don’t know the brand name: I have just a number on the pickup,” says Patrice.

“After two months it ended up that the Amber pickups were the ones that ‘survived’ the comparison. They are very musical and ‘sing’ with the guitar.” The three screws enable both height and tilt adjustment and the dual humbuckers are controlled by a five-way lever selector switch and common master volume and tone controls.

Sounds

Hear are five clips, starting with the bridge and moving through to the neck pickup:

(2 pages; go to page: 2)



Read the original here:
Vigier GV Wood

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