Learn To Make Hip Hop

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

video

...now browsing by tag

 
 

Designing the Sound of a Real Car: An Audi, from Silence to Noise [Video]

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

Hear the idea of creating a car sound, and you might imagine a sound designer working on a video game or film. Imagining that person producing a sound for an actual car could sound like a joke. But as today’s vehicles go silent – whisper-quiet electric cars to human-powered bicycles – the problem of imagining noises for them to make becomes deadly serious.

Our brains are wired to respond quickly to sound, so when cars suddenly don’t make any noise, alerting us to their presence is a serious issue. Audi’s engineers are working on that problem in the video here (thanks to reader Vadim Nuniyants for the tip!):

Audi’s future e-tron models will cover long distances powered by practically silent electric motors. To ensure that pedestrians in urban settings will hear them, the brand has developed a synthetic solution: Audi e-sound.

Audi’s not alone, either; it’s a safe assumption that many electric makers are working on this problem. Cyclists may want to consider it, too, though mechanical solutions (letting the wheels produce a click) and the old-fashioned bell aren’t a bad start. Before the TV show Portlandia poked fun at Portland, readers chuckled at an open source synth out of PDX that produces sounds for a bike – but now, automaker Audi is basically doing just that with real cars. The video of that solution (which isn’t really such a bad idea – now we just need extra lights):


AudioProFeeds-1

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

AKALA – FIND NO ENEMY (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

3rd single from Akala’s third album “Doublethink” featuring Cassell The beatmaker on drums, Jodi Milliner on bass and Angelo Kangellaris on guitar. Both album and single available on iTunes now! itunes.apple.com

A tutorial on BEatmaking for beginners using ableton live 8 Visit my website and listen to my tracks at WWW.SOUNDCLOUD.COM/DYLANNELSON
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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

Figure, Reason Sounds with Finger Control, Available Now on iOS [Video, Preview]

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

Figure, the iOS app that’s powered by Reason instruments and effects, is now available on the App Store for US$ .99 cents. The sound is Reason on your phone – literally, with the Thor polysynth and Kong drum machine, plus the Master Bus Compressor and side-chaining from Reason in effects. But the user experience is quite different. Introduced as something you’d use on the bus, this is really more about playing drums and making melodic gestures with your fingers, then tweaking those sounds and musical elements via X/Y touchpads. It’s a little bit like Korg’s Kaossilator and Reason had a love child.

For beginning users, this could mean a friendly environment to play with your fingers. But for more advanced users, there’s still enough open-ended room to work so that actual music talent might yield a very different result.

A number of our readers pointed to other apps like Intua’s Beatmaker, one of the first iOS production tools on the iPhone, as more fully-featured micro workstations. (Going back to the days of the Palm handheld, you might see something similar.) But there are already good options for those; Figure appears to be something different. I’m curious to see more integration with Reason, but we’ll look at how useful this is when we test it this week.

Features:

  • Drums, bass, lead synth
  • X/Y pad controls melodic figures, constrained by key
  • Adjustable controls for key, rhythm, tempo
  • Tweak as the songs play

More information: propellerheads.se/figure
And you can find Figure in our Apps section, then grab it from the iTunes App Store (or add your own review):
http://apps.createdigitalmusic.com/apps/figure

(We’re working on expanding functionality in that store with our partners; expect a full look at what we’re doing for this multi-platform collection of apps this month.)


AudioProFeeds-1

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

*NEW* Sandwitches (Featuring Hodgy Beats) – Tyler, The Creator – Goblin 2011 Video [HD]

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

Sandwitches (Featuring Hodgy Beats) – Tyler, The Creator – Goblin 2011 Video [HD] @e_LO405 #SUPDEN

OGDonNinja / 1997
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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

King Britt, in the Studio: Fhloston Paradigm and Making Music Like It’s 1983 [Video]

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

We’ve heard the new Fhloston Paradigm; here’s an up-close look at the studio setup on which it was made.

Making music can be about collecting the best, not just the newest, finding what’s inspiring to build your own tradition. Perhaps that’s why so many artists increasingly turn to vintage analog gear not just because they idolize the sound, but because it opens up working techniques that move their music forward. After all, digital emulations get better by the day at copying sounds, but it may be less a matter of old and new and more unlocking some personal creativity. In hybrid setups, each different, everything from a flea market find to a custom software patch can take on new meaning.

Two weeks ago, we heard veteran sound designer/producer/journalist Francis Prève talk about how he integrates analog gear with Ableton Live. Now, here’s King Britt showing us the rig he used to produce the sounds for his Fhloston Paradigm EP, released yesterday on Hyperdub to great acclaim.

The gear, in case you aren’t quick enough in the video, includes some very-classic vintage equipment:

(Roland) BOSS “Doctor Rhythm” DR-110 (1983)
Korg MS-20 (1978)
Korg Mono/Poly (1981)
Roland JX-3P (with Roland PG-200 programmer, 1983)

I don’t want to drive up their eBay value any higher, but it is worth noting that even these legendary synths are available for less than a modern digital flagship; some of their lesser-known counterparts are far more affordable. And they sound utterly terrific. There’s also some new equipment – one digital box from Pioneer, the rest analog from Moog Music:

Pioneer EFX-1000
Moog Music Moogerfooger MF-101 Lowpass Filter
Moog Music Moogerfooger MF-105M MIDI MuRF
Moog Music Moogerfooger MF-102 Ring Modulator

It’s a great compliment to the Moogerfooger that you’d feed even the superb sound of an MS-20 into it and be that much happier. (Side note: it’s my admiration for the EFX-1000, the one digital effect in this signal chain, that makes me enthusiastic about the new RMX-1000 from Pioneer. Non-DJ producers may not give Pioneer any love, but the company really does effects nicely.)

All of this gets piped into Ableton Live. In this video, it’s just acting as a multitrack recorder, but I know King works extensively with Live in editing, alongside effects like the Universal Audio line.

There’s something inspiring about the personality of this setup that goes well beyond just analog or digital, old or new, especially when in the hands of someone with the musical instincts King has. I should know – I spent some quality time fiddling with the rig as I waited out a hurricane/tropical storm warning in King’s Philadelphia studio in the fall. If you don’t have this particular gear, you can achieve some of the same effects, just by multitracking in audio, connecting sequencers, and avoiding too much synchronization and control, letting your instincts drive some of your music making. Heck, you can even do it in software by assigning extra external control and turning off some of the sync on effects and the like. (Let go … use the force and all that.)

And here’s what it all sounds like:

Listen to more from King and read our review of his latest:
Analog Frontiers: Listen to King Britt’s New Fhloston Paradigm EP [CDM Track Stream, FACT Mix]

And keep on creating … music.

kingbritt.com
Hyperdub release page


AudioProFeeds-1

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

Hardwell – Encoded (Official Music Video)

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

OUT NOW!!! bit.ly Today the worlds get Encoded! Finally the release is there of one of the most anticipated tracks of one of the fastest rising dj/producers of 2011; Hardwell! After the number #1 smash with Tiesto ‘Zero 76′, the Dutch talent returned to the solitary state of producing, with ‘Encoded’ as the official follow-up to the floor-sweeping ‘Asteroid’, ‘Molotov’, ‘Voyage and ‘Alright 2010′. ‘Encoded’ out on Hardwell’s very own Revealed Recordings is set for big moments on the floor, giving big room that typical twitch of melody, representing the Hardwell sound in its full glory. Powerful synths, bulky beats and playful feel-goodness come together in this new progressive house anthem. ‘Encoded’, already playlisted by the likes very wide range of house and trance dj’s and early support form Tiësto and David Guetta! The package comes with a Dada Life Remix, turning this track into a stomping beast with added bassline in the break which will for sure make the party people go bananas! For more info check: www.djhardwell.com http www.facebook.com

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

Roland Returns to Synth Roots on Jupiter; New JP-50, iPad Integration [Video]

Monday, March 26th, 2012

The name “Jupiter” evokes some strong feelings among synth aficionados. Little wonder, than, that when Roland introduced a modern successor, the response was impassioned. CDM was one of the first to look in detail at the Jupiter-80, and I was surprised – given the tendency of this readership away from massive flagship keyboards – to see it become one of our biggest stories of the year.

Roland faced some serious criticism when the story it told about the new Jupiter was less about synthesis and more about the instrument-emulating Supernatural engine. After all, since the days of the original Jupiter’s launch, we’ve come to think of the synthesizer as its own category of instrument – not an emulation of anything else. Then there was the fact that the JP-80′s weight and cost put it out of reach of many musicians.

If those were your criticisms, the news out of last week’s Musikmesse should be welcome news. First, the Jupiter-50 is a Jupiter keyboard for those of you without big budgets and road crews; it’s lighter and more affordable. The lack of the JP-80′s nifty touchscreen isn’t bad news, either – new iPad integration means you can get deep into programming right from your tablet.

Second, the JP-50 and a new second version of the JP-80 significantly refocus on synthesis features. I spent some time talking to Peter from Roland Europe at Messe about the synth stuff added to the JP. A lot of the effort went into behavioral modeling of classic analog filters. (See CDM’s hands-on video above.) Peter can’t say on camera the names, but you’ll get the trademark filters found on synthesizers from Sequential Circuits (Prophet) and Moog.

The new Jupiter-50, little sibling to the big JP-80 introduced last year.

Most notably, I got the sense from Peter that Roland not only heard but took seriously complaints from the synth-loving public that any new keyboard called “Jupiter” really needed to be a synth. Now, don’t get me wrong: I actually think the Supernatural stuff is pretty cool. I can easily imagine someone who needs versatility onstage or is programming film and TV scores or otherwise needs some great-sounding, wide-reaching instruments will really love it. It’s not anything you haven’t heard from big sample libraries on computers, but you get it in a keyboard you can turn on in a matter of seconds and tour with without needing a dedicated computer tech tailing you around. I think, ironically, those features will seem more appealing when you don’t have to choose between a keyboard that makes those sounds and a rich synthesizer. Now you get both of those things in one unit, and via the JP-50, one that can reach a wider audience.

New in the version 2 JP-80 and on the JP-50:

  • Three new low-pass filter models, for a total of four
  • New effects structures – yes, parallel routing as previously, but now a total of five structures including serial routing. This gives you the kind of semi-modular effects routing you’d normally expect on a soft synth.
  • Quicker access to playing a single sound (without all the zones) called Registration Play, and SONAR integration.

Jupiter-80 Version 2

On the JP-50:

  • Same sound engine as the JP-80
  • 76-note weighted keys. (This isn’t the same class of keybed as found on the JP-80, but it still feels like a premium keyboard; I gave it a try at Messe.)
  • Integrated USB audio/MIDI interface, and USB song player/recorder. This also includes, via an optional wireless dongle, the ability to wirelessly stream MIDI and audio to an iPad or iPhone – new functionality also demoed at Messe last week.

Jupiter-50

No official pricing yet, but word is it’ll be significantly less (of course) than the 80, and availability is planned for late spring.

My colleague Steve Fortner at Keyboard Magazine got an exclusive first look at the JP-50. There’s an extensive video series, but to get you started, here’s the sound programming vid:

See the full hands-on (and this, naturally, covers some of what’s new in the v2 firmware upgrade for the JP-80):
Roland Jupiter-50 Hands-on [Keyboard Magazine USA]

Previously:
First Look at Roland Jupiter-80, Images, and Reflections on the Jupiter Legacy

And little did I know how prescient the cooler in German words I uttered would become. Oops. (Hello from Berlin.)


AudioProFeeds-1

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

AlphaSphere, Spherical Music Controller, Becomes Messe Favorite; Keyboard Mag Video Hands-on

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Music trade shows are typically full of sensible and useful instruments. They may not always represent something revolutionary, but people find homes for them in their musical lives. Of course, the world’s fair futurist in us may want something really different.

It was a real treat to get my hands on the AlphaSphere, a UK-engineered alternative instrument that maps pitch across touch-sensitive surfaces arrayed in a sphere. It’s what a lot of people were talking about at Messe when people asked “what’s cool?”, as friends rounded up friends to march them over to the booth. (It’s Hall 5.1, stand C27 if you happen to be there this weekend.) The rubbery round sensors are actually really fun to play.

I hope to catch up with these lads from Bristol either in the UK or back in Berlin, but in the meantime, check out Keyboard Magazine’s video of the demo. It’s not as slick as the promo video, but you get a sense of the co-inventor’s real enthusiasm. (I shot the video as I’m contributing to Keyboard‘s Messe coverage.)

More:
http://www.alphasphere.com/

Previously (not spheres, but a similar idea – minus the continuous pressure):
Dodecahedronists, Unite: An Audiovisual Controller, Gestures and Polyhedra, Open Hardware

Official video (I like the white):


AudioProFeeds-1

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

Propellerhead Rack Extensions, Figure for iPhone Video; Figure Q+A

Wednesday, March 21st, 2012

We’ve got lots of other news from Messe to share soon – so don’t worry, this isn’t becoming the Propellerhead News Network. But since I’m starving and going to dinner, you can spend those 40 minutes watching the Propellerhead “keynote” press presentation I saw yesterday.

This video is for the moment the only way to really see the new iPhone app Figure, powered by Reason under the hood. Speaking of which, I have some answers to questions readers asked during our live coverage from yesterday:

Q. Will Figure be available on Android?
A. No plans at this time, no.

Q. Is the US$ 1 price an “intro” price? Really, only a buck?
A. It’s really only a buck, when it becomes available following Apple approval. It’s not officially an intro price, but Propellerhead also hasn’t said it’s the permanent price, so you might want to snap it up.

Q. Is there an iPad-native resolution?
A. There doesn’t appear to be; we saw only an iPhone-native version, not something Universal. It should support your Retina display, though.

Q. Will it support MIDI out?
A. Good grief, I’d be a little frustrated with Propellerhead if they added MIDI in or out to this iPhone app before we got it in Reason. (Cough. Yes, I still want that, darn it.) Anyway, short answer: no. No MIDI in, no MIDI out. MIDI out would be excellent, because it’s a pattern sequencer; maybe they can put that in a future version and I can play my MeeBlip with it. MIDI in makes less sense, because it’s really about the touch experience.

Q. There’s really Reason inside this app?
A. Yes. Ernst was very clear on this, as you can hear in the video. It’d be really great if you could somehow load racks from the desktop Reason with Figure and visa versa, but we’ll just have to get our hands on this, which should happen very soon.


AudioProFeeds-1

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

Exclusive Video: New VAIO® S 13″ Laptop — SGNL by Sony

Tuesday, March 13th, 2012

For more VAIO® S Series specs or to purchase: bit.ly Today, the new VAIO® S 13″ laptop rolled out in the US In addition to all of the great features & capabilities of the previously announced European S, the US version has the option to customize your system up to 2nd generation Intel Core i7 processor, 1GB Hybrid graphics (rather than 512), and has Solid State drive available for increased performance (up to 256 GB SSD). Here’s an exclusive world premier video of the new VAIO® S laptop along with a great product demo of the recently announced VAIO® C Laptop with it’s cool new VAIO® logo look. For more info on both computers, visit: www.sonystyle.com For more SGNL episodes visit www.sony.com

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