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“Domino” – Jessie J / “Last Friday Night” – Katy Perry Official Music Video Mashup by Tanner Patrick

Monday, May 7th, 2012

My cover of “Domino” by Jessie J and “Last Friday Night” by Katy Perry (Mashup). Enjoy! Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter: www.twitter.com Online Store: www.tannerpatrick.bigcartel.com Tumblr www.tannerpatrick.tumblr.com Filmed by Madeline Becker Edited by: Tanner Patrick Produced by: Tanner Patrick Lyrics: I’m feeling sexy and free Like glitter’s raining on me You’re like a shot of pure gold I think I’m bout to explode I can taste the tension like a cloud of smoke in the air Now I’m breathing like I’m running cause you’re taking me there Don’t you know you spin me out of control Ooh ooh ooh ooh We can do this all night Damn this love is skin tight Baby come on Ooh ooh ooh ooh Boomin like a bass drum Sparkin’ up a rhythm Baby, come on Ooh ooh ooh ooh Rock my world until the sunlight Make this dream the best I’ve ever known Dirty dancing in the moonlight Take me down like I’m a domino Every second is a highlight When we touch don’t ever let me go Dirty dancing in the moonlight Take me down like I’m a domino You got me losing my mind My heart beats out of time I’m seeing Hollywood stars You strum me like a guitar I can taste the tension like a cloud of smoke in the air Now I’m breathing like I’m running cause you’re taking me there Don’t you know you spin me out of control Ooh ooh ooh ooh We can do this all night Damn this love is skin tight Baby come on Ooh ooh ooh ooh Boom’n like a bass drum Sparkin’ up a rhythm Baby, come on! Ooh ooh ooh ooh Rock my world until the

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Vox amPlug Night Train

Sunday, April 29th, 2012

Vox’s range of amPlug headphone amps has expanded once again.

The Night Train emulates the Bright and Thick channels of the titular Vox amp, specialising in high-gain classic rock but also sneaking in some decent clean sounds.

For the size of the actual units, the touch-sensitive tones really are very impressive, and the aux input is a handy feature.

Read more about Vox amPlug Night Train at MusicRadar.com




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Ueberschall releases Late Night Session, Looptool 2 and Retro Soul Elastik Soundbanks

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
Ueberschall recently released three new Elastik Player-based products: Late Night Session, Looptool 2 and Retro Soul. Late Night Session [and#8364;99]: Think yourself back to the times where live m [Read More]
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Q&A: Does any know that Church song Daw sang last Monday Night?

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

Question by fun_54me: Does any know that Church song Daw sang last Monday Night?

Best answer:

Answer by T¡tz_Mcgee
no

Add your own answer in the comments!

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Katy Perry – Last Friday Night (Sidney Samson Remix) FL Studio Complete Remake(DiegoMolinams)flp

Sunday, November 20th, 2011

100 Likes = FLP :D Im a 13 years old Dirty Dutch Music producer! Hope Sidney Samson watch this remake! Please like me on facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter:twitter.com Soundcloud:soundcloud.com Suscribe for more remakes! :D Extra Tags: Sidney Samson vs Tara McDonald Dynamite Leo Villagra…

back with a new progressive house track.. although this is a different style to the usual progressive tell me what use think of it.. all feedback is gladly appreciated! thanks, Cutser Follow me on soundcloud: www.soundcloud.com/cutser facebook: www.facebook.com/cutser
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Black Lab-This Night

Monday, September 12th, 2011

Well, i first heard this song when i was at Craigs house one time. I was playing some TF2 on his computer and he brought in his iPod. “Listen to this” he said. So i took the earphone and was blown away. Thank you Craig for this song.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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[NEW 2011] Jeremih – Every Night (Beat Prod By: TY THA ARTIST)

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

Download More Beats Now On: www.tythaartist.com Jeremih – Every Night (PROD. BY TY THA ARTIST) Jeremih Style Beat w ****SOLD**** Instrumental inspired by Jeremih (Def Jam Records) 2011 TY ON THE BEAT – BEAT BY TY THA ARTIST
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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The Music of Video Games [401] Castlevania: Symphony of the Night

Friday, July 15th, 2011

Entry 401 in an on-going video series that offers a selection of musical tracks from various titles throughout gaming’s history. Castlevania: Symphony of the Night Akumajou Dracula X: Gekka no Yasoukyoku (jp) Demon Castle Dracula X: Nocturne in the Moonlight 悪魔城ドラキュラX 月下の夜想曲 (jp) Year: 1997 Platform: Sony Playstation Developer: Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo Inc. Publisher: Konami Co. Ltd. Video source: Speeddemosarchive.com For more info on the game, follow these links: www.mobygames.com www.gamefaqs.com en.wikipedia.org Watch this video with 44 KHz stereo sound: ca.youtube.com Using this link may affect video quality. Music composed by Michiru Yamane.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Vox Night Train NT50H

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Everybody says something. “Nice toaster!” shouts a neighbour as we carry the Night Train to the Music Radar charabanc. “Awesome cheese grater,” quips a designer on a sister magazine as we arrive at the office.

Now see the Vox Night Train NT50H in action…

The food jokes aren’t entirely off the mark as it goes, because this is the next evolution in lunchbox amps; the bigger, more powerful brother to the Vox NT15.

“There’s enough gain to satisfy most styles; a thick, harmonic drive that stays on the classic rock side.”

So, why bigger? “We wanted to give customers a truly versatile and gigworthy amp,” begins Vox product development manager, Dave Clarke, “while adding the most requested features not included in the original Night Train, namely a footswitchable Thick mode, a higher gain channel and an effects loop.”

So, has Vox succeeded? The NT50′s front end is based around a two-channel/three-mode design that spans clean tones through to heavy gains.

Gain and EQ controls are independent, so there are no compromises when setting the two main sounds, while the footswitchable Thick switch bypasses the EQ section (effectively running it all flat- out) for a heavier-gained sound.

Using the VFS2A switch, you have three sounds at your feet. The master section comprises a master volume and Vox’s customary Tone Cut pot which, as Clark explains, “works as a global (ie power stage) high-end roll off.

“It’s a simple circuit that uses a 250k pot and a 4.7nf cap between the outputs of the phase inverter. Look up any AC30 schematic, you’ll see it.”

The final front panel control is the Tight switch, which works in both channels to reign in the bottom end response for a quicker, more controlled bass should you want it.

The lone feature around the back is a hard-bypassable series effects loop that runs at -10dB – a good match for regular stompbox-type pedals. The loop is driven off a small IC chip rather than being valve-powered.

The NT50 uses a pair of EL34 output valves, instead of Vox’s more common EL84s. “The EL34s don’t move too far from the classic Vox tone – after all the AC50s from the ’60s were truly Voxy!” comments Clarke.

“One of the main reasons I chose EL34s, and to make it 50 watts, was the fact there is limited space for four power valves… the design evolved and it seemed to fit nicely.”

Unlike Vox’s four-EL84 AC30, the power valves are fixed bias here, but in common with the that old classic, there’s no negative feedback, which should mean a more direct, dynamic and visceral response under your fingers.

In general design and construction terms, the first thing to note is that the knobs and switches are fully exposed, so do take care not to knock the pots when transporting the amp.

They’re the good quality, metal-shafted type and secured to the chassis with lock nuts. On the inside, they’re connected directly to the main PCB that also houses all the ceramic valve bases and input jack, while the effects loop, speaker outs and footswitch jacks get their own little boards.

The chassis is sturdy bent steel, and who can miss that perforated, chromed top case?

The NT50 head is partnered by the suitably retro-looking – thanks to its rounded corners – V212NT extension cabinet.

Almost fully open-backed and loaded with a pair of Celestion G12H 70th Anniversary drivers, it’s made of quality birch ply and designed to be compact enough to lug around, yet with enough room to make it sound considerably bigger than an equivalent 1 x 12 cab.

The speakers are rated at 30 watts apiece, with 100dB sensitivity and a 50-ounce ceramic magnet. We view them as a likeable halfway house between the classic Celestion Greenback and the more modern-sounding Vintage 30.

Sounds

The bright channel without the thick mode engaged gives a high-headroom clean tone that barely breaks up, even with maximum gain and powerful pickups.

There’s plenty of sparkly high end in the Vox tradition, yet as you wind the master, you get a palpable sense of the eye-popping attack you’d associate with a 50-watt ‘Plexi’-style Marshall. Some reverb would be lovely here, alas you can only cram so much into that diminutive chassis.

Engaging the thick mode is like stepping on a boost, whereupon you can usher in some classic drive; bluesy-sounding with a Strat, more visceral and classic rock- focused with humbuckers.

You might miss the EQ controls, but the global Tone Cut knob does a good job of getting the top end response you like.

For a moment you wonder if the NT50 might be lacking in volume, but the taper of the master is such that there’s always more on tap; where most amps just get more distorted after about six, this one just keeps getting louder.

And so it goes with the Girth channel. There’s enough gain here to satisfy most styles; a thick, harmonic drive that always stays on the classic rock side rather than modern metal, and with judicious use of the EQ pots and Tone Cut, you can dial in singing, vocal leads that will cut through any mix.

The Tight switch is a real boon. The looser setting lets the bottom end off its leash to deliver surprising resonance and trouser flapping thud from the unassuming 2 x 12 – a star performer as it turns out.

If you need to keep things more precise – for playing in a busy mix, for example – flicking the tight switch removes much of that extraneous bottom end for sharper, more precise and articulate response.

This is a surprising amp. The touch-sensitivity, quick attack and sparkling highs are all classic Vox hallmarks, but they’re tempered by the extra headroom and visceral power on tap from that EL34 power section.

And don’t be afraid to wind that wick up – much of this amp’s character and soul is hidden until you get it cooking: it’s not one for the bedroom.

In stylistic terms it’ll cover a great deal of ground – perhaps unsurprisingly – between a more rock-focused AC30 and, dare we say, a heavier-gained Marshall JCM800.

50 watts keeps a relative lid on things, but it’s plenty loud enough for a pub and club band, especially with the superb G12Hs: tonally it’s a winner.

Practically, it won’t make toast, it won’t grate cheese, but it will make you see the load-in in a whole new light. Food for thought…




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Hack by Day, Afrotronic Future Funk By Night: Handmade Music NYC Sat 4/2, Listening and More Free Now

Monday, March 28th, 2011

If you’re in the NYC area, we hope you’ll mark your calendar; if not, we have some free listening for you to explore below.

Hacking and inventing, creative musicians are making and modifying the tools of their performance to express the music they imagine, with stunning variety of results. And so it is that once a month (erm, more or less), we get together in Manhattan to celebrate music makers at a little thing we call Handmade Music.

This month, experimental sound systems and Afrotronic future funk with new electronic instruments inspired by west African tradition join the lineup.

1-6 PM, FREE: OPEN LAB (all ages)
Bring your project to work on, or just hang out and see what others are producing.

  • Bluetooth wireless MIDI music-making on hardware and Android phones
  • Open show-and-tell, including a couple of presentations of free Pd patching tools for making new instruments
  • At 5 PM, Todd Michael Bailey will show off his Where’s the Party At 2 open, DIY sampler, which takes inspiration from grungy digital samplers past.

7PM, FREE – LIVE MUSIC (21+)

Futuristic performances meet reimagined renditions of everything from Game Boys to m’biras this month. The full night is free, and you can remain quenched and fed with Culturefix’s superb beers, wines, and delicious food menu. (Where else in New York can you hear chip music and Afrotronic future funk while munching on The Grilled Cheese of Awesomeness?) The program:

DIGITAL DIASPORA
Afrotronic future funk band! Electronic, handmade remixes of traditional African instruments like the “the Gongo~Tron,” based on the traditional “Gongoma,” a Guinean m’bira (thumb-piano), and “Nano-Shakerator,” based on the traditional “Shekere,” a percussion instrument found throughout western Africa. All in grooving, futuristic new combinations!
http://soundcloud.com/digitaldiaspora

RUCYL MILLS (Saturn Never Sleeps) sci-fi singer

CONCRETE SOUND SYSTEM live sound set (David Primus Luta Dodson). I could try to put into words what David does, but it’s best to see in the video above, from Manhattan’s Harvestworks sound and music research center.

SAPHRYN PHOLLICLE (STEF EYE, Saturn Never Sleeps), multi-instrumentalist, singer, and sound experimentalist plays a left-field live set.

CHRIS GILROY live digital monome music played on grids (In/Out Festival)

KRIS KEYSER chip music +
BATSLY ADAMS NES + Genesis-powered vintage game visuals
Kris Keyser is already a favorite of spectacular 8-bit LSDJ music, here accompanied by live-generated visuals on vintage game consoles by this talented digital artist and inventor.

ALEX KIEFER (exilefaker) Forward-thinking chip music from a man also working toward a PhD in philosophy. The chip philosopher? Believe it.

Listen Now, Learn More

Stef Eye/Zaphryn Follicle, pictured above working away (via SNS), has a great profile by Saturn Never Sleeps’ Rucyl Mills on her production setup, here with Ableton Live, a Kaosillator, a kalimba, and an ancient guitar thing:
Living on the Rings | Stef Eye Artist Process Interview

And she has an experimental Zaturn Blend podcast.

Rucyl Mills, pictured above, has her music up on her endlessly-inspiring blog.
http://rucyl.com/tagged/audio/

I can’t embed it, but I absolutely adore the sound of the Yesterday’s Machine preview; I promise to make sure Rucyl keeps us posted on its release. See also Rucyl’s rig, at bottom.

http://saturnneversleeps.com/yesterdays-machine/

Lovely chip music by Kris Kesyer:

From our last edition, Chris Gilroy (on the docket this time, too) joins Philippe “Flippy Lesaux,” as documented in video by Thomas Piper.

And finally, in addition to one more video below, some SoundCloud-hosted tracks from Digital Diaspora, including Mikel Banks on vocals and “freakaphone” (“Looking Back”) and Janice Lowe on vocals (“Sing With Me”).

Looking Back by digital diaspora

Sing With Me by digital diaspora

Rucyl’s live rig. She and Stef Eye will both be representing label / live act Saturn Never Sleeps.

Where to Go

If you’re not in NY, I hope you’ll get to spend some time with the listening and videos above. But if you are in the area, here are details on our venue for Saturday:

Presented by Culturefix NY
9 Clinton Street
New York, New York 10002

View Larger Map

http://culturefixny.com/

RSVP on Facebook:

Open lab, 1p Saturday 4/2

Live music party, 7p


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